Strongest Cannabis Tincture Recipe: 27mg/ml — 4 Tips
The strongest cannabis tincture recipe I have made came out at 27.3 milligrams per milliliter — tested with the TCheck 2 potency tester. This batch used 190-proof ethanol (95% alcohol) as the solvent and decarboxylated flower. The result was so concentrated it needed to be diluted before use. This post covers the method, the TCheck ...
The strongest cannabis tincture recipe I have made came out at 27.3 milligrams per milliliter — tested with the TCheck 2 potency tester. This batch used 190-proof ethanol (95% alcohol) as the solvent and decarboxylated flower. The result was so concentrated it needed to be diluted before use. This post covers the method, the TCheck 2 testing process, and 4 tips for achieving maximum potency in your cannabis alcohol tincture.
What Makes the Strongest Cannabis Tincture Recipe
A high potency cannabis tincture depends on three variables: the THC percentage of your flower, the quality of your decarboxylation, and your alcohol-to-flower ratio. All three compound each other — great weed poorly decarbed gives mediocre results; mid-grade flower perfectly decarbed and concentrated can surprise you. Here is what pushes potency up:
- High-potency flower: Start with the strongest flower available to you. A 25–30% THC cultivar gives you more potential milligrams to extract than a 15% strain.
- 190-proof ethanol: Use alcohol cannabis tincture 190 proof (95% ethanol) rather than 80-proof or isopropyl. High-proof ethanol is the most efficient solvent for THC and other cannabinoids, pulling more per gram of flower.
- Full decarboxylation: The flower must be fully decarboxylated before tincture-making to convert THCA to THC. Skipping or rushing decarb is the most common reason a tincture comes out weaker than expected.
- Low solvent volume: The strongest cannabis tincture recipe uses the minimum alcohol needed to fully cover the flower. More alcohol means more dilution — keep the ratio tight (aim for 1g flower per 1–2ml alcohol) and reduce further by evaporation if needed.
How to Test Potency With the TCheck 2 Tincture Test
The TCheck 2 tincture test uses infrared spectroscopy to measure cannabinoid concentration. Because it can only measure up to a certain concentration before the reading becomes inaccurate, very potent tinctures need to be diluted before testing. Here is the TCheck 2 testing process for a high potency cannabis tincture:
Related Posts

80 Proof vs 190 Proof Tincture Alcohol: 3 Key Facts
When making cannabis tincture or green dragon, the proof of alcohol you choose directly determines how much THC you extract. This 80 proof vs 190 proof tincture alcohol comparison uses real TCheck potency testing to show the difference — and the results are dramatic. If you want to know which is the best alcohol for ...

Guess Cannabis Hash Potency Test: 5 Best Methods
Can you guess cannabis hash potency test results before running the actual numbers? In this experiment, we vaporize an unknown hash sample, estimate the THC percentage by feel, then measure it with the T-Check potency tester to see how close the guess was. Spoiler: 32.8% actual vs a 35–40% estimate — surprisingly accurate. Why Try ...

ABV Cannabis Tincture Recipe: 5 Simple Steps with T-Check
This ABV cannabis tincture recipe shows you exactly how to extract the remaining THC from already been vaped weed using the quick wash ethanol (Q-wet) method. The results were surprisingly potent — 26.7 mg of THC per milliliter, totalling around 934 mg from just 10 grams of ABV. Don't throw away your vape leftovers. What ...

TCheck 2 Hash Potency Test: 5 Steps to Accurate Results at Home
The TCheck 2 hash potency test lets you measure the THC percentage of your hashish, concentrates, or infusions at home without sending samples to a lab. In this guide we walk through the exact 5-step process used to test a dry hashish sample — which came in at 34% THC — and share tips for ...
