Same-day weed delivery · 1 to 2 hours across the GTAFree delivery over $80 in core areasCash or Interac e-Transfer19+ ID verifiedCustomer service 8AM to 2AM ESTCanada-wide mail order · free shipping over $150Same-day weed delivery · 1 to 2 hours across the GTAFree delivery over $80 in core areasCash or Interac e-Transfer19+ ID verifiedCustomer service 8AM to 2AM ESTCanada-wide mail order · free shipping over $150
GasDank

Jealousy Strain Guide

Jealousy is Seed Junky Genetics' indica-leaning cross of Gelato 41 and Sherbert Bx1, the 2022 Leafly Strain of the Year, pairing a creamy, funky gas profile with 25-30% THC.

HybridTHC 25-30%
Shop Flower
Jealousy strain
Type
Hybrid
THC
25-30%
Effects
Relaxed, euphoric, giggly
Flavour
Creamy, sweet, funky gas
Aroma
Sweet cream, sour funk, gas, pepper
Terpenes
Caryophyllene, limonene, myrcene

Jealousy Strain Overview & Genetics

Jealousy is an indica-leaning balanced hybrid created by Seed Junky Genetics, the Los Angeles breeding house also responsible for Kush Mints and Wedding Cake. It crosses Gelato 41 with Sherbert Bx1, and it took Leafly Strain of the Year honours in 2022. In Toronto it has gone from limited hype drop to permanent menu fixture in under four years.

Gelato 41 supplies the mother side of the cross and much of its reputation. It descends from Sunset Sherbert crossed with Thin Mint Girl Scout Cookies, selected by the Bay Area's Cookie Fam, and it passes down dense bud structure, heavy resin production and the creamy dessert sweetness Jealousy is known for.

Sherbert Bx1 is the father. The Bx1 designation means Sunset Sherbert was backcrossed toward its own genetics to lock in signature traits: fruity funk, purple colouring and the relaxed, body-forward high that anchors Jealousy's indica lean.

Trace both branches upward and they converge on Girl Scout Cookies. Sunset Sherbert is GSC crossed with Pink Panties, and Thin Mint is a GSC phenotype, which means Jealousy carries a concentrated double dose of the Cookies genetics that have dominated North American menus for the past decade.

That pedigree is deliberate rather than accidental. Jealousy was not bred to be novel; it was bred to distill the best-selling flavour family in cannabis into a single cultivar with more funk, more resin and more potency than either parent brings on its own.

Seed Junky Genetics, run by breeder JBeezy, built its name on exactly this kind of refinement work with elite California clones. Jealousy circulated through Los Angeles dispensaries and limited drops first, then spread through clones and seed releases to growers across the continent, including the Canadian producers now supplying Toronto.

Leafly's 2022 Strain of the Year award confirmed what sales data already showed: Jealousy was the fastest-spreading premium strain in North America that year. The title placed it alongside earlier winners Wedding Cake in 2019, Runtz in 2020 and Dosidos in 2021, all of which became long-term staples.

In the jar, Jealousy runs dark and dense. Expect medium-sized, tightly packed buds in deep green with purple shading, rust-orange pistils and a heavy coat of milky trichomes that gives well-grown batches a frosted, almost silver cast before the grind.

Canadian-grown Jealousy varies slightly by producer and phenotype, but the core profile is stable batch to batch. If the flower smells creamy and funky with a gassy edge, tests in the mid-to-high 20s for THC and smokes noticeably heavy, the cut is true to type.

Jealousy has also become a parent in its own right, with a growing list of Jealousy crosses circulating among breeders and pheno hunters. When a strain starts appearing in other strains' lineages within a couple of years of release, it has moved from trend to foundation.

Aroma, Flavour & Terpenes

Jealousy's calling card is a creamy, funky, sweet gas profile that lands dessert and fuel in the same breath. Off a fresh jar the first notes are sweet cream and doughy Gelato funk, chased quickly by sharp gas and a peppery bite that tingles the nose.

Caryophyllene is the dominant terpene in most tested batches, and it explains the spice. It is the same compound that gives black pepper and cloves their kick, and in Jealousy it stops the sweetness from ever reading as one-note candy.

Limonene usually sits second, lifting the top of the aroma with bright citrus. Myrcene typically rounds out the trio with an earthy, musky base that anchors the fuel notes, and humulene shows up in smaller amounts in some batches.

On the palate, Jealousy leans dessert-first. The inhale is creamy and sweet with a vanilla-adjacent smoothness, the exhale builds sour funk and gassy sharpness, and the finish leaves a faint herbal spice sitting on the tongue.

Format changes the emphasis. Rolled in a joint, the funk and gas push forward; smoked through clean glass, the creamy Gelato side comes through more clearly; and a dry herb vaporizer at lower temperatures pulls out sweet citrus top notes that combustion tends to flatten.

Measured against its parents, Jealousy is funkier than Gelato 41's straight dessert profile and gassier than Sunset Sherbert's fruit-forward sweetness. That sour-funk edge is the trait reviewers most often single out, and it is the fastest way to recognize a legitimate cut.

The aroma is loud enough to matter for storage. A properly cured batch announces itself through a sealed bag, so an airtight glass jar kept somewhere cool and dark is the practical minimum for both discretion and freshness at home.

When terpene numbers are printed on a label, total terpenes above 2% signal a flavourful batch, and caryophyllene clearly out front suggests the cut is true. Bag appeal catches the eye, but with Jealousy the nose is the more reliable quality test.

The gas descriptor is worth decoding for newer buyers. It refers to the sharp, fuel-like note inherited from the OG Kush ancestry running through the Cookies line, and in Jealousy it sits under the cream rather than on top, which is why the strain reads as dessert at first sniff and fuel on the grind.

The profile also degrades in a telling way. If a batch labelled Jealousy smells flat, grassy or generically sweet with no funk underneath, it was rushed to market, stored badly or is not the real cut, because the signature is distinctive enough that its absence means something.

Effects & Who Jealousy Suits

Jealousy delivers a two-stage high: euphoric head lift first, warm body relaxation second. Most consumers report the mood lift landing within minutes of the first puff, with the physical weight building steadily over the following half hour before it settles in.

At moderate doses it stays social. The early phase is commonly described as giggly, talkative and mellow rather than heavy, which is why Jealousy works from late afternoon onward instead of being strictly a lights-out strain reserved for the end of the night.

Increase the dose and the indica side takes over. Bigger sessions typically finish in deep couch relaxation and a serious appetite, so have snacks within reach and nothing important left on the calendar if you plan to go heavy.

The full arc from smoked flower runs roughly two to three hours, with the tail end skewing drowsy for many consumers. That trajectory explains why the strain appears in end-of-day rotations far more often than morning ones.

Jealousy suits experienced consumers who want strength and flavour in the same jar. It fits movie nights, gaming sessions, long dinners and low-key hangs where conversation still matters, at least through the first hour of the experience.

Flavour chasers are the other natural audience. If terpene profile drives your buying decisions, Jealousy's creamy funk is a benchmark worth knowing first-hand, the same way Runtz defined the candy category a few years earlier.

It is the wrong pick ahead of anything requiring focus, precision or coordination. Do not drive or operate machinery after a session, and keep your first try to an evening with no remaining obligations so you can gauge how it lands.

Newer consumers are not excluded, but the potency demands a measured approach. Keep a first session to one or two small puffs, wait a full 20 minutes for the creep to finish, and only then decide whether more makes sense.

Setting shapes the experience nearly as much as dose. In company, the giggly first hour dominates and the session stays light; alone on a couch, the body weight registers sooner, so match the amount you smoke to the evening you actually have planned.

Tolerance matters more with a strain this strong. Daily smokers will still feel Jealousy clearly, while occasional consumers should treat it like a special-occasion strain and scale expectations accordingly, because the same joint hits very differently after a week off.

Potency & Dosing

Jealousy typically tests between 25% and 30% THC, which places it firmly in the strongest tier of the flower market. Numbers in that range are commonly reported across producers, though exact potency shifts with grower, phenotype and harvest.

For context, average flower sits around 15% to 20% THC. A 27% batch of Jealousy delivers roughly half again as much THC per puff as a mid-range strain, so an equal-sized session is not an equal experience.

Start low regardless of history. One or two puffs from a joint or bowl followed by a 15-to-20-minute wait tells you more than a full session would, because Jealousy creeps: the first ten minutes routinely undersell where the high lands at the half-hour mark.

Low-tolerance consumers should sample rather than session. A small pinch in a dry herb vaporizer or a couple of pulls from a shared joint is a sensible entry point, and there is no prize for finishing what was rolled.

Regular consumers usually find the sweet spot around a normal personal joint, with effects landing noticeably heavier than the same amount of 20% flower. Rolling smaller than usual is the simple adjustment that keeps the evening on track.

Smoothness is the trap with this strain. Caryophyllene-heavy flower often smokes sweet and easy, which invites bigger hits than intended, so watch your volume, keep water nearby and eat beforehand if strong flower on an empty stomach tends to hit you hard.

If a session runs further than planned, the fixes are unexciting but effective: water, food, a calm spot and time. Effects from smoked flower fade substantially within a few hours, and the practical move is simply to wait it out comfortably.

Potency labels deserve a skeptical read anywhere in the market. Treat the printed number as an estimate rather than a guarantee, let the first session calibrate your dosing, and judge each new batch of Jealousy on its own rather than assuming it matches the last one.

Concentrates and pre-rolls made from Jealousy exist in the wider market and run far stronger than flower, with extracts commonly testing 70% THC and up. The numbers in this guide apply to dried flower, so restart the start-low process from zero if you switch formats.

Jealousy vs Runtz vs Gelato vs GSC

Jealousy, Runtz, Gelato and Girl Scout Cookies are all branches of the same Cookies family tree, but they differ clearly in flavour, potency and effect balance. The short version: Jealousy is the funkiest and strongest, Runtz is the fruitiest, Gelato is the creamiest and GSC is the earthy original.

Jealousy vs Runtz: Runtz, a Zkittlez and Gelato cross, tastes like sugary tropical candy, while Jealousy trades that candy top note for sour funk and gas over a creamy base. Runtz commonly tests in the low-to-mid 20s for THC against Jealousy's 25-30%, and its high reads more evenly balanced, where Jealousy leans harder into the body.

Jealousy vs Gelato: Gelato 41 is one of Jealousy's parents, so the two share dense purple-green buds and dessert sweetness. The difference is direction, because Gelato stays smooth, creamy and sweet from nose to exhale, while Jealousy layers pepper, fuel and funk on top and generally tests a few points higher in THC.

Jealousy vs GSC: Girl Scout Cookies, the OG Kush and Durban Poison cross behind this whole family, runs earthier, mintier and more herbal, with THC commonly in the low-to-mid 20s. GSC opens with a more upfront cerebral buzz, while Jealousy settles into the body faster; think of Jealousy as GSC's louder, higher-octane descendant.

On effect balance: GSC and Runtz sit closest to a true 50/50 experience, Gelato leans mildly indica, and Jealousy is the most decisively indica-leaning of the four at larger doses. None of them are racy sativas, so all fit afternoon-to-evening use, but Jealousy ends the night most firmly.

On smell in the room: Runtz reads as candy-sweet, Gelato as bakery-creamy, GSC as earthy mint and spice, and Jealousy as sour cream-funk with fuel underneath. Once you have smelled each of them a single time, telling the four apart blind is genuinely easy.

On price and availability in Toronto: GSC and Gelato are legacy staples that usually sit at standard AAA pricing, Runtz still carries a premium, and a strong Jealousy batch typically lands at top-shelf AAAA pricing. Award pedigree, test numbers and batch quality drive that gap more than rarity does.

Choosing between them is straightforward: pick Runtz for candy flavour and social energy, Gelato for smooth dessert smoke, GSC for the classic earthy template, and Jealousy for maximum funk, maximum potency and the heaviest landing. The family resemblance is real, so enjoying one is a reliable predictor of liking the rest.

Why Award Winners Matter When Buying Weed

Strain awards are one of the few independent quality signals in a market saturated with marketing copy. Leafly's Strain of the Year, which Jealousy won in 2022, draws on sales data, geographic spread, reviewer scores and industry input rather than one judging panel's taste on one afternoon.

An award at that level tells you the genetics are proven at scale. Thousands of consumers and a long list of growers effectively stress-tested Jealousy before it ever reached a Toronto menu, which sharply lowers the odds of a disappointing profile compared with an unknown new cross.

Awards also standardize expectations. Once a strain wins the way Jealousy did, its core traits of creamy funk, heavy resin and a strong indica-leaning high become the benchmark growers select toward, so flower sold under the name tends to cluster closer to the true profile over time.

The caveat: the award belongs to the genetics, not the jar in your hand. A rushed or badly cured batch of Jealousy smokes worse than a well-grown batch of an unheralded strain, so grower skill and cure quality still matter as much as the name on the label.

Famous names also attract lazy relabelling, where mediocre flower gets sold under whatever strain is trending that month. The practical defence is buying from a delivery service that depends on repeat customers, because a business built on reorders cannot afford to burn trust on fake batches.

Award history is a useful menu-reading shortcut too. Wedding Cake, Runtz, Dosidos and Jealousy, four consecutive Leafly winners, remain four of the most dependable premium picks in Canada years later, which suggests the award tracks staying power rather than just hype cycles.

For Toronto buyers specifically, titles map neatly onto delivery menus: award strains are the ones that hold AAAA pricing and reappear season after season. When you are ordering sight unseen, that consistency is worth more than novelty.

Verifying that a jar lives up to the title takes a minute. Check the colour and frost against known photos, confirm the creamy-funk nose, and compare the posted THC range with the typical 25-30%; a batch that misses on all three is trading on the name alone.

Used properly, awards are a shortlist tool rather than a final verdict. Treat Jealousy's 2022 title as a strong reason to try a batch once, then let the flower itself decide whether it earns a permanent spot in your rotation.

Getting Jealousy in Toronto

GasDank stocks Jealousy flower for same-day delivery across Toronto. Orders placed through gasdank.com typically arrive within 1 to 2 hours, with exact timing depending on your neighbourhood, driver routing and the time of day you order.

Ordering is simple: browse the flower menu, add Jealousy to the cart and check out. Payment is cash on delivery or Interac e-Transfer, and there is no storefront visit, appointment or pickup window involved at any point.

GasDank delivers to customers aged 19 and over, matching Ontario's legal age for cannabis. Keep government-issued ID ready, because age is verified at handoff before the order changes hands.

Delivery coverage spans Toronto, including downtown, East York, North York, Etobicoke and Scarborough. Evening peak orders tend to land closer to the two-hour end of the window, while daytime orders often arrive faster.

Availability rotates with supply because Jealousy sells through quickly when a strong batch lands. If it shows on the menu it can be delivered the same day; if a batch is sold out, Cookies-family hybrids like Runtz or Girl Scout Cookies are the closest substitutes.

Check the product page for current batch details such as grade and format before ordering. Jealousy is stocked as dried flower, and anything else added to the same cart, from pre-rolls to concentrates, arrives in the same 1-to-2-hour delivery.

Grade matters when comparing listings. Jealousy generally appears as AAAA flower given its pedigree, and the gap between AA and AAAA on any menu shows up in nose, trim, moisture and burn rather than just the photo, so the premium buys a noticeably different session.

Same-day delivery has become the default way premium strains reach Toronto consumers, because top-shelf batches sell out faster than storefront restocks. Ordering the day a Jealousy drop appears is the most reliable way to catch a fresh cut.

Once it arrives, transfer the flower to an airtight jar and give it a proper look and smell before the first session. A true Jealousy batch shows dark, frosty buds and leads with creamy funk, which is exactly what the award was given for.

Buying Jealousy from GasDank

Why people order their flower from us.

Jealousy from GasDankGasDankTypical alternative
QualityProperly grown and slow curedRushed or poorly stored flower
HonestyReal strain, real type, stated potencyMislabelled or guesswork
DeliverySame day GTA, mail order Canada wideIn store only or slow shipping
FreshnessMoves quickly, sold freshCan sit on a shelf
GuidanceWe help you find similar strainsNo support

Jealousy, frequently asked questions

Q.Is Jealousy indica or sativa?

Jealousy is an indica-leaning balanced hybrid, commonly described as roughly 60% indica to 40% sativa. The high opens with euphoric head effects and settles into body relaxation, so it behaves more indica than the split suggests at larger doses. Consumers wanting a true 50/50 experience may prefer Runtz or GSC.

Q.How much THC does Jealousy have?

Jealousy typically tests between 25% and 30% THC, with most batches landing in the mid-to-high 20s. That is well above the 15-20% flower average, so treat it as a top-shelf potency strain regardless of your tolerance. Exact numbers vary by grower, phenotype and harvest.

Q.Why is the strain called Jealousy?

Seed Junky Genetics has never published an official origin story for the name. The common read is that it is a flex, meaning flower good enough to make everyone else jealous, in line with the bragging naming style of California hype strains. Whatever the intent, the name predates the 2022 Leafly award that made it famous.

Q.What is the difference between Jealousy and Runtz?

Jealousy is funkier, gassier and typically stronger; Runtz is sweeter, fruitier and slightly more balanced in effect. Runtz, a Zkittlez and Gelato cross, tastes like candy, while Jealousy, a Gelato 41 and Sherbert Bx1 cross, layers sour funk and fuel over its sweetness. Both descend from Gelato, so the creamy base is shared.

Q.Is Jealousy better for evening or daytime use?

Evening, for most people. The first hour is social and euphoric enough for late-afternoon sessions, but the body relaxation builds steadily and the tail end skews drowsy. Save it for after your obligations are done.

Q.Is Jealousy a good strain for beginners?

It can be, with restraint. At 25-30% THC it is one of the stronger flowers on any Toronto menu, so beginners should start with one or two small puffs and wait 20 minutes before continuing. There is no rush, because the jar keeps.

Q.What does Jealousy smell like?

Sweet cream and doughy funk up front, sharp gas underneath and a peppery spice from its dominant terpene, caryophyllene. Limonene adds a citrus top note and myrcene brings an earthy base. It is a loud strain, so expect it to announce itself through the bag.

Q.What affects the price of Jealousy in Toronto?

Batch grade, grower reputation, THC test results and supply. Jealousy usually sells at AAAA top-shelf pricing because of its award pedigree and steady demand, and small-batch craft cuts cost more than large-scale runs. Ordering larger quantities generally lowers the per-gram cost.

Q.How fast can I get Jealousy delivered in Toronto?

GasDank delivers Jealousy same-day across Toronto, typically within 1 to 2 hours of ordering. Payment is cash or Interac e-Transfer, and you must be 19 or older with ID ready at handoff. Availability rotates, so order while it shows on the menu.

Strains similar to Jealousy