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.
