I think you will have a hard time telling the caryophyllene content without using a GC, HPLC, or NMR. You could perhaps do a simple analysis with thin layer chromatography (TLC), though. It wouldn't be a quantitative measure, but you can often tell roughly whether one sample contains more of a particular compound than another if both samples are approximately the same concentration. If you have some pure caryophyllene, then you just need to make up a standard solution of it and you can do TLC analysis whenever you want to identify caryophyllene. This is fast, cheap, and reasonably reliable. If you really want to get a handle on the % composition then you will have to use more sophisticated methods. I'm sure that you could find a collaborator who would be happy to analyze your samples by GC to give you relative quantities. It's really a simple experiment to carry out if you have the equipment.