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MAJOR FACTORS AFFECTING COOKED MILLED RICE HARDNESS AND COOKING TIME
103
Citations
11
References
1983
Year
Food ChemistrySurface AreaHealth SciencesEngineeringAgricultural EconomicsGrain ScienceFood SciencesFood ProcessingThermal ProcessingGrain QualityFood QualityWater ContentSeed ProcessingGrain StorageCooking Time
A study was made of factors affecting cooking time and the relationship between water:rice ratio (water content) in the rice cooker method and Instron hardness of cooked rice using 10 milled rice samples of diverse properties. Water:rice ratio for acceptable soft texture (< 10 kg hardness) increased with increasing amylose content of the sample from 1.1 (56% water in cooked rice, wet basis) to 1.9 (68% water). The spread in cooked‐rice hardness values was higher at a water:rice ratio of 1.9 (68% water) than at 2.65 (75% water), which was equivalent to the water content of rice cooked in excess water for an optimum cooking time. Cooking time correlated better with starch final gelatinization temperature (r=0.75*) than with surface area per gram (r=−0.49) confirming the results of earlier kinetic studies that cooking rate was mainly influenced by the reactivity of the grain constituents with water.
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