Publication | Open Access
Nutritional and sensory profile of two Indian rice varieties with different degrees of polishing
74
Citations
40
References
2011
Year
NutritionEngineeringDifferent DegreesFood AnalysisNutritive ValueAgricultural EconomicsGrain QualityCrop QualityFood ChemistryWhite RiceGrain ScienceIndian Rice VarietiesAsian Indian DietsHealth SciencesFood CompositionFood QualitySensory ProfileFood SafetyFood EngineeringFood TextureTraditional Hand-pounded Rice
Traditional hand-pounded rice has been replaced today with highly polished white rice in the Asian Indian diets. The study aimed to evaluate the nutritional as well as the sensory differences between the brown (0% polish) and the rice milled to different degrees of polish (2.3, 4.4 and 8.0%). Bapatla and Uma (red pigmented) varieties in both raw and parboiled forms were used. The protein, fat, dietary fibre, γ-oryzanol, polyphenols, vitamin E, total antioxidant activity and free radical scavenging abilities of the brown rice decreased while the available carbohydrates increased with polishing. Sensory attributes of the cooked rice samples (whiteness, grain intactness, fluffiness, firmness, stickiness, chewiness and the cooked rice aroma) were evaluated by trained panelists. Scores for branny taste and chewiness decreased with polishing. On the whole, brown rice of both the varieties was readily accepted by the well-informed sensory trained panelists.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1