• Title/Summary/Keyword: Cooked-rice

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Sensory and Quality Evaluation of Aseptic-Packaged Cooked Rice by Cultivar (벼 품종에 따른 무균포장밥의 식미특성 및 품질 변이)

  • Chun, A-Reum;Song, Jin;Kim, Kee-Jong;Kim, Jae-Hyun;Son, Jong-Rok;Oh, Ye-Jin
    • KOREAN JOURNAL OF CROP SCIENCE
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    • v.52 no.4
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    • pp.439-446
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    • 2007
  • We carried out this experiment on the purpose to investigate the quality properties of aseptic-packaged cooked rice by cultivars in 2006. Brown rice was milled for white rice to 89.6% weight of it. Based on cluster analysis of acceptance of sensory evaluation, eleven rice cultivars of 29 cultivars had superior palatability. Whiteness(r=0.42, p<5%), lightness(r=0.39, p<5%), Toyo value(r=0.35, p<10%), and moisture content(r=0.33, p<10%) of milled rice were correlated positively with acceptability. Protein content(r=-0.40, p<5%), expansion rate(r=-0.68, p<1%) and water absorption rate(r=-0.42, p<5%) of milled rice, and yellowness(r=-0.45, p<5%) of aseptic-packaged cooked rice were negatively correlated. In sensory evaluation, correlation coefficients of taste and texture with acceptability were higher than those of appearance and flavor. During storage, hardness and cohesiveness of aseptic-packaged cooked rice before reheating were increased and decreased, but those after reheating had no difference based on storage period and cultivar. On the contrary, whiteness of reheated aseptic-packaged cooked rice with no distinct differences before reheating was decreased during storage. There were no significant differences of texture property, color characteristics and moisture contents by cultivar during storage.

Effects of the Extract of Bamboo (Sasa borealis) Leaves on the Physical and Sensory Characteristics of Cooked Rice (조릿대잎 추출물이 흰밥의 물리적 및 관능적 특성에 미치는 영향)

  • Park, Yeon-Ok;Lim, Hyeon-Sook
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
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    • v.36 no.7
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    • pp.908-914
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    • 2007
  • Sasa borealis (bamboo) is a perennial medicinal plant and its leaves are utilized widely in Korea. In this study, effects of bamboo leaves (Sasa borealis) extract on the physical, textural, and sensory characteristics of cooked rice were examined. Four kinds of cooked rice were prepared with 0.0% (control), 0.2%, 0.3% or 0.4% of the extract (w/w). Moisture content of the cooked rice decreased with increasing amounts of extract. Color of the cooked rice was darkened gradually with increasing amounts of extract and appeared yellowish-brown. Among the four textural properties, only hardness increased significantly by the addition of the extract. Sensory evaluation was significantly different in terms of unique rice flavor, bamboo flavor, color, unique rice taste, bamboo taste, viscosity, hardness, adhesiveness, and coarseness among the control group and the group with 0.2%, 0.3%, and 0.4% of the extract; however, overall acceptancy was not significantly different among the four groups. In conclusion, concerning overall sensory evaluation, cooked rice with 0.2% bamboo leaves (Sasa borealis) extract showed the best result.

Quality and Antioxidant Characteristics of Cooked Rice with Various Mixed Grains in Korea (혼합잡곡 첨가 취반 밥의 품질 및 항산화특성)

  • Woo, Koan Sik;Kim, Hyun-Joo;Kim, Mi-Jung;Sim, Eun-Yeong;Ko, Jee Yeon;Lee, Choon Ki;Jeon, Yong Hee
    • KOREAN JOURNAL OF CROP SCIENCE
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    • v.62 no.4
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    • pp.352-360
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    • 2017
  • This study evaluated the quality characteristics, polyphenolic compounds, and radical scavenging activity of cooked-rice added to commercially available mixed grains. L-value of cooked-rice with various mixed grains decreased compared to that of cooked-white rice; however, a- and b-values increased. Hardness and elasticity of cooked-rice added to various mixed grains were significantly lower in the pressure cooker compared to the electric cooker. There was no significant difference in adhesiveness and stickiness between rice from the electric cooker and pressure cooker. Total polyphenol and flavonoid contents of cooked-rice added to various mixed grains were significantly increased. The average total polyphenol content of cooked-rice added to various mixed grains cooked in an electric cooker and pressure cooker were $16.50{\pm}3.86$ and $15.88{\pm}3.52mg$ gallic acid equivalent /100 g, and flavonoid contents were $1.58{\pm}0.00$ and $1.55{\pm}0.02mg$ catechin equivalents/100 g, respectively. The average of 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl radical scavenging activity was $9.27{\pm}2.62$ and $8.72{\pm}2.41mg$ trolox equivalent (TE)/100 g, and 2,2'-azino-bis-(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) radical scavenging activity was $22.89{\pm}4.60$ and $23.07{\pm}4.49mg$ TE/100 g for cooked-rice added to various mixed grains cooked in an electric cooker and pressure cooker, respectively. Phenol content and radical scavenging activity of cooked rice was in proportion to the amount of added grains, such as brown rice, colored rice, barley, soybean, and sorghum.

Rheological Properties of Rehydrated Freeze Dried Instant Rice (동결건조 즉석미반의 리올로지적 성질)

  • Kim, Kwan-Yu;Lee, Shin-Young;Joo, Hyun-Kyu
    • Applied Biological Chemistry
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    • v.32 no.4
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    • pp.332-337
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    • 1989
  • Rheological properties of rehydrated freeze dried instant rice were investigated in comparison with that of cooked rice. The time changes in reciprocal hardness of instant rice grains at various rehydration temperatures$(60{\sim}90^{\circ}C)$ could be expressed by the first order reaction rate equation regardless of rehydration temperature and reaction rate constant increased as the rehydration temperature increased. Activation energy for rehydrating instant rice was 6.1 kcal/g-mol. Analysis of compressive stress relaxation test showed that the viscoelastic properties of both rehydrated instant rice and cooked rice grains could be expressed by 6-elements generalized Maxwell model. Rehydrated instant rice revealed higher relaxation decay than that of cooked rice and showed the elastic property increased by increasing the rehydration temperature.

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Effect of Water Extract of Green Tea on the Quality and Shelf Life of Cooked Rice (녹차 물추출물이 쌀밥의 품질 및 저장성 향상에 미치는 효과)

  • Roh, Hyun-Jeong;Shin, Yong-Seo;Lee, Kap-Sang;Shin, Mee-Kyung
    • Korean Journal of Food Science and Technology
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    • v.28 no.3
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    • pp.417-420
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    • 1996
  • We investigated the effect of green tea extract (GTE) on the sensory properties, color value and shelf-life characteristics (pH, titratable acidity and total bacteria count) of cooked rice. Sensory attributes such as taste, flavor and overall acceptability were significantly higher in cooked rices prepared with 500, 1000 ppm of GTE than those of control group (p<0.01) but there was no significant difference among samples (p<0.01) in textural quality. Redness, yellowness and total color difference (${\Delta}E$) were higher when GTE was added. When cooked rice was putrefied, the values of pH, titratable acidity and total bacteria count were about 5.8, 0.3% and $10^8$ cfu/g, respectively. The shelf life of cooked rice was prolonged to 1-2 day by adding 500 and 1000 ppm of GTE as compared to control group.

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A Survey on the Consumption and Satisfaction Degree of the Cooked Rice Mixed with Multi-Grain in Seoul${\cdot}$Kyeonggi and Kangwon Area (서울${\cdot}$경기와 강원지역의 잡곡밥의 섭취실태 및 만족도에 대한 조사)

  • Kim, Yoon-Sun;Lee, Gui-Chu
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.21 no.6
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    • pp.661-669
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    • 2006
  • The purpose of this study was to investigate the consumption and perception on the effect of cooked rice mixed with multi-grain (CR-MG). Reason for like and dislike, intake frequency and variables related with the satisfaction of CR-MG were also investigated. The data for the analysis was collected from 315 adults who were residing at Seoul${\cdot}$Kyeonggi and Kangwon area and analyzed by the SPSS 11.0 program. The result showed that 84.8% of the respondents consumed CR-MG, showing significant difference by gender and occupation (p<0.05). It also revealed that they consumed it knowing their effect, showing significant difference by all general characteristics except for resident area and BMI, respectively. Kind of multi-grain (MG) mixed with cooked rice was high in the order of SoRiTae (80.1%) > brown rice (73.4%) > black rice (72.7%) > waxy rice (61.0%), respectively. As for the mixing type of MG, 61.4% of the respondents preferred non-mixed product rather than pre-mixed product. 2 or 3 kinds were preferred numbers of MG mixed with rice, showing significant difference by age (p<0.001) and marital status(p<0.05), respectively. 59.9% of the respondents answered 'high nutritive value more than polished rice' as the major reason for like, whereas 31.3% answered 'greatly rough more than polished rice' as that for dislike, respectively. By the use of multiple regression analysis, it revealed that health was the most significant variable which affect the satisfaction of CR-MG. From these results, it was suggested that in view of the high consumption and intention to continue the intake of CR-MG, following studies should be conducted to improve the preference of CR-MG.

The Literary Investigation On Types and Cooking Method of Bap (Boiled Rice) During Joseon Dynasty($1400's{\sim}1900's$) (조선시대 밥류의 종류와 조리방법에 대한 문헌적 고찰(1400년대${\sim}1900$년대까지))

  • Bok, Hye-Ja
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.22 no.6
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    • pp.721-741
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    • 2007
  • 1. For the types of boiled rice, there were 1 type of bap, 1 type of jebap cooked with glutinous rice, 13 types of boiled rice cooked by mixing grains and nuts such as daemakban, somakban, jobap, cheongryangmiban, jobap, gijangbap, yulmubap, hyeonmibap, boribap and patmulbap as well as patbap, congbap, byeolbap and bambap etc as ogokbap. Also, there were 12 types of bap cooked by mixing herb medicinal ingredients such as cheongjeong, oban, boksungabap, gumeunsaekbap, hwanggukgamchobap, yeongeunbap, okjeongbap, gogumabap, dububap, samssibap, dorajibap, gamjabap, songibap and jukshilbap. There were 7 types bap cooked as unique one bowl dish at the present as bapby mixing fish, meat, shellfish and milk as ingredients are hwangtang, gyejanggukbap, janggukbap, gulbap, kimchibap, chusaban and bibimbap, etc and the types of bap that have been analyzed are 34 total. 2. For the food ingredients used in bap types 23 types of miscellaneous grains, 5 types of nuts and 11 types of meat, 6 types of fish, 35 types of vegetables, 2 types of fruit including pears or peaches were used. Garlic wasn't used perhaps because of it being boiled rice 3. Types of Sap by Cooking Methods. (1) The ssalbap was cooked by first boiling water, putting in rice grains and boiling hard to be cooked as overcooked bap (rice). (2) The japgokbap (boiled cereals) has used buckwheat, barley job's tear, etc to be boiled down by soaking the ones with large grains (beans) first in advance to be boiled down or cooked by crushing into fine pieces. The red bean, etc was boiled down in advance or placed at the bottom of pot by cutting into two pieces while jujube or nut was cut into three pieces to cook the bap by pouring a lot of water and mixing other ingredients. (3) The gukbap (soup boiled rice), etc were cooked by squeezing out the yellow chrysanthemum that has dried chrysanthemum to cook the boiled rice by putting in rice and gukbap, meat or bones, etc were boiled down for a long time and decorated with meat or wild greens by mixing the bap in the meat juice. For gulbap (oyster boiled rice), etc, it was cooked as ingredients were stir fried in advance or washed and put in when the bap was about half cooked. (4) For bibimbap (mixed boiled rice), after the bap was overcooked first with rice, the wild greens were mixed lightly with bap beforehand, then the wild greens, decorations and garnishings were laid above rice and red pepper powder was sprinkled. (5) Namchok leaves, etc were boiled to cook the boiled rice with rice after being cooled while namchok stem and leaves were pounded to make juice and cooked the bap with rice. The peach, lotus root and yams were cut into fine pieces to be put in together when rice was about half done. The bellflower was soaked in water to be boiled down for a long time while potatoes and pine mushrooms, etc were cut into fine pieces to cook the bap (boiled rice) with rice.

Varietal and Culture-Seasonal Variation in Physicochemical Properties of Rice Grain and Their Interrelationships (쌀의 식미 관련 이화학 성분의 품종 및 작기간 변이와 상관 관계)

  • 오용비
    • KOREAN JOURNAL OF CROP SCIENCE
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    • v.38 no.1
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    • pp.72-84
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    • 1993
  • This study was carried out to understand the varietal variation in physicochemical properties of rice grain and those environmental changes by different transplanting time, and to elucidate the interrelationships among the factors related with eating quality of cooked rice. Fifty three rice samples, among which fifty samples were harvested at ordinary or late transplanted plots of the Crop Experiment Station in Suwon and three samples were harvested orpurchased from Niigata prefecture in Japan, were tested for various physicochemical components of rice grain and some physical factors of cooked rice. All of twenty seven rice cultivars tested were the recent-bred Korean japonica rice showing the wide range of maturity from early to medium-late heading and considerable difference in palatability of cooked rice. Amylose content, taste value by Nireco palatability tester (TVN), iodine blue color of cooking extracts(IB), and the ratio of IB /extracted solid amounts (ES) increased significantly by late transplanting, while viscosity (VN) and Mg / K. N value by Nireco tester, hot-water absorption of milled rice (HA), loss tangent of cooked rice by Rheolograph-Micro(LT), and most viscogram characteristics except setback viscosity (C-P) decreased drastically by late transplanting as compared with ordinary transplanting. Most of physicochemical properties of milled rice revealed narrower varietal variation in lately transplanted plot than in ordinary transplanted one. Protein content (PRO), volume expansion rate of cooked rice(VE), C-P and all physical factors of cooked rice by Rheolograph-Micro showed almost negligible seasonal variation, while amylose content (AM), VN, HA, IB/ES, peak viscosity(P), hot viscosity(H) and breakdown(P-H) viscosity exhibited considerably large seasonal variation. The early-headed varieties revealed lower amylose content and smaller seasonal variation of IB/ES compared with medium or medium-late headed rice varieties. AM was closely associatied with IB and IB / ES and VN was highly correlated with Mg/K. N and TVN in both ordinary and late transplanted plots. VN also was highly negatively correlated with cooking characteristics and highly positively correlated with viscogram properties in ordinary culture. PRO was closely connected with moisture content of milled rice and L T in ordinary transplanted plot. IB, which was closely connected with ES, was also singificantly associated LT, P and P-H in ordinary seasonal culture. IB/ES was highly negatively correlated with P, P-Hand P-H / C-P in ordinary culture but with LT and dynamic viscosity of cooked rice in late seasonal culture. The thirty rice cultivars were largely classified into two varietal groups by cluster analysis with physicochemical properties related with eating quality of cooked rice. Korean and Japanese high-quality rice cultivars were separately distributed in two respective varietal group.

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Comparison of Korean and Japanese Rice Cultivars in Terms of Physicochemical Properties (II) The Comparison of Korean and Japanese Rice by Amylose Content and Cooking Characteristics (한국 쌀과 일본 쌀의 물리화학적 특성 연구 (II) 아밀로즈 함량과 조리특성의 차이에 의한 품질비교)

  • 김혁일
    • Journal of the East Asian Society of Dietary Life
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    • v.14 no.2
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    • pp.145-155
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    • 2004
  • From the cooking data, Japanese rice showed higher water uptake but lower expansion volume, pH and iodine blue value than those of Korean rice. Japanese rice had higher maximum viscosity, breakdown viscosity and pasting temperature but lower final viscosity and setback viscosity than those of Korean rice by RVA analysis. Japanese rice had higher LC (low compression) hardness, U stickiness and HC (high compression) stickiness, LC balance and HC balance, but had lower HC hardness and thickness in the tensipresser data. Also Japanese rice had higher stickiness and balance, and lower hardness from the texturometer analysis. Japanese rice showed higher a cooked taste score than that of the Satake cooked taste machine. The various mean values of Japanese rice after cooking showed better cooking characteristics than the Korean rice. These results might be caused because Japanese rice had a little lower amylose and protein content, but higher tat acidity content.

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Analysis of Consumption Status of Cooked Rice with Different Grains and Related Factors in a Korean Population: Based on Data from 2011 Korean National Health and Nutritional Examination Survey (KNHANES) (한국인의 잡곡밥 섭취 실태 및 관련 요인 분석 - 2011년 국민건강영양조사 자료를 이용하여 -)

  • Han, Gyusang;Lee, Youngmi
    • Journal of the East Asian Society of Dietary Life
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    • v.24 no.6
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    • pp.748-758
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    • 2014
  • This study aimed to investigate consumption status of cooked rice with different grains as well as examine related factors of Koreans. Based on the Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey of the second year (2011) in the fifth stage, we extracted data on 7,190 people aged 1 year and higher who consumed cooked rice with one or more grains and legumes for at least one meal per day. A total of 15,250 meals were analyzed. Approximately 67.6% of subjects consumed cooked rice with different grains for more than one meal. Age was the strongest influencing factor for consuming cooked rice with different grains. Compared with people in their 40s, those aged 19~29 and in their 30s showed lower probabilities (0.5 and 0.6, respectively) of intake of cooked rice with different grains, whereas those in their 50s and 60s showed relatively higher probabilities (1.9 and 5.0, respectively). The intake ratio of cooked rice with different grains was higher in subjects who were females (64.5%), aged 1~18, over 50s, and residing in a metropolis (62.0%). Breakfast (69.6%) showed a higher intake ratio of cooked rice with different grains compared to lunch (49.1%) and dinner (57.9%). Intake of cooked rice with different grains was highest at home (71.2%), whereas it was lowest in restaurants (11.2%). The findings of the current study may be useful in planning dietary guidelines for intake of cooked rice with different grains.