• Title/Summary/Keyword: Rice.

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Physicochemical Properties of Jeung-pyun Dough Containing with Different Amounts of Brown Rice (현미가루를 첨가한 증편반죽의 이화학적 특성)

  • Jeong, Sang-Yeol;Park, Mi-Jung;Lee, Sook-Young
    • Korean journal of food and cookery science
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    • v.27 no.2
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    • pp.9-17
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    • 2011
  • In this study, the physicochemical properties of polished rice flour, brown rice flour, and Jeung-pyun dough were studied. The protein, lipid, dietary fiber, pH of brown rice flour were higher than those of polished rice flour. The total polyphenol contents and electron donating ability (EDA) of brown rice flour (83.60 mg%, 2.44%, respectively) were higher than those of polished rice flour (56.91 mg%, 1.43%, respectively). The temperature gelatinization of brown rice flour higher than that of polished rice flour. The counts in Jeung-pyun dough were not significantly decreased brown-rice flour. The addition of brown rice flour decreased the amount of carbon dioxide gas evoluted from Jeung-pyun dough. The pH values of brown rice Jeung-pyun dough generally decreased fermentation time.

Adsorption Equilibrium Moisture Content of Rough Rice, Brown Rice, White Rice and Rice Hull (벼, 현미, 백미 및 왕겨의 흡습평형함수율)

  • Keum, D. H.;Kim, H.
    • Journal of Biosystems Engineering
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    • v.26 no.1
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    • pp.57-66
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    • 2001
  • This study was performed to determine adsorption equilibrium moisture contents of rough rice, brown rice, white rice and rice hull grown in Korea. EMC values were measured by static method using saturated salt solutions at three temperature levels of 20$\^{C}$, 30$\^{C}$ and 40$\^{C}$, and eight relative humidity levels in the range from 11.2% to 85.0%. The measured EMC values were fitted to modified Henderson, Chung-Pfost, and modified Oswin models by using nonlinear regression analysis. The results of comparing root mean square errors for three models showed that modified Henderson and Chung-Pfost models could serve as good models, and that modified Oswin model could not be applicable to rough rice, brown rice, white rice and rice hull.

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Performance Evaluation of Rice Mill Plant By a Computer Simulation

  • Chung, Jong-Hoon
    • Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.7-14
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    • 2001
  • A rice mill plant with a capacity of 3 t/h was constructed with automated facilities at Chonnam National University. A simulation model was developed with SLAMSYSTEM for evaluation and improving the rice mill process. The developed model was validated in the views of hulling efficiency, milling efficiency, milled rice recovery, other materials produced, at bottlenecks in the processes. The results of hulling efficiency, milling efficiency, milled rice recovery in the simulation were, respectively, 81.1%, 89,5%, and 73.1%, while those of the actual mill plant were 81.5%, 90.2%, and 73.5%. The simulation results including the rates of other materials(chaff, bran, broken rice, stone, etc) produced in the processes were almost similar with those of the actual process. In the simulation the bottlenecks were found out in the process for separating brown rice and sorting colored rice. These phenomena also appeared in the actual process. It needed to increase the hourly capacities of the brown rice separator and the rice color sorter. As the developed model could well express the automated rice mill plant, it could be used for designing and improving rice mill plants.

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Sensory and Physicochemical characteristics and Storage time of Daechu-Injeulmi added with various levels of chopping jujube (다진 대추를 첨가한 대추인절미의 관능적, 이화학적 특성과 저장성 연구)

  • 차경희;이효지
    • Korean journal of food and cookery science
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    • v.17 no.1
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    • pp.29-42
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    • 2001
  • The purpose of this study was 10 investigate the effect of jujube on the physicochemical properties of lnjeulmi during storage. Various lnjeulmi samples were prepared with steamed glutinous rice, glutinous rice flour, or brown glutinous rice flour along with the addition of chopped jujube at 3, 6, 9, or 12% of rice. In sensory evaluation, the more jujube was added, the stronger sweetness and bitterness were obtained. The samples made with steamed glutinous rice gave the harshest texture. Tenderness and moistness of Deachu-Injeulmi were the highest in the samples made with glutinous rice followed by brown glutinous rice flour, and glutinous rice flour, and they were increased with less amount of jujube. The chewiness of the samples made with brown glutinous rice flour' was the highest and the samples made with glutinous rice were the coarsest. The more jujube was added, the redness and yellowness of Daechu-Injeulmi were increased. The moisture content was higher in the samples made with glutinous rice followed by glutinous rice flour and brown glutinous rice flour. The reducing sugar content of samples during storage was higher in the order of glutinous rice, glutinous rice flour, and brown glutinous rice flour, and it was dramatically reduced until 48hr of storag e; however, it was increased a little bit after 72 hr. The degree of gelatinization was reduced rapidly during the first 24hr of storage, and it was decreased in the order of brown glutinous rice flour, glutinous rice flour, and glutinous rice. The springiness and cohesiveness were decreased during storage. The chewiness and gumminess were increased with the increase of added jujube, and they were increased until 24hr of storage, then decreased after 48hr. The hardness was the highest in the samples made with glutinous rice and 12% of chopped jujube showed the least change in the hardness. The more jujube was added, the less change in the hardness of samples was observed during storage, consequently retarded the speed of retrogradation

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Effects of Food Consumption Monitoring Using Modified Rice Bowls on Food Intake, Satiety Rate, and Eating Rate (모니터링 강화 밥그릇이 섭취량과 포만도 및 섭취속도에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Young-Suk;Chang, Un-Jae
    • Journal of the Korean Dietetic Association
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    • v.21 no.3
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    • pp.194-202
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    • 2015
  • The study examined dietary intake, satiety rate, and eating rate using rice bowls with an elevated bottom (diet rice bowl) and rice bowls with an elevated bottom and monitoring line (monitoring rice bowl). The monitoring rice bowl was used to help subjects monitor amounts they had eaten as they ate. Eighteen normal weight college female students participated in this study once a week for 2 weeks. Three hundred grams of fried rice in a diet rice bowl (1st week), and 300 g of fried rice in a monitoring rice bowl were served to the participants over 2 consecutive weeks. After each lunch, dietary intake, satiety rate, and eating rate were measured. The consumption amount of fried rice was 261.6 g in the diet rice bowl group, and 264.8 g in the monitoring rice bowl group. There was no significant difference in fried rice intake between the two groups. The satiety rate of fried rice in the monitoring rice bowl group was significantly higher than that of the diet rice bowl group after 1 hour and 2 hours (P<0.05). The eating rate of the diet rice bowl group (21.3 g/min) was significantly faster than that of the monitoring rice bowl group (18.7 g/min) (P<0.05). This result shows that food consumption monitoring can affect not only eating rate but also the subjective feelings of satiety after meal eating. Although more study is needed, these data suggest consumption monitoring in a rice bowl may help to control obesity and weight.

Comparison of Cooking Properties between the Functionally Fortified and Regular Rices using Electric and Pressure Cookers (전기솥과 압력솥을 이용한 기능성 강화쌀과 일반쌀의 취반 특성 연구)

  • Kim, Gee-Yeoun;Lee, In-Seon;L.Kim, Hye-Young
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Culture
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    • v.19 no.3
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    • pp.359-368
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    • 2004
  • The Physicochemical, sensory and cooking properties of functionally fortified rice with dietary fiber and chitosan were compared with regular rice when the rices were cooked with pressure and electric cookers. Moisture content of functional rice before cooking was 11.11%, which was lower than 13.72% in regular rice. Accordingly, moisture contents of functional rice samples cooked both with pressure and electric cookers were lower than those of regular rice. L value showing the degree of lightness of cooked rice was significantly higher in rice samples cooked with pressure cookers. The ${\alpha}$ value, the degree of redness and the b value, the degree of yellowness, were the highest in the functional rice cooked with an electric rice cookers. Textural measurement of hardness using a rheometer showed the highest value in functional rice cooked with a pressure cooker. The degree of gelatinization measured using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) before cooking showed higher onset gelatinization temperature ($T_0$) and peak gelatinization temperature ($T_p$) in functional rice compared with those in regular rice. The gelatinization enthalpy (${\Delta}H$) of functional rice was lower than that of regular rice, showing that functional foe had lower gelatinization energy compared with regular rice. When the samples were stored in a refrigerator for one week, the DSC showed faster retrogradation degrees in samples cooked with electric rice cooker, having significantly higher enthalpies of regular and functional rice cooked with electric cooked compared to those cooked with pressure cookers. The functional rice samples cooked with pressure cooker had higher consumer acceptance test values compared to those cooked with electric cookers.

Review on Rice Flour Manufacturing and Utilization

  • Kim, Myoung Ho
    • Journal of Biosystems Engineering
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    • v.38 no.2
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    • pp.103-112
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    • 2013
  • Background: The Korean government launched a project in 2008, where the amount of rice used as raw ingredient in rice-based foods in 2012 was planned to increase up to 10% (470,000 ton) of the total rice production through developing various new rice-based processed foods and their commercial manufacturing technology. Among the four major rice-based processed foods, rice cakes and noodles need rice flour as their main raw ingredient. Technology in rice flour utilization and manufacturing is far behind than the technology pertinent to wheat flour in many subject areas. Purpose: This review aims to provide information on rice flour utilization and manufacturing with some fundamental subjects in the area of size reduction. Results: A variety of food items including bread, noodle, cake, cookie, muffin, pre-mix, beverage, vinegar, surimi, and artificial meat have found rice flour as their raw ingredient. Rice bread made out of 100% rice flour has been developed and is now sold in retail stores. Various noodle products made from rice flour are also on the market. Issues on product definition and labeling regulation about rice flour content of the products were explored. Generalized grinding equations available in the literature were seldom used in practice; instead, it has been a general practice to develop empirical equations from test milling data. Introductory remarks on three popular particle size measurement methods (sieving, Coulter counter, light diffraction) were explained. Mathematical expressions frequently used to describe particle size distribution and to correlate cumulative quantity of particles with particle size were represented. Milling methods used in producing rice flour were described along with their advantages and disadvantages. Because of their profound effect on functional properties of the rice flour, four rice flour milling equipments used at both laboratory experiments and commercial manufacturing plants were discussed.

Optimal Mixture Ratio for Rice (Oryza sativa L.) Gruel Supplemented with Puffed Rice by Mixture Design (혼합물 실험 계획법에 의한 팽화미 첨가 쌀죽의 최적 배합비 분석)

  • Ku, Kyung-Hyung;Choi, Eun-Jeong;Koo, Min-Sun
    • Journal of the East Asian Society of Dietary Life
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    • v.23 no.2
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    • pp.218-226
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    • 2013
  • This study examined the optimal mixture ratio of rice gruel supplemented with puffed rice by mixture design. The quality characteristics of rice gruel samples were examined according to mixture ratios at eleven experimental points. The high soluble solid content and viscosity of gruel samples were significantly dependent on rice (short grain) content instead of glutinous rice. The viscosity ranged from $2,891{\sim}9,153\;cP{\cdot}s$ and soluble solid content ranged from $8.23{\sim}10.13^{\circ}Brix$ at the eleven experimental points. The mixture with the highest solid content and viscosity, 12% rice gruel sample was $10.10{\sim}10.13^{\circ}Brix$ and $9,150{\sim}9,153\;cP{\cdot}s$. The L color of sample decreased with decreasing rice content, while "a" (redness) and "b" (yellowness) values slightly increased. In the sensory evaluation, samples with higher amount of puffed rice and glutinous rice scored higher for brown color, flavor and sweetness than high-content rice samples. The response surface and trace plot results showed that increasing of puffed rice increased the brown color, sweet taste and sticky aftertaste. From the results of the F-test, viscosity, "a" (redness) and "b" (yellowness) values fit a quadratic model with significant probabilities within 0.05%. The optimum predicted formulations of rice gruel containing puffed rice were 1.69% of puffed rice, 0.47% of glutinous rice and 9.84% of rice, respectively.

Chemical composition of banana meal and rice bran from Australia or South-East Asia

  • Natalia S. Fanelli;Leidy J. Torres-Mendoza;Jerubella J. Abelilla;Hans H. Stein
    • Animal Bioscience
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    • v.36 no.10
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    • pp.1568-1577
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    • 2023
  • Objective: A study was conducted to determine the chemical composition of banana meal and rice bran from Australia or South-East Asia and test the hypothesis that there are no differences in rice bran produced in different countries, but there are differences between full-fat and defatted rice bran. Methods: Two sources of banana meal and 22 sources of rice bran (full-fat or defatted) from Australia or South-East Asia were used. All samples were analyzed for dry matter, gross energy, nitrogen, amino acids (AA), acid hydrolyzed ether extract (AEE), ash, minerals, total starch, insoluble dietary fiber, and soluble dietary fiber. Banana meal was also analyzed for sugars including glucose, fructose, maltose, sucrose, stachyose, and raffinose. Results: Chemical analysis demonstrated that banana meal from the Philippines is primarily composed of starch. Full-fat rice bran from Australia had greater (p<0.05) concentrations of AEE, lysine, and glycine than samples from the Philippines and Vietnam. Full-fat rice bran from Australia and Thailand had greater (p<0.05) concentrations of gross energy and most AA than rice bran from Vietnam. Full-fat rice bran from Australia had greater (p<0.05) concentrations of tryptophan and manganese than all other sources, but full-fat rice bran from the Philippines contained less (p<0.05) zinc than all other sources of rice bran. Gross energy, AEE, and copper were greater (p<0.05) in full-fat rice bran compared with defatted rice bran, but defatted rice bran contained more (p<0.05) crude protein, ash, insoluble dietary fiber, total dietary fiber, AA, and some minerals than full-fat rice bran. Conclusion: Banana meal is a high-energy source that can be used as an alternative ingredient in livestock diets. Full-fat rice bran from Australia and Thailand contained more concentrations of AEE and AA than samples from the Philippines or Vietnam. Full-fat rice bran had more gross energy and AEE than defatted rice bran, whereas defatted rice bran contained more crude protein, ash, and total dietary fiber.

Ecological Successions of Arthropod Communities in Stored Rough Rice, Polished Rice and Brown Rice (저장중 벼, 현미 및 백미에서의 마디발동물 군집의 환이)

  • 류문일;조혜원;김영배
    • Korean journal of applied entomology
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    • v.29 no.1
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    • pp.31-42
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    • 1990
  • Storage ecosystems of rough rice, brown rice and polished rice were analyzed form Feb. 1987 to Nov. 1988 to investigate structures and ecological successions in the arthropod communities as well as changes in energy of the systems. The changes in temperature of stored rice showed high degree dependence on the temperature of storage room with time lag of about four weeks. Moisture content of rough rice, brown rice and polished rice during the period were in the range of 12.7$\pm$0.4, 13.1$\pm$0.4 and 13.5$\pm$0.3%, respectively. The arthropod communities in rough rice, brown rice and polished rice were qualitatively and quantitatively different. In rough rice, dominant species changed from Leptinotus reticulatus Endlein to Liposcelisentomophilus Endlein, while in brown rice from Pyralis farinalis L. to Sitophilus oryze (L.), unidentified parasitic wasps, Anisopteromalus calandrae Howard and Tribolium castaneum Herbst and finally to S. oryzae. In polished rice, the arthropod community showed an ecological succession similar to that in brown rice except for a transient dominance of two psocidspecies. Thearthropod community in rough rice was rather simple and unstable in comparison with those in brown rice and polished rice. The 1000 kernel weight of brown rice decreased slightly during the period when the arthropods were active (summer season), while that of rough rice and polished rice remained at the similar level. However, the ash content per unit volume of brown rice as well as rough rice and polished rice showed no increase during the period.

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