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Factors Affecting the Slope of Head Rice Yield vs. Degree of Milling

September 1998 Volume 75 Number 5
Pages 738 — 741
J. D. Reid , 1 T. J. Siebenmorgen , 1 , 2 A. Mauromoustakos 1 , 2

Graduate assistant and professor, Biological and Agricultural Engineering Department, and assistant professor, Agricultural Statistics Department, respectively, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville. Mention of a commercial name does not imply endorsement by the University of Arkansas. Corresponding author. E-mail: tsiebenm@saturn.uark.edu Phone: 501/575-2841. Fax: 501/575-2846.


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Accepted May 26, 1998.
ABSTRACT

Milling data of four long-grain rice cultivars were analyzed to determine the uniformity in the slope of their curves for head rice yield (HRY) versus the corresponding degree of milling (DOM). The data set for each cultivar comprised samples that had been subjected to various drying air conditions and durations and milled over a range of moisture contents. All treatment combinations were split and milled for either 15, 30, 45, or 60 sec in a McGill no. 2 laboratory mill to obtain HRY versus DOM data. Linear relationships between HRY and DOM, as observed in past research, were confirmed. This implies that as rice is milled to greater extents (higher DOM), the HRY decreases linearly. Within the bounds of the experimental levels tested, neither the drying air condition nor drying duration affected the rate at which HRY changed with DOM. However, the cultivar and the moisture content at which the rice was milled significantly (P < 0.05) influenced this rate. At higher milling moisture contents, the decrease in HRY per unit of increase in the DOM was greater than at lower moisture contents. While not conclusive, there was an indication of a relationship between the average kernel thickness of a cultivar and the HRY versus DOM slope.



© 1998 American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.