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Genotype and Environmental Influences on Pasting Properties of Rice Flour

July 2004 Volume 81 Number 4
Pages 486 — 489
Jennifer Minh-Chau Dang 1 and Les Copeland 1 , 2

Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources, The University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia. Corresponding author. E-mail: l.copeland@acss.usyd.edu.au


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Accepted September 18, 2003.
ABSTRACT

The pasting behavior of flour from several Australian rice (Oryza sativa L.) cultivars, differing in amylose content and grown in three different locations and three seasons, were determined using the Rapid Visco Analyser. Genotype, growth season, and growth location all affected the pasting behavior of rice flour. The amylose content of the same cultivar was significantly higher in the coolest growing season, resulting in RVA traces with lower peak viscosity and higher setback than samples with lower amylose content. When the same cultivar of rice was grown in different locations in the same season, there were no significant differences in the total starch, protein, lipid, and amylose content of the flour, but there were significant differences in the pasting behavior. This indicates that environmental as well as genetic factors influence the pasting behavior of rice flour. Flour from parboiled and quick-cooking rice did not paste and had low viscosities compared with unprocessed rice. Results from this study showed that the pasting behavior of rice flour was related to genotype and was influenced by environmental factors that brought about subtle changes in the grains that were not picked up by chemical analyses.



© 2004 American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.