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Physicochemical Properties and In Vitro Starch Digestibility of Cooked Rice from Commercially Available Cultivars in Canada

July 2010 Volume 87 Number 4
Pages 297 — 304
Hyun-Jung Chung,1,2 Qiang Liu,1,3 Ruilin Huang,4 Yulong Yin,4 and Aike Li5

Guelph Food Research Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, 93 Stone Road West, Guelph, Onatrio, N1G 5C9, Canada. Graduate School of Life and Biotechnology, Korea University, S-1 Anam-dong, Sungbak-Ku, Seoul 136-701, South Korea. Corresponding author. Phone: 519-780-8030. Fax: 519-829-2600. E-mail address: qiang.liu@agr.gc.ca Institute of Subtropical Agriculture, The Chinese Academy of Science, Changsha, Hunan, China. Feed Research Institute, Academy of State Administration of Grain, No. 11, Baiwanzhuang Avenue, Beijing 100037, China.


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Accepted March 31, 2010.
ABSTRACT

The influence of amylose content, cooking, and storage on starch structure, thermal behaviors, pasting properties, and rapidly digestible starch (RDS), slowly digestible starch (SDS), and resistant starch (RS) in different commercial rice cultivars was investigated. Long grain rice with high-amylose content had a higher gelatinization temperature and a lower gelatinization enthalpy than the other rice cultivars with intermediate amylose content (Arborio and Calrose) and waxy type (glutinous). The intensity ratio of 1047/1022 cm–1 determined by Fourier Transform Infrared (FT-IR), which indicated the ordered structure in starch granules, was the highest in glutinous and the lowest in long grain. Results from Rapid ViscoAnalyser (RVA) showed that the rice cultivar with higher amylose content had lower peak viscosity and breakdown, but higher pasting temperature, setback, and final viscosity. The RDS content was 28.1, 38.6, 41.5, and 57.5% in long grain, Arborio, Calrose, and glutinous rice, respectively, which was inversely related to amylose content. However, the SDS and RS contents were positively correlated with amylose content. During storage of cooked rice, long grain showed a continuous increase in pasting viscosity, while glutinous exhibited the sharp cold-water swelling peak. The retrogradation rate was greater in rice cultivars with high amylose content. The ratio of 1047/1022 cm–1 was substantially decreased by cooking and then increased during storage of cooked rice due to the crystalline structure, newly formed by retrogradation. Storage of cooked rice decreased RDS content and increased SDS content in all rice cultivars. However, no increase in RS content during storage was observed. The enthalpy for retrogradation and the intensity ratio 1047/1022 cm–1 during storage were correlated negatively with RDS and positively with SDS (P ≤ 0.01).



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