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Publication no. C- 1997-1029-01R
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ARTICLE
Effect of Rice Kernel Thickness on Degree of Milling and Associated
Optical Measurements.
H. Chen and T. J. Siebenmorgen (1,2).
(1) Research associate and professor, respectively, Dept. of Biological
and Agricultural Engineering, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville,
AR. Published with the approval of the Director, Agricultural
Experiment Station, University of Arkansas. (2) Corresponding
author: E-mail: <tsiebenm@saturn.uark.edu> Cereal Chem.
74(6):821-825. Accepted August 6, 1997. Copyright 1997 by the
American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.
Three cultivars of long-grain rice were milled to three degree
of milling (DOM) levels. Inverse linear relationships were established
between surface fat concentration (SFC) and Satake milling meter
(MM1B) optical DOM measurement values, including whiteness, transparency,
and DOM, for the unfractionated head rice within each cultivar.
Milled bulk rice for each cultivar was subsequently separated
into thickness fractions. Effects of milled rice kernel thickness
on SFC and optical DOM measurements were investigated. For a given
DOM level, SFC decreased with increasing milled rice kernel thickness
up to a thickness of 1.67 mm, after which it remained constant.
As the overall DOM level increased, the difference in DOM between
thin kernels and thick kernels lessened, implying that thin kernels
were milled at a greater bran removal rate than thick kernels.
Milled rice kernel thickness significantly (at the 0.05 significance
level) affected MM1B whiteness and MM1B transparency in two of
the cultivars because of the predominant effects of the thinner
kernel fractions. Within each cultivar, MM1B DOM was not significantly
influenced by milled rice kernel thickness.
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