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DOI: 10.1094/CC-82-0228
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ARTICLE
Heat Treatments of Milled Rice and Properties of the Flours.
Toru Takahashi (1,2), Makoto Miura (3), Naganori Ohisa (1), Katsumi Mori
(1), and Shoichi Kobayashi (3). (1) Akita Research Institute of Food and
Brewing, 4-26, Sanuki, Arayamachi, Akita City, Akita, 010-1623, Japan. (2)
Corresponding author. Phone: +81-18-888-2004. Fax: +81-18-888-2008. E-mail: <toru@arif.pref.akita.jp> (3) Faculty of Agriculture, Iwate University, 3-18-8,
Ueda, Morioka City, Iwate, 020-8551, Japan. Cereal Chem. 82(2):228-232. Accepted
November 23, 2004. Copyright 2005 American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.
The effects of autoclave and oven treatments on the gelatinization of rice flour
and on the rheological characteristics of its pastes were studied by
differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), rapid viscoanalysis (RVA), and
rotational viscometry. Flours from autoclave-treated rice (ATR) and oven-treated
rice (OTR) were prepared, respectively, by heating at 120°C for 60 min and
160°C for 60 min followed by drying (ATR sample), and grinding at 2.2–12.9%
moisture content. The rice flour dispersions were adjusted between pH 6.3 and
2.8 using 0.2M citrate buffer. The retort processing of rice flour in
water pastes were done at 120°C for 20 min either once or twice. The
gelatinization peak temperature (PT and T(o)) and the peak temperature
corresponding to the amylose-lipid complexes (T(p3)) of ATR increased at
pH 6.3 and 2.8 compared with OTR and UTR flour. This indicates that the internal
structures of the starch granules in ATR became more stable to heat and acid,
even though the damaged starch content of ATR was 23% compared with 16 and 7%,
respectively, for untreated rice flour (UTR) and OTR. The OTR flour pastes
showed a gel-like behavior at pH 4.5 after retort processing in water at 120°C
for 20 min; however, the ATR mixture behaved more like a liquid paste. Decreases
in the reducing sugar content of OTR and ATR pastes suggested that enzymes in
the heat-treated rice were denatured, which retarded the hydrolysis of glucose
chains and the rupture of starch granules during pasting.
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