Cooked high-amylose rices have slower digestibility, giving nutritional benefits, but inferior eating qualities. Molecular structural mechanisms for this inferior eating quality are found here using structural analysis by size-exclusion chromatography of both the parent starch and starch leached during cooking. All commonly-accepted sensory attributes of cooked rice were characterized by a trained human panel. Hardness, with the strongest negative correlation with panelist preference, was the dominant but not sole factor determining palatability. Hardness was controlled by the amounts of medium and long amylopectin chains and amylose in the starch, and by amylose content and amount of longer amylopectin chains in the leachate. This gives kn...
BACKGROUND: Characterization of starch properties and functionality can apply breeding program selec...
Not AvailableStarch, composed of amylose and amylopectin, greatly influences rice cooking and textur...
The hydrolysis of starch is a key factor for controlling the glycemic index (GI). Slow digestion pro...
Much is known about factors affecting rice texture, but the underlying molecular reasons for the obs...
Statistically and causally meaningful relationships are established between starch molecular structu...
The structure features (both molecular size and chain-length distribution) of leached starch during ...
Whole white rice is a major staple food for human consumption, with its starch digestion rate and lo...
The physicochemical properties of eleven Vietnamese rice starches with apparent amylose contents ran...
Cooked high-amylose rices, such as Australian wild rice (AWR) varieties, have slower digestion rates...
Starch molecular fine structure can have significant effects on pasting and thermal properties of ri...
Human diets containing greater resistant starch (RS) are associated with superior glycemic control. ...
Rice grain as the staple food for more than half the global population provides 20% of global human ...
The composition of amylopectin is the determinant of rice eating quality under certain threshold of ...
Autoclave cooking is used to produce “convenience” rice. In this study, autoclaving effects on senso...
Starch, composed of amylose and amylopectin, greatly influences rice cooking and textural quality, w...
BACKGROUND: Characterization of starch properties and functionality can apply breeding program selec...
Not AvailableStarch, composed of amylose and amylopectin, greatly influences rice cooking and textur...
The hydrolysis of starch is a key factor for controlling the glycemic index (GI). Slow digestion pro...
Much is known about factors affecting rice texture, but the underlying molecular reasons for the obs...
Statistically and causally meaningful relationships are established between starch molecular structu...
The structure features (both molecular size and chain-length distribution) of leached starch during ...
Whole white rice is a major staple food for human consumption, with its starch digestion rate and lo...
The physicochemical properties of eleven Vietnamese rice starches with apparent amylose contents ran...
Cooked high-amylose rices, such as Australian wild rice (AWR) varieties, have slower digestion rates...
Starch molecular fine structure can have significant effects on pasting and thermal properties of ri...
Human diets containing greater resistant starch (RS) are associated with superior glycemic control. ...
Rice grain as the staple food for more than half the global population provides 20% of global human ...
The composition of amylopectin is the determinant of rice eating quality under certain threshold of ...
Autoclave cooking is used to produce “convenience” rice. In this study, autoclaving effects on senso...
Starch, composed of amylose and amylopectin, greatly influences rice cooking and textural quality, w...
BACKGROUND: Characterization of starch properties and functionality can apply breeding program selec...
Not AvailableStarch, composed of amylose and amylopectin, greatly influences rice cooking and textur...
The hydrolysis of starch is a key factor for controlling the glycemic index (GI). Slow digestion pro...