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1.
J Food Sci Technol ; 59(8): 3150-3157, 2022 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35872744

ABSTRACT

Development process of rice analogues by utilising the broken rice (BRF) and broken pigeonpea dhal (BPDF) flours together with water and sodium alginate as binding agent through extrusion was carried out. Two variable viz., BPDF (20, 30 and 40%) and moisture content (25, 30 and 35%) were controlled in the study to produce rice analogue resembling the raw rice. The optimum combination of flour mixture established for 30% BPDF and 30% water content with highest desirability of 0.855. The optimum combination had highest crude protein, carbohydrate and ash contents of 12.70, 71.72 and 0.99%, respectively. The colour values L*, a* and b* were found to be 68.30, 4.62 and 25.91, respectively. The pasting temperature and peak viscosity were 78.68 °C and 23,173.3 cP. The physico-chemical and pasting properties can be modified by altering the different constituents for specific quality requirements.

2.
J Food Sci Technol ; 59(9): 3474-3481, 2022 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35875226

ABSTRACT

Fortified rice analogues were developed utilising the broken-rice fortified with selected micronutrients like iron, folic acid and Vitamin A. The purpose of this study was to investigate the feasibility of fortifying rice analogues with micronutrients and retention after extrusion and cooking. Cold extruder operated at 55 rpm screw speed and 1.5 kg/h feed rate was used for the study. The composite flour prepared using broken-rice flour, sodium alginate (1%), water (30%) and micronutrient mix was extruded through rice shaped die at barrel temperature of 60 °C. The level of fortifying nutrient ready mix (FNRM) was statistically optimised based on retention of nutrients after extrusion and cooking. The retention results for iron was observed to be 73.3 to 91.3 per cent after cooking whereas folic acid and Vitamin A being sensitive to processing and culinary operations were 44.2 to 60.4 and 10.1 to 12.4 per cent, respectively. Statistical optimisation resulted 150 per cent of FNRM could supply nutrient levels nearing the standards with the desirability of 0.835. The production cost was calculated as Rs.53.50 per kg whereas, increase in the cost of raw rice mixed with fortified analogues @ 1:50 ratio was about Rs.1.00 per kg with benefit-cost ratio of 1.22:1.

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