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Red rice

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Red rice

Red rice is rice that is colored red due to natural anthocyanin content. It is usually eaten unpolished or partially polished, and has a red bran layer, rather than the more common pale brown. Red rice has a nutty flavor. It has the highest nutritional value[quantify] among rices eaten with the bran intact.[citation needed]

Health claims

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Some strains of red rice, when eaten dehusked (analogous to ordinary brown rice), has a lower glycemic index compared to white rice (Basmati and Jasmine), which is polished. However, research also indicates that polishing red rice removes this difference.[1]

Red rice contains higher antioxidant levels compared to white rice,[2] though what they actually do in the human body is unclear.

Dehusked red rice is also a richer source of iron, magnesium, calcium and zinc than white rice.[3] The same can be said of ordinary brown rice.[4]

Varieties

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Varieties of red rice include:

  • Rakthashali, a rare rice variety of Indian rice, often mentioned in Ayurveda and Hinduism
  • Oryza glaberrima, also known as African red rice
  • Oryza longistaminata, also known as red rice
  • Oryza punctata, also known as red rice
  • Oryza rufipogon, also known as wild rice and red rice
  • Red rice, also known as weedy rice, a low-yielding rice variety that persists as a weed in fields of better-quality rice
  • Thai Red Cargo rice, a non-glutinous long grain rice variety
  • Bhutanese red rice, a medium-grain rice grown in the Kingdom of Bhutan in the eastern Himalayas
  • Camargue red rice, a relatively new variety of rice cultivated in the wetlands of the Camargue region of southern France
  • Matta rice Kerala Matta rice, also known as Rosematta rice, Palakkadan Matta rice, Kerala Red rice, and Red parboiled rice, is an indigenous variety of rice grown in Palakkad District of Kerala. It is popular in Kerala and Sri Lanka, where it is used for idlies and appams, and eaten plain.Matta rice is mostly eaten in Kerala and in Dakshina Kannada and Udupi district of Karnataka state, India. Some natives of these region settled elsewhere also prefer Matta rice as staple food.
  • Ulikan or mini-angan, heirloom red rice from Ifugao and Kalinga, Philippines
  • Arroz da terra, an heirloom red rice cultivated in Northeastern Brazil (States of Rio Grande do Norte and Paraíba) since the 16th century.[5]
  • Malaysia red rice varieties are Udang Besar, Udang Halus, Katek Merah, Silah Merah, MRQ98, MRQ99, MRQ 100 and UKMRC-9. UKMRC-9 is the new red rice varieties in Malaysia, developed through plant breeding program.

Dishes

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Se, C.H.; Chuah, K.A.; Mishra, A.; Wickneswari, R. (2016). "Evaluating crossbred red rice variants for postprandial glucometabolic responses: A comparison with commercial varieties". Nutrients. 8 (5): 308. doi:10.3390/nu8050308. PMC 4882720. PMID 27213446.
  2. ^ Abdullah, A.; Muhammad, K. & Wickneswari, R. (2013). "New red rice transgressive variants with high antioxidant capacity". International Food Research Journal. 20 (3): 1497–1501.
  3. ^ Raghuvanshi, R.S.; Dutta, A.; Tewari, G. & Suri, S. (2017). "Qualitative characteristics of red rice and white rice procured from local market of Uttarakhand: a comparative study". Journal of Rice Research. 10 (1): 49–53.
  4. ^ "Rice, brown, long grain, unenriched, raw". FoodData Central.
  5. ^ "Lançada primeira cultivar de arroz vermelho desenvolvida no Brasil".
  6. ^ "Arrack", Wikipedia, 2023-08-07, retrieved 2023-08-14