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Pasta and Cereal Grains. Chapter 14. Consumption. USDA disappearance data shows upward trend in use of grains Still less than in early 1900 Consumption of whole grains is short of dietary recommendations. Structure and Composition. Bran 5% of kernel High fiber and mineral ash
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Pasta and Cereal Grains Chapter 14
Consumption • USDA disappearance data shows upward trend in use of grains • Still less than in early 1900 • Consumption of whole grains is short of dietary recommendations
Structure and Composition • Bran • 5% of kernel • High fiber and mineral ash • Contains some fat • Endosperm • 83% of kernel • High starch • Contains protein • Very low vitamin, mineral, and fat content • Germ • 2-3% of kernel • Rich in fat, protein, ash, and vitamins
Nutritive Value • Grains provide majority of food calories and about half of protein for world population • Protein – incomplete protein source • Starch • Fiber • Vitamins and minerals • Low in fat
Refined and Enriched Grains • Refined flours and cereals made from endosperm • Therefore are enriched • Enriched flour • B vitamins and iron added • 1996 – folic acid addition mandated
Whole Grains • Cereal grains with endosperm, germ, and bran present in same relative proportions as found in nature • Whole grain consumption associated with reduced risk of • Cancer • Cardiovascular heart disease • Diabetes • Obesity
Common Cereal Grains • Wheat • Corn • Rice • Oats • Rye • Barley
Wheat • Classes of wheat based on • Winter or spring • When planted – fall or in spring • Hard or soft • Hard are higher in protein • Better for bread making • Color • Red or white
Forms of Wheat • Often ground into flour • Other forms • Wheat berry • Bulgur • Cracked wheat • Wheat germ • Wheat bran • Farina
Corn • Corn used as a grain is different than corn cooked as a vegetable • Dent or field corn • Forms of corn • Hominy • Hominy grits • Fine grits • Corn meal • Corn flours
Rice • Many varieties of rice are grown • Classified as • Long grain • Medium grain • Short grain • Also specialty rice varieties • Jasmine, basmati, Arborio, waxy rice
Rice Processing • Brown rice • White polished • Enriched • Converted or parboiled • Instant • Rice flour • Rice bran
Oats • Processing • Most of outer hull removed • Most of germ and bran remain • Groats • Quick rolled oats • Old-fashioned rolled oats • Source of beta-glucan in diet
Additional Grains • Rye • Much used as flour • Barley • Usually pearled barley • Wild rice • Hulled grain of reedlike water plant • Buckwheat • Seed of herbaceous plant
Additional Grains • Triticale • Hybrid produced by crossing what and rye • Kamut • High protein variety of wheat • Spelt • Predecessor of wheat • Quinoa • Small seed
Breakfast Cereals • Ready-to-eat • Puffed • Flaked • Granular • Shredded • Extruded • Economics of breakfast cereals • Cooking breakfast cereals
Cooking of Rice • White rice • Cook with amount of water that will be absorbed • Rice will increase 3X in volume • Several methods • Simmering range top • Double boiler • Oven • Microwave • Rice cookers
Cooking Rice • Brown rice • Must cook about twice as long as white rice • Precooked • Done quickly • Rice Pilaf • Brown rice in small amount of fat followed by cooking in water
Pasta • Pasta or alimentary paste • Made with semolinaflour made from durumwheat • Manufacture
Pasta Preparation • Add pasta to boiling water • 2-3 quarts of water per 8 ounces pasta (or 1 gallon water per 1 pound pasta) • Done when al dente • Increases by 2 – 2.5 times original volume