October 31, 2017

October 30, 2017

The color of rice


















… is not always white! Rice may be green, red, brown, purple or black.

Rice has been domesticated in Asia more than 8000 years ago and its importance as a staple food is even deep-seated in Chinese everyday-language, where the word for “cooked rice” (/fàn) is part of all meals: breakfast (早饭/zǎofàn) , lunch (午饭/wǔfàn) and dinner (晚饭/wǎnfàn).

Rice is usually cultivated on flooded fields, which makes rice production more efficient because it controls weed growth and pests. Although rice can also be grown without flooding the fields, the cultivation of 1 kg rice therefore normally requires ~1400 liters of water on average or even more (such as ~2500-5000 liters per kg rice).

Green rice, as it is popular in Vietnam, stems from sticky rice that is still immature. The harvesting and preparation process of green sticky rice (Cốm) is done in autumn and it is a laborious and sophisticated process. It is harvested by hand at a delicately chosen time point to catch exactly the right degree of maturity. Furthermore, it is said to be best only within the first 24 hours after harvesting. Green rice, which has a slightly sweet taste, is then either eaten plain or it is used to prepare desserts (e.g. cakes, sweet soup) or as an ingredient in other dishes.

Red, black/purple and brown rice are all whole grain rice sorts, which have differently colored husks. When cooked, the black color of black rice turns into a dark purple.
Although fibers are generally healthy, the fibers in whole grain rice bear a potential health risk because rice can accumulate arsenic more readily than other plants from its environment and it is even more enriched in the husks. Therefore white rice may have reduced arsenic levels compared to whole grain rice. Besides testing rice for arsenic to allow selection of rice with low arsenic levels for consumption, the risks from arsenic in rice can be lowered by soaking rice in lots of water that is poured away after soaking or by cooking rice in a large amount of water.  

Because black rice was reserved for royals in Ancient China, it is also called “forbidden rice” or “emperor’s rice”. It is more nutritious than many other sorts of rice and therefore was supposed to prolong the emperor’s life.
Rice with a red color can either be rice with a reddish husk or it may be rice that has been cultivated with a particular mold that causes the red color of “red yeast rice”, a type of fermented rice that is used as a food colorant and which also is used in Traditional Chinese medicine.

米饭 / mǐfàn / rice



Sources and further reading:

Black Rice Research, History and Development, Kushwaha Ujjawal, Springer International Publishing,2016,  eBook ISBN 978-3-319-30153-2, ISBN 978-3-319-30153-2




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