|
 Rice: coming soon to a
whole-grain bread loaf near you. Click the image for more information about
it. |
Baking up a Whole-Grain Rice Bread
By Erin Peabody
December 27, 2004
Whole-grain foods are often touted for their health benefits. But for
people with wheat allergiesor those whose bodies cannot tolerate certain
proteins in wheat, rye and barleytrying to get ample servings of whole
grains in the diet is a real challenge.
Now, an Agricultural Research
Service food technologist has developed a whole-grain rice bread mix made
for home bread machines. Not only does the new rice bread qualify as whole
grain, providing the high-in-fiber bran fraction of the grain, it also boasts a
texture comparable to that of whole-wheat bread.
The product is especially valuable to the roughly two million
Americans with celiac disease, according to
Ranjit
Kadan, a food technologist at the ARS
Food
Processing and Sensory Quality Research Unit in New Orleans. These
individuals must avoid grain products made from wheat, rye and barley because
they contain the protein called gluten.
Developing a gluten-free, whole-grain bread that not only is tasty but
also has the right texture is a tough task, since gluten proteins offer a kind
of resiliency that's essential for making breads and other baked goods. But
Kadan experimented until he found the best rice cultivar and flour particle
size for the whole-grain bread.
For decades, rice has been considered one of the most easily digested
grains. In his home country of India, according to Kadan, rice has been
traditionally fed to those with chronic diet-related illnesses because of its
hypoallergenicity.
According to members of the Louisiana Celiac Sprue Association, the
whole-grain rice bread is superior to commercial rice breads currently on the
market. Plus it lacks other potentially allergenic ingredients like milk and
eggs.
Research is still ongoing to find the optimal bread machine conditions
for kneading and baking the whole-grain bread dough.
Kadan is currently seeking a commercial partner to help advance his
technology. But given the current interest in the product, the whole-grain rice
bread mix could be available as soon as next year.
ARS is the chief scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.