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Rice is a popular dish enjoyed around the world. It pairs well with many food flavors and textures, making it a common side dish in many cultures' cuisines. It is eaten in large quantities in India and China, where it is an inexpensive staple. However, the downside to this delicious food is that it's not the healthiest choice – it's high in carbohydrates, as much as 200 calories per cup, and it quickly converts to sugar and body fat. It's not only bad for your weight but also your health. Rice consumption has been linked to higher incidences of diabetes.
By tweaking with how rice is cooked, Sri Lankan undergraduate student Sudhair James, supervised by his professor Dr. Pushparajah Thavarajah, at the College of Chemical Sciences, has found a way to reduce the calorie intake by half. The pair tested 8 different recipes and 38 types of rice to find the winning formula. They discovered that making two slight changes to the traditional boiling method of cooking rice can alter the way the body absorbs the carbohydrates.
Weigh the amount of rice you want to cook.
This might seem too simple however this method is valid when you understand food chemistry. The researchers explain that by adding coconut oil, a lipid, they changed the way the rice interacted with starch. Boiling rice creates a digestible starch, which is easy for the body to digest, and converts quickly to glucose, energy and body fat. With a lipid in the mix, the rice's composition changes and behaves more like a resistant starch. This healthier starch takes the body longer to process and isn't converted into glucose and fat. Chilling the rice immediately fortifies the resistant starch.
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