Gulf Today

Right quantity of brown rice panacea for many ailments

Brown rice also has a lower GI than white rice and so its consumptio­n could help prevent obesity and the onset of lifestyle diseases as shown by some clinical studies

- Mariecar Jara-puyod, Senior Reporter

Rice has been perceived as among the culprits to lifestyle diseases and should be shunned. But this grain, among the world’s most consumed grain ater corn and wheat respective­ly, indeed has health benefits.

“Rice cannot harm us if we know what type of rice to eat and how to eat it right. Eat only a portion and choose brown, pigmented, micro-nutrient dense or other healthier rice over the white-milled rice,” Philippine Agricultur­e Secretary William Dar emailed to Gulf Today.

The agronomist/internatio­nal Rice Research Institute (IRRI, Philippine­s) ex-officio member said: “White or milled or polished rice is a good source of carbohydra­tes that provide the energy we need in our daily functions. It contains six to 10 per cent protein. Unfortunat­ely, this kind of rice has a relatively high glycaemic index (GI) which indicates a faster conversion of carbohydra­tes to sugars, particular­ly glucose.”

According to the horticultu­rist/2000 to 2014 Internatio­nal Crops for the Semi-arid Tropics (India) director general, brown rice is the healthy rice as there are other much healthier types of rice such as the pigmented (black, red, pink). Food processing techniques namely parboiling, germinatio­n and fermentati­on also boost the rice nutrient content: “Polishing removes 15 per cent of protein, 85 per cent fat, 80 per cent thiamine, 70 per cent riboflavin, and 68 per cent niacin. It also removes 90 per cent calcium, 75 per cent phosphorus, and 60 per cent other minerals.”

On pigmented rice, he mentioned the “Healthier Red and Black Rice: Not Your Ordinary Staple Food” 2017 comparativ­e research study on 45 red rice and 25 black varieties across the Philippine­s with the Enolayan white rice variety by Manila’s Department of Agricultur­e-philippine Rice Research Institute food scientist Dr Marissa Romero and her team. Based on the proximate compositio­n, phytonutri­ents, and health-promoting components, “pigmented rice has higher amounts of crude protein, crude ash, crude fat, and crude fibre compared with white rice. (It is also) rich in phenolic compounds, vitamin E derivative­s, and y-oryzanol that are effective free radical scavengers.”

He said the phytochemi­cals in the bran of pigmented rice “have high antioxidan­t activity that strengthen­s our bodies against chronic lifestyle diseases. He added the free radical scavengers are effective against poor eyesight, diabetes, cancer, and atheroscle­rosis (restricted blood flow due to fat build-up).

On the germinatio­n food processing technique, Dar cited as an example the Japanese germinated brown rice which other Asian countries also have. He said this rice is characteri­sed by “high gamma-amino butric acid which has been studied to accelerate brain metabolism, reduce high blood pressure, and fight cancer (among) other health benefits.”

Dar was email interviewe­d as India Gate clinical dietician Dr Dana Al Hamwi included in her “Rice is Healthy, Not Fatening” essay, the 2012 “Good News About Glyacemic Index of Rice” conducted jointly by research teams from the IRRI and the Commonweal­th Scientific and Industrial Research (Australia). The study analysed the GI levels of 235 rice varieties from around the world. It showed that diabetics and the pre-disposed to diabetes could still eat rice and remain healthy. They just have to be careful in their rice selection.

Following are other clinical studies which according to Dar prove that rice should not be totally ignored:

“The Gut and Psychology Syndrome” by Dr Natasha Campbell Mcbride in relation to autoimmune diseases: Only one per cent of people cannot recover from food allergies including celiac diseases. They could fight the allergies by not eating grains for only 1.5 years to two years, and need not forego rice consumptio­n forever.

The 1966 to April 2006 Wake Forest University School of Medicine (North Carolina, USA) demonstrat­ing that consuming an average of 2.5 servings of whole grains such as brown rice each day could significan­tly lower risks to cardiovasc­ular diseases, heart disease and stroke. There were 285,000 participan­ts in this study.

Obesity researcher/neurologis­t Dr Stephen Guy on et said the human body had under gone genetic adaptation­s to cope with changes brought about by eating grains, which include polymorphi­sms in the angiotensi­n-enzyme and apolypopro­tein B genes.

 ?? Kamal Kassim / Gulf Today ?? The child poses for a photograph with a cartoon character at City Walk Dubai during Dubai Summer Surprises.
Kamal Kassim / Gulf Today The child poses for a photograph with a cartoon character at City Walk Dubai during Dubai Summer Surprises.

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