A Pressure Cook–Cool Process with Coconut Oil and Thai Herbs Enhances Resistant Starch, Antioxidant Activity, and Prebiotic Potential in Khao Dawk Mali 105 (KDML 105)
Vijitra Luang-In, Noppakun Pakdeenarong

TL;DR
This study shows that a pressure-cook-cool process with coconut oil and Thai herbs improves the health benefits of Thai rice by increasing resistant starch, antioxidants, and prebiotic potential.
Contribution
A novel pressure-cool process with coconut oil and Thai herbs is introduced to enhance rice's functional properties.
Findings
Pressure-cooked rice with coconut oil increased resistant starch content to 1.39 g per 100 g.
Rice treated with butterfly pea or pandan juice showed enhanced antioxidant activity.
All formulations supported probiotic growth, indicating prebiotic potential.
Abstract
Khao Dawk Mali 105 (KDML 105) is a widely consumed Thai staple, but conventional cooking yields rapidly digestible starch with limited functional health benefits. This study aimed to formulate pressure-cooked KDML 105 rice as a functional food using extra–virgin coconut oil, citric acid, and Thai herbs (butterfly pea flower or pandan leaf juice). Rice was pressure-cooked, cooled at room temperature, stored at 4 °C for 24 h, and frozen at −20 °C to promote resistant starch (RS) formation. RS content increased from 0.65 g 100 g−1 DW in control rice to 1.39 g 100 g−1 DW with coconut oil, and to 2.08 and 1.80 g 100 g−1 DW when citric acid plus pandan or butterfly pea juice were added, respectively. Coconut oil-treated samples showed higher antioxidant activity in DPPH and FRAP assays, while formulations with butterfly pea or pandan juices additionally reduced ABTS•+ radicals. Prebiotic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFood composition and properties · Probiotics and Fermented Foods · Food and Agricultural Sciences
