Effect of rice milling, washing, and cooking on reducing pesticide residues

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Abstract

The effects of milling, washing, and cooking on etofenprox, flubendiamide, and tebufenozide levels in brown and polished rice were investigated by HPLC using a UV detector. The reduction rates of etofenprox, flubendiamide, and tebufenozide after milling were 68.74–93.16%, 64.49–90.25%, and 69.74–92.58%, respectively, 11.64–41.44%, 31.36–65.37%, and 31.61–73.79%, respectively, after washing brown rice, and 30.85–82.08%, 52.13–83.05%, and 43.04–83.89%, respectively, after washing polished rice. The residue levels of the three pesticides in brown rice decreased after electric and pressure cooking by 56.49 and 54.41%, 75.80 and 73.42%, and 70.01 and 71.27%, respectively, and the corresponding levels in polished rice decreased after electric and pressure cooking by 85.58 and 85.82%, 86.70 and 87.06%, and 89.89 and 89.68%, respectively. In conclusion, various processing methods decrease the residual levels of etofenprox, flubendiamide, and tebufenozide in rice.

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APA

Lee, H., Cho, M., Park, M., Kim, M., Seo, J. A., Kim, D. H., … Im, M. H. (2024). Effect of rice milling, washing, and cooking on reducing pesticide residues. Food Science and Biotechnology, 33(3), 557–567. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10068-023-01345-7

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