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Puffed rice

Puffed rice and popped rice (or pop rice) are types of puffed grain made from rice commonly eaten in the traditional cuisines of Southeast Asia, East Asia, and South Asia. It has also been produced commercially in the West since 1904 and is popular in breakfast cereals and other snack foods.

Puffed rice in a packet

Traditional methods to puff or pop rice include frying in oil or salt. Western commercial puffed rice is usually made by heating rice kernels under high pressure in the presence of steam, though the method of manufacture varies widely. They are either eaten as loose grains or made into puffed rice cakes.

Description edit

While the terms "puffed rice" and "popped rice" are used interchangeably, they are properly different processes. Puffed rice refers to pre-gelatinized rice grains (either by being parboiled, boiled, or soaked) that are puffed by the rapid expansion of steam upon cooking. Puffed rice retains the shape of the rice grain, but is much larger. Popped rice, on the other hand, refers to rice grains where the hull or the bran is intact. When cooked, the kernel explodes through the hard outer covering due to heating. Popped rice has an irregular shape similar to popcorn. There are various methods, both modern and traditional, for making puffed and popped rice.[1]

Traditional versions by region edit

East Asia edit

Puffed rice or other grains are occasionally found as street food in China (called "mixiang" 米香), Taiwan (called "bí-phang" 米芳), Korea (called "ppeong twigi" 뻥튀기), and Japan (called "pon gashi" ポン菓子), where hawkers implement the puffing process using an integrated pushcart/puffer featuring a rotating steel pressure chamber heated over an open flame. The great booming sound produced by the release of pressure serves as advertising.

Mainland China edit

 
Puffed rice cakes in China

The earliest mention of puffed rice in Mainland China is in Zhejiang Province, from a book by Fan Chengda written in the Song Dynasty (c. 1100). It was part of the rituals of the Spring Festival and was made in large cooking pots known as (釜) which was heated with woodfire. Puffed rice, known as bào chǎo mǐ huā lou (爆炒米花), is still a traditional street food in Shanghai where it is made by frying rice in oil and sugar.[2]

Japan edit

 
Various types of kaminari-okoshi from Japan

Traditional puffed rice cakes in Japanese cuisine are known as kaminari-okoshi (雷粔籹) 'thunder cakes' or simply okoshi (おこし). In Edo Japan, the name okoshi was related to good luck, as the similar word okosu means to establish or set up.[3] It is made by deep-frying sun-dried rice grains until they pop. It is then mixed with syrup (and other ingredients like peanuts or sesame seeds), pressed into trays, and dried. They are cut up into squarish or rectangular blocks before being sold. Traditional okoshi boxes feature images of Raijin, the Japanese god of thunder and lightning. Its earliest attestation was during the middle of the Edo Period, when it was sold as a snack outside the Sensō-ji of Asakusa, Tokyo. Modern okoshi can use a variety of other ingredients and flavors and are usually factory-made.[4]

Another type of Japanese puffed rice snack is ninjin (にんじん), which are loose puffed rice grains. Its name literally means "carrot" because it is sold in a carrot-shaped cone.[5]

Puffed rice is also used in genmaicha (玄米茶) 'brown rice tea', a traditional Japanese tea beverage consisting of green tea mixed with roasted puffed brown rice.[6]

Taiwan edit

In Taiwan, puffed rice is known as Bí-phang or pōng-bí-phang (磅米芳, the word "pōng" is the sound of the explosion when the pressure furnace is opened) in Taiwanese, Mi-hsiang (米香) in Mandarin.

Korea edit

 
Gangjeong from South Korea coated with puffed rice

In Korea, puffed rice is known as twibap (튀밥) and is used to make yeot-gangjeong or to coat gangjeong.[7]

Korea also has a tea beverage made with puffed rice called hyeonmi-nokcha (현미녹차, literally "brown rice green tea") made with green tea and roasted puffed brown rice.

Southeast Asia edit

Philippines edit

 
Ampaw from the Philippines

In Filipino cuisine, traditional puffed rice is known as ampaw or ampao (a term which also became applied to popcorn). It is made with cooked white rice (usually leftovers). It is dried in the sun for around four hours. They are then fried in hot oil to make them puff up. The oil is drained thoroughly after frying. The sugar glazing is cooked separately using muscovado sugar or molasses (or corn syrup), salt, butter, and vinegar or calamansi juice. The glazing is poured onto the puffed rice and mixed until the grains are evenly coated. It is then allowed to cool and shaped into the desired form before it fully hardens. They are usually cut into square or rectangular blocks or molded into balls.[8][9][10]

Thailand edit

In Thai cuisine, a traditional popped rice snack is krayasaat (กระยาสารท). It is associated with the Buddhist Saat festival which is celebrated in autumn. It can be made with regular rice or glutinous rice. It is roasted directly in a dry pan like popcorn until it pops. It is mixed with caramelized palm sugar, coconut milk, peanuts, sesame seeds, and khao mao (pounded green rice).[11]

Malaysia edit

In Malay cuisine, traditional puffed rice is known as bepang pulut especially in Terengganu state. Glutinous rice is dried under sunlight and cooked with palm sugar. It is different from regular bepang which uses ground nuts instead of glutinous rice. Bepang pulut is famous as a gift from the host to guests at a wedding ceremony.

South Asia edit

Nepal

Puffed Rice is a popular snack in Nepal which is known as "Bhuja"-भुजा. It is used in a wide variety of recipes from simply eating it directly to making other dishes. Some people also refer to rice as bhuja which can be a little confusing.

India edit

 
Uggani and bajji (steamed puffed rice and fritters), a typical breakfast of Rayalaseema.
 
Puffed rice with Telebhaja (Bengali fritters), and potato fries in West Bengal.

In India, puffed rice is known as muri. Other regional names include parmal, mandakki, puri, mudhi, murmura, murmuri, borugulu, maramaralu in Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and pori in Tamil Nadu. It is a staple food in Odisha and West Bengal.[12]

It has been made since ancient times using a technique called hot salt frying in which parboiled rice (i.e. steamed and then dried) is puffed by preheated salt.[13] Salt is heated in a pan until it is hot enough to pop rice added to it within seconds. Parboiled or dried pre-cooked rice is added to the heated contents of the pan and stirred. Puffing starts almost immediately and completes in less than a minute and the rice is scooped out by a sieve.

Puffed rice is an ingredient of bhel puri, a popular Indian chaat (snack). It is offered to Hindu gods and goddesses in all pujas in the southern Indian states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu. Pilgrims of Sabarimala often pack puffed rice in their travel pouch along with jaggery meant to be offered to Ayyappan. Pori has been mentioned in various Tamil texts as an offering to Hindu deities. Offerings of pori and jaggery made to Ganesha are mentioned in the Tiruppukal, a 15th-century anthology of Tamil religious songs, written by Tamil poet Arunagirinathar. In Gujarati cuisine it is called 'mamra' and is often used to make a dry snack by shallow frying in oil with spices or made into sweet balls using jaggery and ghee.

In Telangana, as a snack typically given to children, puffed rice or borugulu is made into a ball with jaggery sugar syrup or bellam pakam.

In Karnataka, puffed rice is mixed with carrots, tomatoes, spices and coriander leaves to make churumuri, a popular evening snack.

Under the initiative of Make in India, the Central Government of India decided that mudhi from Odisha would be part of Indian traditional food among 12 traditional dishes from different states that would be launched globally.[14][12]

In Mithila and Bengal area, puffed rice is had with "kachari"-fried potato/onion chops, fried fish or with mutton curry. "Jhal-muri" and "Murhi-Bhuja" are also very popular snacks in this area. In Madhya Pradesh, this is referred to as Parmal and it is very often eaten with Sev as a snack and also used in Bhel. In some areas it is also known as laai and dishes made from it are called sweet laai, laai poha etc.

Bangladesh edit

Puffed Rice is a popular snack in Bangladesh. Mostly used to make Jhalmuri, it is the most common and cheapest snack in Bangladesh. They use the same ancient method as India to prepare the puffed rice. This snack can be found anywhere in Bangladesh. In Old Dhaka, the jhalmuri -wala (Jhalmuri-seller) is still often seen dressed in colourful clothes, wearing anklet bells and calling out to the residents. Puffed rice is also mixed with jaggery and shaped into a rounded ball snack called murir moa.

Rest of the world edit

Czech Republic and Slovakia edit

In 1960s Czechoslovakia, state firm Vitana was the first to begin the production of 'expanded rice', as plain flavoured or sweetened snack.[15] The product became popular under the names burizony (Czech: burisony) or arizonky. These continue to be produced to this day in Pardubice[16] or Sereď.[17]

Modern commercial production edit

Puffed rice cereal edit

 
A bowl of Rice Krispies

Puffed rice is formed by the reaction of both starch and moisture when heated within the shell of the grain. Unlike corn, rice kernels are naturally lacking in moisture and must first be conditioned with steam. Puffed rice can be created by heating the steam-conditioned kernels either with oil or in an oven. Rice puffed in this way is crisp, and known as "crisped rice". Oven-crisped rice is used to produce the Rice Krispies breakfast cereal as well as the crisped rice used in Lion Bars, Nestlé Crunch, Krackel, and similar chocolate bars.[18] Though not as dramatic a change when compared to popcorn, the process and end result are the same.[18]

Another method of puffing rice is "gun puffing", where the grain is conditioned to the correct level of moisture and pressurized to around 200 psi (1,400 kPa). When the pressure is suddenly released, the pressure stored inside the kernel causes it to puff out. This method produces a puffed rice which is spongy in texture.[18]

Rice can also be puffed by making a rice dough, and extruding small pellets which are then rapidly heated. The moisture in the dough flash boils and puffs the rice up. A cereal such as Cap'n Crunch is extruded, cooked, cut, pressurized, puffed and dried in a continuous process.[18]

The method of modern industrial puffed rice production is attributed to American inventor Alexander P. Anderson, who stumbled across puffing while trying to ascertain the water content of a single granule of starch, introduced the first puffing machine at the World's Fair in Saint Louis, Missouri, in 1904. His eight "guns" that puffed grains for Fair goers were dubbed "The Eighth Wonder of the World" by an advertising billboard poster. Once the puffing principle, technique and technology had been discovered by Anderson, the competition to puff ready-to-eat American breakfast cereal took over the economy of Battle Creek, Michigan, with Kellogg's and Quaker Oats being two memorable and still active names to endure through the early puffing frenzy.

In the United States and Europe, puffed rice is served with milk as a breakfast cereal, a popular brand of this is Rice Krispies. Some chocolate bars, such as the Nestlé Crunch, include puffed rice, and puffed rice cakes are sold as low-calorie snacks.

American puffed rice cakes edit

 
American puffed rice cakes

In the United States, a flat disk of puffed rice was sold as "rice cakes" by the company Chico-San in the 1970s. These "rice cakes" were marketed as low-calorie "saucers" meant to be eaten with toppings like cottage cheese, jelly, and fruit. Chico-San was eventually acquired by Heinz in 1984, at which time the Quaker Oats Company also developed their own "rice cake" marketed as a "low-carb alternative to bread". "Rice cakes" became a fad diet in the 1980s and 1990s in the United States. In 1993, Quaker Oats Company also acquired Chico-San, their biggest competitor, from Heinz. "Rice cakes" are also produced by other companies including Lundberg Family Farms, Hain Celestial Group, and Whole Foods.[19][20][21]

These puffed "rice cakes" are typically sold plain or blandly-seasoned, with the most popular flavor being lightly salted. But they are also sold in flavored versions, including caramel, chocolate, cinnamon toast. They are popularly disk-shaped, but can also be sold as squares.[19]

In the Netherlands, disk-shaped puffed rice cakes are commonly sold in cylindrical packaging in supermarkets.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Juliano, Bienvenido O. (1993). Rice in human nutrition. International Rice Research Institute, FAO.
  2. ^ "Bào Chǎo Mǐ Huā – Puffed Rice – 爆炒米花". Movable Feasts. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Okoshi, Osaka's confectionary". Kansai Odyssey. 2 May 2018. Retrieved 24 May 2021.
  4. ^ "Okoshi". tasteatlas. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  5. ^ "Ninjin: Classic Puffed Rice Snack in Carrot-like Packaging". Tomo. 21 February 2019. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-02-09. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  7. ^ . Standard Korean Language Dictionary (in Korean). National Institute of Korean Language. Archived from the original on 5 August 2017. Retrieved 5 August 2017.
  8. ^ "Ampaw (Puffed Rice)". Mama's Guid Recipes. 2 August 2017. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  9. ^ "Filipino traditional snack: AMPAO (dried rice with sugar and lemon)". Sharsy. 8 April 2014. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  10. ^ "Puffed Rice (Ampaw)". Atbp.ph. 24 March 2017. Retrieved 28 March 2019.
  11. ^ "Vegan Thai Kanom (Thai Desserts)". MessyVeganCook. 13 May 2019. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  12. ^ a b "Mudhi to be a part of global 'Make in India' campaign | Bhubaneswar News - Times of India". The Times of India. 2 August 2015.
  13. ^ Church, A. H. (1886). Food-Grains in India. Chapman and Hall. pp. 73-75.
  14. ^ . www.telegraphindia.com. Archived from the original on 2015-08-07.
  15. ^ Urc, Rudolf (2014). "Vzdialené roky, blízke témy" (PDF). film.sk. Retrieved 21 August 2021.
  16. ^ "Naše výrobky - KÁVOVINY". www.kavoviny.cz. Retrieved 2021-08-21.
  17. ^ "B.M. Kávoviny | Ryžové burizony". kavoviny.sk. Retrieved 2021-08-21.
  18. ^ a b c d "What is a Rice Krispy? What is it made out of and how do they make it?". HowStuffWorks. June 2, 2000.
  19. ^ a b Houck, Brenna (17 September 2020). "The Rise and Fall of the Quaker Rice Cake, America's One-Time Favorite Health Snack". Eater. Retrieved 27 May 2023.
  20. ^ "Quaker Buys Chico-San from Heinz to Puff Up Rice Cake Business". AP News. 19 May 1993. Retrieved 27 May 2023.
  21. ^ Varkonyi, Charlyne (19 June 1986). "Rice takes the cake when it comes to Low-Calorie, High-Fiber Eating". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 27 May 2023.

puffed, rice, crispy, rice, redirects, here, confused, with, crunchy, rice, popped, rice, rice, types, puffed, grain, made, from, rice, commonly, eaten, traditional, cuisines, southeast, asia, east, asia, south, asia, also, been, produced, commercially, west, . Crispy rice redirects here Not to be confused with Crunchy rice Puffed rice and popped rice or pop rice are types of puffed grain made from rice commonly eaten in the traditional cuisines of Southeast Asia East Asia and South Asia It has also been produced commercially in the West since 1904 and is popular in breakfast cereals and other snack foods Puffed rice in a packetTraditional methods to puff or pop rice include frying in oil or salt Western commercial puffed rice is usually made by heating rice kernels under high pressure in the presence of steam though the method of manufacture varies widely They are either eaten as loose grains or made into puffed rice cakes Contents 1 Description 2 Traditional versions by region 2 1 East Asia 2 1 1 Mainland China 2 1 2 Japan 2 1 3 Taiwan 2 1 4 Korea 2 2 Southeast Asia 2 2 1 Philippines 2 2 2 Thailand 2 2 3 Malaysia 2 3 South Asia 2 3 1 India 2 3 2 Bangladesh 2 4 Rest of the world 2 4 1 Czech Republic and Slovakia 3 Modern commercial production 3 1 Puffed rice cereal 3 2 American puffed rice cakes 4 See also 5 ReferencesDescription editWhile the terms puffed rice and popped rice are used interchangeably they are properly different processes Puffed rice refers to pre gelatinized rice grains either by being parboiled boiled or soaked that are puffed by the rapid expansion of steam upon cooking Puffed rice retains the shape of the rice grain but is much larger Popped rice on the other hand refers to rice grains where the hull or the bran is intact When cooked the kernel explodes through the hard outer covering due to heating Popped rice has an irregular shape similar to popcorn There are various methods both modern and traditional for making puffed and popped rice 1 Traditional versions by region editEast Asia edit Puffed rice or other grains are occasionally found as street food in China called mixiang 米香 Taiwan called bi phang 米芳 Korea called ppeong twigi 뻥튀기 and Japan called pon gashi ポン菓子 where hawkers implement the puffing process using an integrated pushcart puffer featuring a rotating steel pressure chamber heated over an open flame The great booming sound produced by the release of pressure serves as advertising Mainland China edit nbsp Puffed rice cakes in ChinaThe earliest mention of puffed rice in Mainland China is in Zhejiang Province from a book by Fan Chengda written in the Song Dynasty c 1100 It was part of the rituals of the Spring Festival and was made in large cooking pots known as fǔ 釜 which was heated with woodfire Puffed rice known as bao chǎo mǐ hua lou 爆炒米花 is still a traditional street food in Shanghai where it is made by frying rice in oil and sugar 2 Japan edit nbsp Various types of kaminari okoshi from JapanTraditional puffed rice cakes in Japanese cuisine are known as kaminari okoshi 雷粔籹 thunder cakes or simply okoshi おこし In Edo Japan the name okoshi was related to good luck as the similar word okosu means to establish or set up 3 It is made by deep frying sun dried rice grains until they pop It is then mixed with syrup and other ingredients like peanuts or sesame seeds pressed into trays and dried They are cut up into squarish or rectangular blocks before being sold Traditional okoshi boxes feature images of Raijin the Japanese god of thunder and lightning Its earliest attestation was during the middle of the Edo Period when it was sold as a snack outside the Sensō ji of Asakusa Tokyo Modern okoshi can use a variety of other ingredients and flavors and are usually factory made 4 Another type of Japanese puffed rice snack is ninjin にんじん which are loose puffed rice grains Its name literally means carrot because it is sold in a carrot shaped cone 5 Puffed rice is also used in genmaicha 玄米茶 brown rice tea a traditional Japanese tea beverage consisting of green tea mixed with roasted puffed brown rice 6 Taiwan edit In Taiwan puffed rice is known as Bi phang or pōng bi phang 磅米芳 the word pōng is the sound of the explosion when the pressure furnace is opened in Taiwanese Mi hsiang 米香 in Mandarin Korea edit nbsp Gangjeong from South Korea coated with puffed riceIn Korea puffed rice is known as twibap 튀밥 and is used to make yeot gangjeong or to coat gangjeong 7 Korea also has a tea beverage made with puffed rice called hyeonmi nokcha 현미녹차 literally brown rice green tea made with green tea and roasted puffed brown rice Southeast Asia edit Philippines edit Main article Ampaw nbsp Ampaw from the PhilippinesIn Filipino cuisine traditional puffed rice is known as ampaw or ampao a term which also became applied to popcorn It is made with cooked white rice usually leftovers It is dried in the sun for around four hours They are then fried in hot oil to make them puff up The oil is drained thoroughly after frying The sugar glazing is cooked separately using muscovado sugar or molasses or corn syrup salt butter and vinegar or calamansi juice The glazing is poured onto the puffed rice and mixed until the grains are evenly coated It is then allowed to cool and shaped into the desired form before it fully hardens They are usually cut into square or rectangular blocks or molded into balls 8 9 10 Thailand edit In Thai cuisine a traditional popped rice snack is krayasaat krayasarth It is associated with the Buddhist Saat festival which is celebrated in autumn It can be made with regular rice or glutinous rice It is roasted directly in a dry pan like popcorn until it pops It is mixed with caramelized palm sugar coconut milk peanuts sesame seeds and khao mao pounded green rice 11 Malaysia edit In Malay cuisine traditional puffed rice is known as bepang pulut especially in Terengganu state Glutinous rice is dried under sunlight and cooked with palm sugar It is different from regular bepang which uses ground nuts instead of glutinous rice Bepang pulut is famous as a gift from the host to guests at a wedding ceremony South Asia edit NepalPuffed Rice is a popular snack in Nepal which is known as Bhuja भ ज It is used in a wide variety of recipes from simply eating it directly to making other dishes Some people also refer to rice as bhuja which can be a little confusing India edit nbsp Uggani and bajji steamed puffed rice and fritters a typical breakfast of Rayalaseema nbsp Puffed rice with Telebhaja Bengali fritters and potato fries in West Bengal In India puffed rice is known as muri Other regional names include parmal mandakki puri mudhi murmura murmuri borugulu maramaralu in Odisha Andhra Pradesh Telangana and pori in Tamil Nadu It is a staple food in Odisha and West Bengal 12 It has been made since ancient times using a technique called hot salt frying in which parboiled rice i e steamed and then dried is puffed by preheated salt 13 Salt is heated in a pan until it is hot enough to pop rice added to it within seconds Parboiled or dried pre cooked rice is added to the heated contents of the pan and stirred Puffing starts almost immediately and completes in less than a minute and the rice is scooped out by a sieve Puffed rice is an ingredient of bhel puri a popular Indian chaat snack It is offered to Hindu gods and goddesses in all pujas in the southern Indian states of Kerala and Tamil Nadu Pilgrims of Sabarimala often pack puffed rice in their travel pouch along with jaggery meant to be offered to Ayyappan Pori has been mentioned in various Tamil texts as an offering to Hindu deities Offerings of pori and jaggery made to Ganesha are mentioned in the Tiruppukal a 15th century anthology of Tamil religious songs written by Tamil poet Arunagirinathar In Gujarati cuisine it is called mamra and is often used to make a dry snack by shallow frying in oil with spices or made into sweet balls using jaggery and ghee In Telangana as a snack typically given to children puffed rice or borugulu is made into a ball with jaggery sugar syrup or bellam pakam In Karnataka puffed rice is mixed with carrots tomatoes spices and coriander leaves to make churumuri a popular evening snack Under the initiative of Make in India the Central Government of India decided that mudhi from Odisha would be part of Indian traditional food among 12 traditional dishes from different states that would be launched globally 14 12 In Mithila and Bengal area puffed rice is had with kachari fried potato onion chops fried fish or with mutton curry Jhal muri and Murhi Bhuja are also very popular snacks in this area In Madhya Pradesh this is referred to as Parmal and it is very often eaten with Sev as a snack and also used in Bhel In some areas it is also known as laai and dishes made from it are called sweet laai laai poha etc Bangladesh edit Puffed Rice is a popular snack in Bangladesh Mostly used to make Jhalmuri it is the most common and cheapest snack in Bangladesh They use the same ancient method as India to prepare the puffed rice This snack can be found anywhere in Bangladesh In Old Dhaka the jhalmuri wala Jhalmuri seller is still often seen dressed in colourful clothes wearing anklet bells and calling out to the residents Puffed rice is also mixed with jaggery and shaped into a rounded ball snack called murir moa Rest of the world edit Czech Republic and Slovakia edit In 1960s Czechoslovakia state firm Vitana was the first to begin the production of expanded rice as plain flavoured or sweetened snack 15 The product became popular under the names burizony Czech burisony or arizonky These continue to be produced to this day in Pardubice 16 or Sered 17 Modern commercial production editPuffed rice cereal edit nbsp A bowl of Rice KrispiesPuffed rice is formed by the reaction of both starch and moisture when heated within the shell of the grain Unlike corn rice kernels are naturally lacking in moisture and must first be conditioned with steam Puffed rice can be created by heating the steam conditioned kernels either with oil or in an oven Rice puffed in this way is crisp and known as crisped rice Oven crisped rice is used to produce the Rice Krispies breakfast cereal as well as the crisped rice used in Lion Bars Nestle Crunch Krackel and similar chocolate bars 18 Though not as dramatic a change when compared to popcorn the process and end result are the same 18 Another method of puffing rice is gun puffing where the grain is conditioned to the correct level of moisture and pressurized to around 200 psi 1 400 kPa When the pressure is suddenly released the pressure stored inside the kernel causes it to puff out This method produces a puffed rice which is spongy in texture 18 Rice can also be puffed by making a rice dough and extruding small pellets which are then rapidly heated The moisture in the dough flash boils and puffs the rice up A cereal such as Cap n Crunch is extruded cooked cut pressurized puffed and dried in a continuous process 18 The method of modern industrial puffed rice production is attributed to American inventor Alexander P Anderson who stumbled across puffing while trying to ascertain the water content of a single granule of starch introduced the first puffing machine at the World s Fair in Saint Louis Missouri in 1904 His eight guns that puffed grains for Fair goers were dubbed The Eighth Wonder of the World by an advertising billboard poster Once the puffing principle technique and technology had been discovered by Anderson the competition to puff ready to eat American breakfast cereal took over the economy of Battle Creek Michigan with Kellogg s and Quaker Oats being two memorable and still active names to endure through the early puffing frenzy In the United States and Europe puffed rice is served with milk as a breakfast cereal a popular brand of this is Rice Krispies Some chocolate bars such as the Nestle Crunch include puffed rice and puffed rice cakes are sold as low calorie snacks American puffed rice cakes edit Not to be confused with Rice cake nbsp American puffed rice cakesIn the United States a flat disk of puffed rice was sold as rice cakes by the company Chico San in the 1970s These rice cakes were marketed as low calorie saucers meant to be eaten with toppings like cottage cheese jelly and fruit Chico San was eventually acquired by Heinz in 1984 at which time the Quaker Oats Company also developed their own rice cake marketed as a low carb alternative to bread Rice cakes became a fad diet in the 1980s and 1990s in the United States In 1993 Quaker Oats Company also acquired Chico San their biggest competitor from Heinz Rice cakes are also produced by other companies including Lundberg Family Farms Hain Celestial Group and Whole Foods 19 20 21 These puffed rice cakes are typically sold plain or blandly seasoned with the most popular flavor being lightly salted But they are also sold in flavored versions including caramel chocolate cinnamon toast They are popularly disk shaped but can also be sold as squares 19 In the Netherlands disk shaped puffed rice cakes are commonly sold in cylindrical packaging in supermarkets See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Puffed rice Puffed grain Flattened riceReferences edit Juliano Bienvenido O 1993 Rice in human nutrition International Rice Research Institute FAO Bao Chǎo Mǐ Hua Puffed Rice 爆炒米花 Movable Feasts Retrieved 14 November 2020 Okoshi Osaka s confectionary Kansai Odyssey 2 May 2018 Retrieved 24 May 2021 Okoshi tasteatlas Retrieved 14 November 2020 Ninjin Classic Puffed Rice Snack in Carrot like Packaging Tomo 21 February 2019 Retrieved 14 November 2020 Genmaicha at ocha tv Archived from the original on 2018 02 09 Retrieved 2020 11 14 Twibap 튀밥 Standard Korean Language Dictionary in Korean National Institute of Korean Language Archived from the original on 5 August 2017 Retrieved 5 August 2017 Ampaw Puffed Rice Mama s Guid Recipes 2 August 2017 Retrieved 28 March 2019 Filipino traditional snack AMPAO dried rice with sugar and lemon Sharsy 8 April 2014 Retrieved 28 March 2019 Puffed Rice Ampaw Atbp ph 24 March 2017 Retrieved 28 March 2019 Vegan Thai Kanom Thai Desserts MessyVeganCook 13 May 2019 Retrieved 14 November 2020 a b Mudhi to be a part of global Make in India campaign Bhubaneswar News Times of India The Times of India 2 August 2015 Church A H 1886 Food Grains in India Chapman and Hall pp 73 75 Humble mudhi makes it big www telegraphindia com Archived from the original on 2015 08 07 Urc Rudolf 2014 Vzdialene roky blizke temy PDF film sk Retrieved 21 August 2021 Nase vyrobky KAVOVINY www kavoviny cz Retrieved 2021 08 21 B M Kavoviny Ryzove burizony kavoviny sk Retrieved 2021 08 21 a b c d What is a Rice Krispy What is it made out of and how do they make it HowStuffWorks June 2 2000 a b Houck Brenna 17 September 2020 The Rise and Fall of the Quaker Rice Cake America s One Time Favorite Health Snack Eater Retrieved 27 May 2023 Quaker Buys Chico San from Heinz to Puff Up Rice Cake Business AP News 19 May 1993 Retrieved 27 May 2023 Varkonyi Charlyne 19 June 1986 Rice takes the cake when it comes to Low Calorie High Fiber Eating Chicago Tribune Retrieved 27 May 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Puffed rice amp oldid 1218169300, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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