About Rice
Is rice a grain?
Rice is a cereal, related to other cereal grass plants such as wheat, oats and barley.
It completes its entire life cycle within six months, from planting to harvesting. It's also semi-aquatic, which means it can grow partly on land and partly submerged in water. Most cultivated rice comes from either the Oryza sativa, O. glaberrima, or O. rufipogon species.
Rice is generally divided into two types of species: Indica (adapted to tropical climates like Southeast Asia) and Japonica. Indica varieties are usually characterized by having long, slender grains that stay separate and are fluffy once cooked, while Japonica varieties are smaller, round and when cooked are classed as ‘softer’ cooking and are sticky and moist.
What is in a grain of Rice?
The rice grain is made of three main layers - the hull or husk, the bran and germ, and the inside kernel, or endosperm.
The hull: The rice hull or husk is a hard, protective outer layer that people cannot eat. The hull is removed when the grain is milled.
Rice bran: Underneath the hull is the bran and germ layer, which is a thin layer of skin which adheres it all together. This layer gives brown rice its color. White rice is just brown rice with the bran and germ layer removed.
Endosperm: The endosperm is the inside of the rice grain, which is hard and white and contains lots of starch.