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Most Koreans, like their Asian neighbors, eat white rice as their everyday grain. Although white rice is sometimes mixed with other grains and beans to create an interesting grain-legume medley, brown rice is not commonly eaten.
That’s why my daughter Elizabeth was surprised, on her annual visit to Korea, to find a new refine-your-own-rice machine in the supermarket. She described it in an email from Korea like this:
Guess what I saw yesterday? The rice vampire machine. It was right in the middle of the EMart produce section. You put the whole rice in and it [refines the heck] out of it until it becomes white rice. Customers can say how many minutes they want to mill the rice. It has a handy chart explaining what percent of the nutrients are removed per minute, and examples of rice milled for different amounts of time. It was doing a brisk business while I was there. Everyone wanted freshly milled, completely white rice.
Elizabeth translated the instructions for the four different choices for me, which I’ll paraphrase broadly here.
#1. A little bit milled. Very healthy but practically indigestible. 50% of the bran and germ remains.
#2. Milled a bit more. You might actually be able to eat this. 30% of the bran and germ remains.
#3. Tastes almost like real rice, but still a little healthy. 15% of the bran and germ remains.
#4. Good old white rice. 95% of the bran and germ have been removed.
Even if you don’t read Korean you can see the percentages in the text (that’s the part I translated directly, without exaggerating.)
Well, at least it’s a start in helping Koreans contemplate the health benefits of brown rice!
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