enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Before You Take a Resistant Starch Supplement, Try This - AOL

    www.aol.com/resistant-starch-supplement-try...

    A study review published in Frontiers in Nutrition showed that resistant starch types 1 and 2 (1 is found in whole foods, 2 in some supplements like corn-based resistant starch supplements) can ...

  3. Resistant starch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resistant_starch

    A specially developed strain of barley, high in resistant starch. Resistant starch (RS) is starch, including its degradation products, that escapes from digestion in the small intestine of healthy individuals. [1] [2] Resistant starch occurs naturally in foods, but it can also be added as part of dried raw foods, or used as an additive in ...

  4. Parboiled rice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parboiled_rice

    This increases the formation of type-3, resistant starch which can act as a prebiotic and benefit health in humans. [9] However, this also makes the kernels harder and glassier. Parboiled rice takes less time to cook and is firmer and less sticky. In North America parboiled rice is often partially or fully precooked before sale.

  5. Isomaltooligosaccharide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isomaltooligosaccharide

    Isomaltooligosaccharide (IMO) is a mixture of short-chain carbohydrates which has a digestion-resistant property. IMO is found naturally in some foods, as well as being manufactured commercially. The raw material used for manufacturing IMO is starch, which is enzymatically converted into a mixture of isomaltooligosaccharides.

  6. Maltodextrin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maltodextrin

    After development of food ingredients from starch sources around 1950, digestible maltodextrins were first produced between 1967 and 1973. [14] Digestion-resistant maltodextrins were developed in the 1990s from studies of starch nutrition, leading to the definition of resistant starch. [15]

  7. Inulin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inulin

    Inulin-containing foods can be rather gassy, especially for those unaccustomed to inulin and these foods should be consumed in moderation at first. [citation needed] Inulin is a soluble fiber, one of three types of dietary fiber including soluble, insoluble and resistant starch. Soluble fiber dissolves in water to form a gelatinous material.

  8. Hydroxypropyl distarch phosphate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydroxypropyl_distarch...

    Hydroxypropyl distarch phosphate (HDP) is a modified resistant starch. It is currently used as a food additive ( INS number 1442). [ 1 ] It is approved for use in the European Union (listed as E1442), [ 2 ] the United States, Australia, Taiwan, and New Zealand.

  9. Starch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starch

    Resistant starch is starch that escapes digestion in the small intestine of healthy individuals. High-amylose starch from wheat or corn has a higher gelatinization temperature than other types of starch, and retains its resistant starch content through baking, mild extrusion and other food processing techniques.