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Ragi Boiled Rice is a millet that is ideal for making healthy porridge quickly and easily. It can also be used for cooking all those recipes that can be prepared with normal rice. Read more..
100% natural without additives
100% organic
Healthy and low in calories
A source of protein
Suitable for vegetarian food
Vegan
Gluten free
Ragi Boiled Rice is a millet which is ideal for making healthy porridge quickly and easily. It can also be used for cooking all those recipes that can be prepared with normal rice.
Ragi Boiled Rice is also known as finger millet or miracle grain. It helps reduce heat from the body, it also aids in healing ulcers and anemia. It is a great substitute for rice and wheat, especially for diabetic patients.
Native Food produces all its products exclusively with natural ingredients, without preservatives, without added colors, without flavor enhancers. Taste the difference.
Millet can be roughly divided into 2 types:
Small millets: these are peeled because they have an indigestible skin.
Large millets: these do not have a hard, indigestible skin and you can also eat unpeeled (whole grain).
Ragi millet.
Energy value / Calories: 1333 kJ / 320 kcal
Fat: 1.9 gr
Of which saturated: 0.32 gr
Carbohydrates: 72 gr
Of which sugars: 0 gr
Fiber: - gr
Protein: 7.6 gr
Salt: 0 gr
Sodium: - mgr
500 gr.
This product is packaged and / or stored in a company that also processes products containing wheat, nuts, peanuts, mustard, celery, gluten, sesame, shellfish, soy, sulphite, fish and molluscs. Despite all precautions, this product may contain traces of these allergens.
Keep in a cool, dark and dry place. After opening, transfer the contents to an airtight container.
Simply said, you use millet as you use rice. So you can simply cook millet, steam it, make risotto or pilav, (semi-) ground it into flour for baking (often in combination with other types of flour) or to make (semolina) porridge or other desserts. Millet is also soaked and only then ground into slurry to bake pancakes. You can also roast millet into a kind of small popcorn or use it as couscous or bulgur. In India, millet is often cooked in a pressure cooker, not so much to save time, but for an extra fluffy result. Loosen the grains after cooking, a bit like with couscous, to prevent them from clumping together. The different types of millet taste about the same (a little grainy and a little bitter) and can all be prepared in the same way.
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