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Effecr of Supplementing Poor Indian Diets Based on Wheat, Rice and Ragi with Vitamins, Minerals and Groundnut Flour on the Nutritive Value of the Diets as Judged by the Growth of Albino Rats


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1 Central Food Technological Research Institute, Mysore, India
     

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Poor Indian diets based on different cereals and millets are deficient in certain dietary essentials such as proteins, certain minerals and vitamins and hence they do not promote optimal growth of rats.. In an earlier paper, Kuppuswamy et al reported that incorporation of 12.5% of Indian Multipurpose Food (based on 3 1 blend of groundnut flour and Bengalgram flour and fortified with calcium salts and certain vitamins) in poor Indian diets brought about a marked improvement in the nutritive value of the diets as judged by the growth of rats. In a later study.
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  • Effecr of Supplementing Poor Indian Diets Based on Wheat, Rice and Ragi with Vitamins, Minerals and Groundnut Flour on the Nutritive Value of the Diets as Judged by the Growth of Albino Rats

Abstract Views: 238  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

K. Hariharan
Central Food Technological Research Institute, Mysore, India
B. L. M. Desai
Central Food Technological Research Institute, Mysore, India
S. Venkat Rao
Central Food Technological Research Institute, Mysore, India
D. Rajalakshmi
Central Food Technological Research Institute, Mysore, India
M. Swaminathan
Central Food Technological Research Institute, Mysore, India
H. A. B. Parpia
Central Food Technological Research Institute, Mysore, India

Abstract


Poor Indian diets based on different cereals and millets are deficient in certain dietary essentials such as proteins, certain minerals and vitamins and hence they do not promote optimal growth of rats.. In an earlier paper, Kuppuswamy et al reported that incorporation of 12.5% of Indian Multipurpose Food (based on 3 1 blend of groundnut flour and Bengalgram flour and fortified with calcium salts and certain vitamins) in poor Indian diets brought about a marked improvement in the nutritive value of the diets as judged by the growth of rats. In a later study.