Rolled oats

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A tablespoon of rolled oats
Rolled oats, dry
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy 379 kcal (1,590 kJ)
67.70 g
Sugars 0.99 g
Dietary fiber 10.1 g
6.52 g
13.15 g
Vitamins
Vitamin A equiv.
(0%)
0 μg
Thiamine (B1)
(40%)
0.460 mg
Riboflavin (B2)
(13%)
0.155 mg
Niacin (B3)
(8%)
1.125 mg
Pantothenic acid (B5)
(22%)
1.120 mg
Vitamin B6
(8%)
0.100 mg
Folate (B9)
(8%)
32 μg
Vitamin B12
(0%)
0.00 μg
Choline
(8%)
40.4 mg
Vitamin C
(0%)
0 mg
Vitamin D
(0%)
0 μg
Vitamin E
(3%)
0.42 mg
Vitamin K
(2%)
2.0 μg
Minerals
Calcium
(5%)
52 mg
Iron
(33%)
4.25 mg
Magnesium
(39%)
138 mg
Manganese
(173%)
3.630 mg
Phosphorus
(59%)
410 mg
Potassium
(8%)
362 mg
Sodium
(0%)
6 mg
Zinc
(38%)
3.64 mg
Other constituents
β-glucan (soluble fibre)  4 g

Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA Nutrient Database

Rolled oats are traditionally oat groats that have been de-husked, steamed and then rolled into flat flakes under heavy rollers before being stabilized by being lightly toasted. The oat, like the other cereals, has a hard, inedible outer husk that must be removed before the grain can be eaten. After the outer husk (or chaff) has been removed from the still bran-covered oat grains, the remainder is called oat groats. Oat groats are a whole grain that can be used as a breakfast cereal; various forms of oatmeal and rolled oats, and pinhead oats are cooked to make porridge.[1] Steel-cut oats (pinhead oatmeal) are oat groats that have been chopped into smaller pieces before any steaming and thus retain bits of the bran layer. Since the bran layer, though nutritious, makes the grains tough to chew and contains an enzyme that can cause the oats to go rancid, raw oat groats are often further steam-treated to soften them for a quicker cooking time (modern "quick oats") and to denature the enzymes for a longer shelf life.

Rolled oats that are sold as porridge oats usually, but not always, have had the tough bran removed. They have often, but not always, been lightly baked or pressure-cooked or "processed" in some fashion. Thick-rolled oats are large whole flakes, and thin-rolled oats are smaller, fragmented flakes. Oat flakes that are simply rolled whole oats without further processing can be cooked and eaten as "old-fashioned" porridge oats, but more highly fragmented and processed rolled oats absorb water much more easily and therefore cook faster, so they are sometimes called "quick" or "instant" porridge oats. Rolled oats can be further processed into coarse powder, which, when cooked, becomes a thick broth. Finer oatmeal powder is often used as baby food. Rolled oats are also often the main ingredient in granola and muesli.

Rolled oats can be used to prepare oat flour at home by pulsing rolled oats in a food processor.[2]

Whole oats are an excellent source of thiamine, iron, and dietary fiber. Whole oats are also the only source of antioxidant compounds known as avenanthramides; these are believed to have properties which help to protect the circulatory system from arteriosclerosis. Oat products also contain beta-glucan, which may help people with Type 2 diabetes control their blood glucose level, and might also help stimulate the immune system to fight off bacterial infections.

Fineness and properties

Oat grains can be sold whole (groats), ground into oatmeal, steamed and rolled into flakes of varying thickness, or cut into two or three pieces, steel-cut. Groats can be used as other whole grains; they are a little softer than wheat berries. Rolled oats can be used for many purposes; the bigger the flakes, the chewier the result. They may be precooked—instant varieties. Steel-cut, as a cereal, are much chewier. They are suitable as a breakfast cereal, but less so for baking, as they do not soften well.[3] If oat flour, prepared from rolled oats, is used alone, baked goods will not rise or hold together; oat flour must be mixed with other flours in baking.[4]

See also

References

  1. Guardian newspaper: How to cook perfect porridge
  2. The Sparkpeople cookbook: love your food, lose the weight, Galvin, M., Romnie, S., May House Inc, 2011, ISBN 978-1-4019-3132-2, page 98.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-oat-flour.htm "What is oat flour?" wisegeek.com. Retrieved 07 July 2013.

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