4.5 Article

Method validation, household cooking effect on pesticide residues, and evaluation of processing factors in rice

Journal

JOURNAL OF STORED PRODUCTS RESEARCH
Volume 104, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jspr.2023.102191

Keywords

Rice; Method validation; QuEChERS; Processing factor; Liquid chromatography mass spectrometry

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An experiment demonstrates that common household cooking techniques can reduce pesticide residues in rice. Traditional cooking with excess water is shown to be the most efficient method for reducing pesticide residues, effectively minimizing human exposure to pesticides.
An experiment shows the reduction of pesticide residues using common household cooking techniques. The estimation of seven pesticides was performed using the quick, easy, cheap, effective, rugged, and safe (QuEChERS) method with liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) and Gas Chroma-tography Tandem Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS/MS) in rice. The method validation study was carried out with linearity (R-2 > 0.99), average recoveries of all pesticides ranged from 82.00 to 102.36%, with a precision of 3.78-6.84% and 1.25-7.24% inter and intraday, respectively. The limit of quantification was 0.01 mg/kg for all tested pesticides. The processing factors (PF) were calculated for seven pesticides from various processing of rice grains collected from the plot applied with pre-mixed pesticides. To decrease pesticide residues in rice grains, processing techniques, including pressure cooking rice, traditional cooking without drained water, and tradi-tional cooking with excess water, were investigated. The overall percent reductions of fipronil, imidacloprid, pymetrozine, flonicamid, bifenthrin, clothianidin, and cartap hydrochloride were 71.96-90.01, 69.07-86.60, 79.78-91.05, 69.37-84.08, 68.95-88.77, 71.73-85.44, and 61.23-89.67 percent, respectively. The calculated PFs for all pesticides were less than 1, indicating that the residue magnitudes of all pesticides decreased after each process and all the processing techniques were effective. The data showed that the traditional technique of cooking rice with excess water was the most efficient technique to reduce pesticides, proving effective in minimizing pesticide residues and reducing human exposure to pesticides through diet.

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