[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 21, Volume 2]
[Revised as of April 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 21CFR137.350]

[Page 384-385]
 
                        TITLE 21--FOOD AND DRUGS
 
CHAPTER I--FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN 
                          SERVICES (CONTINUED)
 
PART 137--CEREAL FLOURS AND RELATED PRODUCTS--Table of Contents
 
  Subpart B--Requirements for Specific Standardized Cereal Flours and 
                            Related Products
 
Sec. 137.350  Enriched rice.

    (a) The foods for which definitions and standards of identity are 
prescribed by this section are forms of milled rice (except rice coated 
with talc and glucose and known as coated rice), to which nutrients have 
been added so that each pound of the rice contains:
    (1) Not less than 2.0 milligrams (mg) and not more than 4.0 mg of 
thiamin, not less than 1.2 mg and not more than 2.4 mg of riboflavin, 
not less than 16 mg and not more than 32 mg of niacin or niacinamide, 
not less than 0.7 mg and not more than 1.4 mg of folic acid, and not 
less than 13 mg and not more than 26 mg of iron (Fe).
    (2) Each pound may contain not less than 250 U.S.P. units and not 
more than 1,000 U.S.P. units of vitamin D.
    (3) Each pound may contain not less than 500 milligrams and not more 
than 1,000 milligrams of calcium (Ca). Calcium carbonate derived from 
the use of this substance in milling rice, when present in quantities 
that furnish less than 500 milligrams of calcium (Ca) per pound, is 
considered a normal ingredient of the milled rice used and not an 
optional ingredient of the enriched rice unless such enriched rice is 
labeled to show it contains the optional ingredient calcium. Iron and 
calcium may be added only in forms that are harmless and assimilable. 
The vitamins referred to in paragraphs (a) (1) and (2) of this section 
may be combined with harmless substances to render them insoluble in 
water, if the water-insoluble products are assimilable.
    (4) In the case of enriched parboiled rice, butylated hydroxytoluene 
may be added as an optional ingredient in an amount not to exceed 0.0033 
percent by weight of the finished food.
    (b) The substances referred to in paragraphs (a) (1), (2), and (3) 
of this section may be added in a harmless carrier. Such carrier is used 
only in the quantity necessary to effect an intimate and uniform mixture 
of such substances with the rice.
    (c) Unless the label of the food bears the statement ``To retain 
vitamins do not rinse before or drain after cooking'' immediately 
preceding or following the name of the food and in letters not less than 
one-fourth the point size of type used for printing the name of the food 
(but in no case less than 8-point type) and the label bears no cooking 
directions calling for washing or draining or unless the food is 
precooked and it is packaged in consumer packages which are 
conspicuously and prominently labeled with directions for preparation 
which, if followed, will avoid washing away or draining off enriching 
ingredients, the substances named in paragraphs (a) (1), (2), and (3) of 
this section shall be present in such quantity or in such form that when 
the enriched rice is washed as prescribed in paragraph (e) of this 
section, the washed rice contains not less than 85 percent of the 
minimum quantities of the substances named in paragraph (a)(1) of this 
section, as required for enriched rice; and in case any optional 
ingredients named in paragraphs (a) (2) and (3) of this section are 
used, the washed rice also contains not less than 85 percent of the 
minimum quantity specified for the substance or substances used.
    (d) The name specified for each food for which a definition and 
standard of identity is prescribed by this section is the common name of 
the kind of milled rice to which the enriching substances are added, 
preceded by the word ``enriched'' as, for example, ``Enriched rice'' or 
``Enriched parboiled rice''.
    (e) The method referred to in paragraph (c) of this section is as 
follows: Mix the contents of one or more containers and transfer \1/2\ 
pound thereof to a 4-liter flask containing 2 liters of distilled water 
at room temperature (but not below 20  deg.C). Stopper the flask and 
swirl it moderately for \1/2\ minute so that the rice is in motion and 
in uniform suspension. Allow the rice to settle for \1/2\ minute, then 
pour off 1,600 milliliters of the water, together with any floating and 
suspended matter, and discard. To the contents of the flask, add 1,600 
milliliters of distilled water

[[Page 385]]

and 20 milliliters of 10 N hydrochloric acid. Agitate vigorously and 
wash down the sides of the flask with 150 milliliters of 0.1 N 
hydrochloric acid. In order to avoid excess foaming during the 
extraction, heat the mixture slowly to about 100  deg.C, agitate if 
necessary, and maintain at this temperature until air is expelled. Again 
wash down the sides of the flask with 150 milliliters of 0.1 N 
hydrochloric acid. Heat the mixture in an autoclave at 120  deg.C to 123 
 deg.C for 30 minutes, remove and cool to room temperature. Dilute the 
mixture with distilled water so that the total volume is 2,500 
milliliters. Swirl the flask, and while the solids are in uniform 
suspension pour off about 250 milliliters of the mixture for later 
determination of iron (and calcium, if this is to be determined). With 
filter paper that has been shown not to adsorb thiamine, riboflavin, or 
niacin, filter enough of the remaining mixture for determination of 
thiamine, riboflavin, and niacin. (In the case of a mixture difficult to 
filter, centrifuging or filtering through fritted glass, or both, using 
a suitable analytical filter-aid, may be substituted for, or may 
precede, filtering through paper.) Dilute an aliquot of filtrate with 
0.1 N hydrochloric acid, so that each milliliter contains about 0.2 
microgram of thiamine, and determine thiamine by the ``Rapid 
Fluorometric Method--Official Final Action,'' in section 43.034 of 
``Official Methods of Analysis of the Association of Official Analytical 
Chemists'' (AOAC), 13th Ed. (1980), which is incorporated by reference. 
Copies may be obtained from the Association of Official Analytical 
Chemists International, 481 North Frederick Ave., suite 500, 
Gaithersburg, MD 20877-2504, or may be examined at the Office of the 
Federal Register, 800 North Capitol Street, NW., suite 700, Washington, 
DC. With a suitable aliquot determine riboflavin by the method 
prescribed in section 43.041(a) by the ``Fluorometric Method--Official 
Final Action,'' AOAC, 13th Ed. (1980), beginning with the third sentence 
of the second paragraph, ``Adjust, with vigorous agitation * * *.'' 
Determine niacin in a 200-milliliter aliquot of the filtrate by the 
``Colorimetric Method--Official Final Action,'' in section 43.045, AOAC, 
13th Ed. (1980), beginning with the sixth sentence of the first 
paragraph, ``Adjust to pH 4.5 with * * *.'' Evaporate to dryness a 100-
milliliter aliquot of the nonfiltered material withdrawn while 
agitating, and determine iron using the method ``Iron--Official Final 
Action,'' in sections 14.011, 14.012, and 14.013, AOAC, 13th Ed. (1980), 
and, if required, determine calcium as directed in section 14.014 under 
the heading ``Calcium--Official Final Action,'' AOAC, 13th Ed. (1980).
    (f) When the optional ingredient specified in paragraph (a)(4) of 
this section is added, the statement ``Butylated hydroxytoluene added as 
a preservative'' shall be placed on the label prominently and with such 
conspicuousness (as compared with other words, statements, designs, or 
devices in the label) as to render it likely to be read and understood 
by the ordinary individual under customary conditions of purchase.
    (g) Label declaration. Each of the ingredients used in the food 
shall be declared on the label as required by the applicable sections of 
parts 101 and 130 of this chapter.
    Note: The Order of the Commissioner of Food and Drugs appearing at 
23 FR 1170, Feb. 25, 1958, amending paragraphs (a)(1) and (c) provides 
in part as follows: The regulations in Sec. 137.350 (formerly 
Sec. 15.525) are stayed insofar as they require each pound of the food 
to contain not less than 1.2 milligrams and not more than 2.4 milligrams 
of riboflavin. This stay shall continue until final action is taken 
disposing of the objections, after public hearing thereon.

[42 FR 14402, Mar. 15, 1977, as amended at 47 FR 11828, Mar. 19, 1982; 
49 FR 10098, Mar. 19, 1984; 54 FR 24894, June 12, 1989; 58 FR 2878, Jan. 
6, 1993; 61 FR 8796, Mar 5, 1996]