Short answer: it depends how each rice is processed, cooked, and portioned, but as typically eaten, semi-polished/unpolished Rajamudi (a red heritage rice) will usually be the more blood-sugar-friendly choice than polished Sona Masoori, thanks to more fibre, pigments (polyphenols), and intact bran. Direct lab GI data for Rajamudi are limited, but nutrition experts consistently describe it as lower GI than regular white rice, while Sona Masoori (polished) has been measured as high GI (~72).
What matters most for diabetes
- Glycaemic Index (GI): how fast a food raises blood glucose. Polished Sona Masoori is high GI (~72) in clinical testing; it tends to spike glucose more.
- Glycaemic Load (GL) & Portion size: ½ cup cooked vs 1½ cups cooked is a big difference. You should aim smaller portions to keep the Glycemic Load Low.
- Processing: Semi-polished/unpolished grains (where the bran is intact) generally reduce GI; parboiled rice is typically lower GI than the same rice polished/“raw.”
- Cooking & cooling: Cook → cool 12–24h in the fridge → reheat. This increases resistant starch and can blunt the post-meal glucose rise.
- Pairing: Protein, fat, and fibre (dal, vegetables, ghee/healthy oils, salads) slow absorption and impact on blood sugar level.
Head-to-head: Rajamudi vs Sona Masoori
| Feature | Rajamudi (usually red, semi-polished/unpolished) | Sona Masoori (commonly polished “raw” white) |
|---|---|---|
| Grain/processing | Heritage red rice from Karnataka; mostly semi-polished so bran & pigments remain | Medium-grain white rice; widely sold polished |
| Fibre/bran | Higher (bran retained) → slower glucose rise | Lower (bran removed) → faster glucose rise |
| Typical GI | Described as lower vs white rice; often moderate (limited direct lab values) | High GI: clinical study reports ~72 ± 4.5 (glucose=100) |
| Satiety | Chewier, more filling per cup | Lighter mouthfeel; easier to over-portion |
| Taste/uses | Nutty, earthy; everyday meals, South-Indian plates | Neutral; pairs with most curries; popular daily rice |
| How to make friendlier | Keep semi-polished; cook–cool–reheat; portion control | Go for parboiled Sona Masoori or brown rice; cook–cool–reheat; smaller portions |
Sources: clinical GI for Sona Masoori; expert commentary & brand-independent write-ups noting Rajamudi’s lower GI vs white rice; general evidence on parboiling and cooling for resistant starch.
What the evidence says (in plain language)
- Sona Masoori (polished): measured high GI (~72) in a human crossover study; that puts it in the “faster spike” camp. PubMed
- Rajamudi: Lab-quality GI numbers are scarce, but dietitians and nutrition write-ups describe it as lower GI than white rice and moderate GI overall, likely due to its bran, fibre and red pigments. Treat it as “better than white,” not “free-for-all.” The Indian ExpressB&B Organics
- Parboiling (any variety): tends to lower GI relative to the same rice when sold as polished “raw” rice. If you prefer Sona Masoori, seek parboiled packs. DiabeSmartScienceDirect
- Cook–cool–reheat: turns some starch into resistant starch, measurably reducing glycaemic response in controlled studies. (Still mind food-safety: chill quickly; reheat thoroughly.) PubMedPMC
Practical ways to eat rice more gently (whichever you choose)
- Choose the friendlier form
- Rajamudi: buy semi-polished/unpolished.
- Sona Masoori: pick parboiled or Brown Rice rather than polished raw.
- Portion smart
- Start with ½ cup cooked (about a small katori); add more veg/dal instead.
- Use the chill step
- Cook; refrigerate 12–24h; reheat. Helps blunt glucose spikes via resistant starch.
- Pair for balance
- Plate rice last after dal/veg/protein. Add salad/raita; a teaspoon of ghee or healthy oil can slow absorption.
- Chew & pace
- Eat slowly; stop at “satisfied,” not stuffed.
💡 Want to try Rajamudi at home? Explore our Rajamudi Rice Recipes for ideas like dosas for breakfast, and festive pulaos tailored to highlight its nutty texture.
So…which is “better” for diabetics?
- If you’re comparing typical supermarket versions:
Rajamudi (semi-polished/unpolished red rice) will usually be kinder to post-meal glucose than polished Sona Masoori. - If your choice is parboiled Sona Masoori vs highly polished Rajamudi: the parboiled option may perform better glycaemically. Context matters.
- The biggest levers you control every day are portion size, cook–cool–reheat, and how you pair your plate — these can narrow differences between varieties dramatically.
A note on “low-GI rice” claims
Experts caution that differences between Indian rice varieties are often modest, and extreme “miracle” claims don’t hold up. Use GI/GL as guides, not absolutes — test what works for you, especially if you use a glucometer or CGM.
FAQs
Is Sona Masoori always bad for diabetes?
No. Polished Sona Masoori is high GI, but parboiled Sona Masoori and cook–cool–reheat can make it more manageable, without affecting the taste much — with small portions.
Is Rajamudi “low GI”?
Evidence suggests lower than white rice and often moderate GI, but robust lab values are limited. Treat it as a better-than-white choice, not a free pass.
What about brown or hand-pounded rice?
Similar principle: more bran → more fibre → typically lower GI than polished white rice. Parboiling can lower GI further.
The Aara Living view
We lean towards heritage, semi-polished grains like Rajamudi for everyday plates and if you love Sona Masoori, we suggest parboiled plus cook–cool–reheat. As we build our pantry range, we’ll prioritise transparent sourcing and processing that preserves fibre — so your bowl works with your goals, not against them.
Disclaimer
This article is educational and not medical advice. Glycaemic responses vary depending on several factors. If you manage diabetes, work with your clinician/dietitian and monitor your own readings when changing staples.