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"sodium" news and stories

Happy National More Herbs, Less Salt Day!

saltWell, this is the oddest food holiday I've found, next to Dress Up Like An Ear Of Corn Day*, but let's see what we can do with it.

It's always good to use less salt, especially if you have high blood pressure (and a lot more people in the country have high blood pressure than anyone realizes - what used to be "borderline" is now too high). I haven't added salt to food in over 10 years (no joke), usually substituting pepper if I need a little seasoning. I also like those no-salt seasoning like Mrs. Dash. Go check out that aisle in your supermarket. I think you'll be surprised at what you'll find there.

Here's some info on using less salt. Here's a recipe for Linguine with Fresh Herbs you might want to try, and how about some tips on drying fresh herbs?

* This doesn't actually exist.

Filed under: Trends, Health & Medical, Ingredients, Holidays

These cookies have nutrition facts on them

Here's an idea that is either brilliant or will make you feel really, really guilty about eating snacks.

AndrewAndrew has come up with these cookies that have the nutritonal label printed right on the icing! So now with every bite you can see what you're putting into your body. Or, if you don't want to know, you can just shove the whole thing into your mouth and not think about the numbers.

I wonder if this would work with other foods? Maybe print nutritional labels right into a piece of Wonder bread or onto a piece of Kraft American cheese? It probably wouldn't work with Pepsi or creamed corn.

[via Boing Boing]

Filed under: Trends, Health & Medical, New Products

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We are addicted to salt

added saltLast week's Chicago Tribune published a long feature on our addiction to salt, which seems to be growing, despite the AMA's request that salt to be stripped of its "generally recognized as safe" (GRAS) status. The article goes into some detail about why we are addicted, how salt is necessary for our bodies, and how cutting out excess salt could improve health. However, the most helpful part of the article is the list of simple ways to cut back on salt in your diet:

  • Eat fewer boxed and canned foods.
  • Use fresh meats instead of canned, cured, smoked or processed.
  • Rather than adding salt during cooking, sprinkle it on at the table.
  • Use fresh or plain frozen vegetables instead of canned.
  • Rinse canned vegetables, which will remove sodium that was added during processing.
  • Make your own salad dressing and marinades.
  • Make your own stock and gravy.
  • At restaurants, order grilled, baked, steamed or poached instead of fried, battered, smothered or gratineed.

Additionally, the article lists some common food items, both at home and in restaurants, that are veritable salt bombs.

Source

Filed under: Health & Medical, Ingredients

Singling out salt

A representative for the Food Products Association asked the American Medical association why they were singling out salt as a health risk to the American public. Predictably, they cited evidence that salt may cause an increased risk of elevated blood pressure and heart disease. But is an increased risk enough to label salt as a danger?

There is no denying that there is a lot of salt in the foods we eat. The recommended daily amount of salt is about 2,400 mg, which is roughly a teaspoonful. Many people consume double that in a day. But the salt that we add to our homemade chicken dinners is not the problem; the greatest source of sodium in our diets is processed food. For example, a Big Mac contains over 1000mg of salt - half the recommended allowance. Unfortunately, because this salt isn't readily apparent to the eater, people don't know its there - and if they are told by their doctor to watch their salt intake, or take to heart the advice from the AMA, they end up watching the wrong places.

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Filed under: Health & Medical, Ingredients, How To

Bread targeted as unhealthy source of salt

With news agencies now saying that a major source of salt in daily diets is bread, carb-laden loaves could once again come under fire from nutrition-fanatics. Even though the headlines blame bread, more than 75 percent of all the salt in people’s diets come from processed foods, only a small portion of which are breads. Salt is necessary in bread making, not only for flavor, but because it interacts with the yeast, retarding its growth and producing a better-textured, tastier loaf. One teaspoon of salt weighs just over 2 grams, and organizations like the British government recommend a maximum of 6 grams of salt a day. If a loaf of homemade or non-preprocessed bread has one to three tablespoons of salt in it, there is nothing to worry about unless you are eating multiple loaves of bread on a daily basis.

Some salt is necessary in the diet, serving functions like regulating fluid levels in the body. Do yourself a favor and cut back on the deli meats, don’t just cut back on bread.

Source

Filed under: Trends, Light Food, Ingredients, Methods

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