Sodium and Chicken Breast
Tuckersn
Posts: 149
I buy Costco Foster Farms chicken breast, boneless and skinless. Foster Farms also sells a chicken breast tenders (just not at Costco) =0) . . . the boneless and skinless sodium is 250mg per 4oz of meat, in comparison to the breast tenders that are 75mg per 4oz.
That is a huge difference. Just curious if anyone knew why? There's the same amount of fat, same nutrients mostly . . . just sodium is different. And I'm trying to watch sodium . . . this is a huge part of my daily diet.
That is a huge difference. Just curious if anyone knew why? There's the same amount of fat, same nutrients mostly . . . just sodium is different. And I'm trying to watch sodium . . . this is a huge part of my daily diet.
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Replies
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Just a guess...they don't inject as much saline solution into the tenders because the cut is smaller/cheaper.0
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I've been watching my sodium too as I realized that was an area that I was really messing up big time. Glad I wasn't the only one noticing / wondering that.0
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Generally the reason the sodium is higher is because they inject the meat with a "flavoring" solution that contains sodium before they freeze it.
I buy fresh chicken breast when it's on sale or I buy frozen tenders at Trader Joe's because they don't add sodium to their chicken.0 -
I was curious about this too because I recently purchased some frozen chicken (without checking the label of course) and realized when I went to log it that there was over 400mg of sodium per 4 oz.!!
This link helped explain it a lot:
http://www.cookinglight.com/eating-smart/nutrition-101/sodium-in-chicken-00412000070041
I am now more careful about checking both the sodium and calorie count whenever I buy foods but chicken was one thing that I just didn't think would be a problem. There are lower sodium chicken breasts out there, you just have to be looking for them.0 -
This is interesting. Seems there are at least a couple of different kinds of foster farms chicken breasts at Costco. I get the ones that are in the refrigerated section, and they come in a big pack of 6 or 8 pouches, with 2 breasts in each pouch surrounded by liquid. Then there's some in the frozen section. I think the frozen ones may be brined. Not sure about the refrigerated ones, but now you got me wondering. I need to look at the label next time I go there.0
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If you are watching sodium intake you are better off buying fresh chicken as they do not inject those with sodium. They do in frozen ones as sodium acts as a preservative. I love how they can ruin something so healthy buy adding nasty stuff like that!0
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They aren't frozen when I buy them but they are kinda "bulk", since I get quite a bit (gotta love Costco). So perhaps it is just a way to preserve them for longer. I would rather buy smaller amounts, pay a tad more, and get a quarter of the sodium! Thanks for all the answers, and the link (which I will check out as soon as I have time!).0
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I love how they can ruin something so healthy buy adding nasty stuff like that!
AMEN!!!!!0 -
Weird, I was about to reply that the ones I buy have 75mg for the boneless, skinless breasts and 60 for the tenders. The chicken breast "steaks" (larger breasts) have 115mg of sodium. But I also don't buy mine at Costco. I get them in the small packs at the grocery store. So I wonder if Costco has their own breasts and tenders they alter more to keep 'em fresh longer.
It could also be a location thing, I'm in CA and not too far from where Foster Farms come from, so maybe getting 'em to Oregon requires additional help in the freshness area?0 -
Hey, I just wanted to flag something since I noticed that a lot of people are responding that you should buy fresh chicken to avoid the added sodium...most major producers add a ton of sodium (via a salt solution) to the fresh ones, too, to increase weight and effectively charge more. I was appalled when I realized how much sodium I was consuming just from fresh, boneless/skinless chicken breasts. It never occurred to me to check the sodium since they're labelled all-natural. Here is a link to a great article on the details, and how to spot modified versus unmodified chicken: http://www.cookinglight.com/eating-smart/nutrition-101/sodium-in-chicken-00412000070041/0
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