Holy sodium batman! How do you cut it down? It's everywhere!
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Totally agree about cutting down the sodium, but be aware of where it is. Sodium in Coke isn't that bad (45mg according to the can in front of me) but the sodium in my sliced turkey from the deli that I made a sandwich with is well over 100mg a slice. Just need to be aware IMHO
Once you log it you will figure out how to limit it.
P.S I'm not advocating Soda, they are bad for you for so many reasons, but oddly enough, sodium isn't one of them.0 -
I really don't pay a whole lot of attention to sodium. I don't track it because there's really no way to be super accurate considering I cook almost all of my own food, and I refuse to measure salt (I count/measure enough.) I drink a lot of water, so I'm not super concerned, and I don't have any health issues. If you're eating fresh/clean/well I wouldn't be too concerned. The occasional meal out will almost always be loaded with sodium, but if you are eating well the rest of the day/week I wouldn't worry about it. Maybe just have an extra few glasses of water.0
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i usually don't have any issue staying under sodium unless it's a day i go out to eat and purposely go overboard. cook food yourself and eat a lot of healthier things.0
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Oh, and one other thing, be careful of the sodium listed in the food diary. I added "Generic Mashed Potatoes" It said it had 500mg of salt in in, since I added a little margarine to the potatoes and mashed, I knew I was no where near that, but if I'd have just blindly clicked on someones recipe of something from a pot in the store I'd have been way over.
If you cook yourself you can keep stuff much lower.0 -
Totally agree about cutting down the sodium, but be aware of where it is. Sodium in Coke isn't that bad (45mg according to the can in front of me) but the sodium in my sliced turkey from the deli that I made a sandwich with is well over 100mg a slice. Just need to be aware IMHO
Once you log it you will figure out how to limit it.
P.S I'm not advocating Soda, they are bad for you for so many reasons, but oddly enough, sodium isn't one of them.
I know you're not advocating soda, but I wanted to point out that if you're a soda addict (or for people who haven't yet realized just how bad that stuff is), that 45mg really adds up if you're not watching how much you drink every day. My brother, for example, drinks at least a two liter of soda everyday. That's 400mg of sodium JUST from his soda habit.0 -
No, it's not set low. I looked into that at the Mayo Clinic site because I'm watching that too. The maximum recommended is 2500 per day but the lower the better. 1500 if you have other problems like high blood pressure (ME) or diabetes or some other things I don't recall off the top of my head. I lowered mine to 1500 goal because I am on HBP meds when I found that out. Most days I can come pretty close to that on one side or another. Any time you eat out, it's going to throw all your numbers to the wind....nothing at any restaurant is made the healthy way, even the stuff they say are the "healthy choices." Found that out 10 years ago when my husband was diagnosed with diabetes and I looked into the menu nutrition for some of our favorite restaurants. So number 1, limit your eating out to special treat days. But all I've really done as far as home cooking is start using unsalted butter, substituting salt-free seasonings for salt in many recipes (doesn't work for baking, but most anything else, you can either leave it out or substitute it), look for low-salt or no-salt canned and boxed goods, eat more chicken, turkey and fish (which are lower in sodium than any beef in many cases but not all. I read the labels and ask the deli which of their fresh-sliced meats are the LOWEST in sodium and get those.) Sometimes I use vanilla Greek yogurt instead of salad dressing which is pretty good actually. It's amazing how much difference a few simple changes can make. I didn't realize how high the numbers I was seeing really were until I looked up what they SHOULD be. When I look back over my diary from June when I started here vs. since late July when I had the sodium lightbulb, it's gone from 5-7,000 per day to hovering in the vicinity of 1,000-1500 per day and I document very carefully and use the recipe tool freely to reflect exactly what I put in my food since I cook from scratch alot. So it can be done -- where you can't control the ingredients, you just have to use portion control and look at where you want to spend your sodium allowance. If a dish is really high in sodium and there's no way to cut it down, take a half or quarter portion and fill up on other things. That's my best advice.0
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Totally agree about cutting down the sodium, but be aware of where it is. Sodium in Coke isn't that bad (45mg according to the can in front of me) but the sodium in my sliced turkey from the deli that I made a sandwich with is well over 100mg a slice. Just need to be aware IMHO
Once you log it you will figure out how to limit it.
P.S I'm not advocating Soda, they are bad for you for so many reasons, but oddly enough, sodium isn't one of them.
I know you're not advocating soda, but I wanted to point out that if you're a soda addict (or for people who haven't yet realized just how bad that stuff is), that 45mg really adds up if you're not watching how much you drink every day. My brother, for example, drinks at least a two liter of soda everyday. That's 400mg of sodium JUST from his soda habit.
Or thats 4 slices of Deli meat, on a Subway 6" sandwich there are 4. I think there are way more people out there eating a 6" turkey sub a day thinking it is healthy. Most people who drink 2 litres of coke know that is bad0 -
Thanks for the article! Great read! I am learning a lot today :-)0
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I am in the same boat. ALWAYS over on the sodium. Gotta read the labels - all frozen dinners, soups, cold cuts- highest amounts. Trying to avoid them- but I love soup!0
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Sodium causes bloating and adds to retaining water weight. I avoid it as much as possible for those reasons.0
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For heart health, I keep my sodium at 1500 mg per day. I may go over by 100 or so some days, but I try hard to keep it that low. I have no underlying heart issues, just people on my mother's side that ALL had heart issues. I decided to be proactive and reduce it. In reading about sodium, I learned that just as important as the correct sodium is having the correct amount of potassium to work together with the sodium in your cells. For an adult woman it was recommended that she have 4700mg of potassium. At the very least you should be getting twice the potassium as you get sodium. Below is a pretty simple explanation of how to balance these and why it's important.
http://www.livestrong.com/article/507014-the-relationship-between-potassium-and-sodium/0 -
Arg! I just realized I do eat pachakd turkey almost daily! Why did that not register in my brain?
Does anyone here make this own cold cuts for sandwiches from a home Cooked turkey?0 -
Arg! I just realized I do eat pachakd turkey almost daily! Why did that not register in my brain?
Does anyone here make this own cold cuts for sandwiches from a home Cooked turkey?
Not yet, it's on the plan, especially now that the stores acutally have turkey that's not already processed/ground/not whole.0 -
I think I have a meat grinder attachment to my food processor. I wonder how worth it it would be to grind my own meats.....
Edit for typos0 -
Good 4 U for watching your sodium intake. Agreed - processed foods are the culprit. With beans, you can rinse them, but there's not much you can do about soup (except make your own). Knowledge is power! Read every label!!
I started cooking my own beans from scratch about a year ago. It's ridiculously easy. Soak a pound or two of dried beans overnight. The next day, rinse them, throw them in a big pot, cover generously with water, crank the heat, and get them up to a nice simmer. Let them go for about 30-45 minutes (Depends on the bean - cook them until they're JUST done, so they're not mushy). Rinse again, and when they're cool enough to handle, scoop them out two cups at a time into freezer bags and then freeze flat. One bag is roughly one can of beans. No sodium, nothing but beans. I've done this with all kinds of beans, and chickpeas as well (for hummus-making).0 -
I really agree with alot of people on here. Sodium is not good for you and yes it's addictive, like sugar. Try to keep it low and use everyones tips. I really like bluelena's tip for beans. I will start doing that to mine, I freeze everything. lol Thanks for the all the tips and this post.
Just a side note I am usually under in my salt to unless we eat out. Really puts a hurtin to your body.0 -
Yes!! read, read, read!
Real salt is very good for the body... Try Himalyan salt. I will post an article on my group, the Skinny on Obesity.
Himalayan salt is 98% sodium chloride so it's no different to those watching their salt intake.
Same goes for the myth about sea salt being "better". There are just trace extra minerals than are in the refined...0 -
OKAY! While I was growing up I remember salting EVERYTHING. My Grandma (she raised me) used to say "stop with the salt, you're gonna get high blood pressure!". I currently have an average blood pressure of 100 over 60. It's been low as long as I can remember. My Doctor at first had me stand to make sure the reading was going correct. That was when it was ninety-something over sixty-something.0
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Arg! I just realized I do eat pachakd turkey almost daily! Why did that not register in my brain?
Does anyone here make this own cold cuts for sandwiches from a home Cooked turkey?
We always roast meats here for sandwiches. Beef, pork, chicken, turkey. (not hams) Easily freezable and portable. My hubby takes his and bread in seperate baggies to work, puts them together there. that way the thawing meat doesn't make his bread soggy.
Much healthier for s, and actually not any more expensive than buying deli meats. would be nice if it were cheaper, but at least it doesn't cost more.0 -
My kidney doctor (nephrologist) told me to cut out salt as much as possible. Apparently it is really bad for your kidneys because it messes with your fluid retention, hence, high-blood pressure. I have my sodium goal set as 1400mg/day. It's a tough thing to do. I lost a lot of puffy weight that came from water retention, my blood pressure is way down.
It's a tough diet to be on. Once you start looking around its amazing how much salt is in everything! It starts to seem hopeless. I think a lot of my weight loss is because there is hardly anything laying around to eat, and I'm too lazy to cook. Diet foods that cut out fats or carbs usually make up for it with extra salt.
Eating out is a killer. Find a place with a salad bar, at least then you can control what your eating. Use just oil-and-vinegar dressing.
There are items that can help, like the salt substitutes in the spice section of the store. If you go to Trader Joe's or Whole Foods you can find some organic/natural products that don't have salt added. No salt spaghetti sauce, no salt added salsa, no salt blue-corn chips, etc. All very tasty. Some Evo frozen dinners have less than 500mg.
Some other things to know: Most cheese is very high in salt, but not Swiss cheese! Its very reasonable. You can also replace your cream cheese with Mascarpone.
Matzo! (Jewish flat bread-cracker) you have to check the boxes, but several brands have 0 salt. Organic/natural ones have a lot of nutrition, too. I use this as a bread substitute, because I don't care much for the salt-free breads out there.
Balsamic Vinegar! Tons of flavor and great on almost everything. I've heard of people using it on ice-cream!
Harissa. A condiment that looks like thick ketchup, but its a paste made with peppers. It adds a great kick and flavor to many foods. Stir it in or spread it on top. Its an expensive "import" food, but really easy to make yourself.
I never used to salt my food, anyway, but I loved salty treats. Now that I know how to spice things up I don't really miss the salt at all.0 -
I really agree with alot of people on here. Sodium is not good for you and yes it's addictive, like sugar. Try to keep it low and use everyones tips. I really like bluelena's tip for beans. I will start doing that to mine, I freeze everything. lol Thanks for the all the tips and this post.
Just a side note I am usually under in my salt to unless we eat out. Really puts a hurtin to your body.
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No, the MFP default for sodium is not too low. In fact, it's too high according to all other health websites (mayo clinic, AMA, etc.) They say the max should be 2,300mg per day.
No offense but the mayo clinic, AMA, and even MFP are behind the times when it comes to sodium intake.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24651634
This was an interesting meta-analysis of the current research on sodium intake and morbidity/mortality.
http://weightology.net/weightologyweekly/?page_id=5616
Breaks the study into laymen terms (weightology is a paid service though so you probably can't access it)
The conclusion is basically that both low (less than 2,645mg) and high (more than 4,945) intake of sodium are associated with negative health outcomes. For the average person around 5k a day should cause no issue.
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Eating less processed foods will help decrease your sodium levels.0
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In fact OP - if you have no pre existing health conditions that require the monitoring of it - Id suggest removing both sodium and sugar from your diary.
Replace them with more important things like Calcium or Iron (as examples). Focus on calories, macro and micro nutrients IMO
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