How do you keep sodium down??
Blackdinomite
Posts: 26 Member
First I'd like to say that my weight is starting to fall again after 3 weeks of no loss or gains (I think sodium is one cause of the stall) but sodium just seems to be so high in everything. Aside from cooking everything I eat, has anyone had success at maintaining low levels of sodium?
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Try to cut down on processed foods. That is where you find most of it.0
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Some products are made with lower sodium and usually says so on the front of the package (still a little high in sodium, but if you only use 1 processed thing a day, it helps). But other than that, you've really answered your own question, you have to cook everything you eat.0
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Yes. I use lemon and lime instead, even with my turkey burgers
But yeah, cooking my own food is also my best solution, and I guess this is obvious but avoid processed food. Processed is another word for "high in sodium"
Ps edited to say congrats on recent loss!0 -
Most of my meals are prepared and I still record high sodium counts. I don't eat lots of Fast food. Maybe once a week if that. Is my fitness pal accurate in sodium calculation?0
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Most of my meals are prepared and I still record high sodium counts. I don't eat lots of Fast food. Maybe once a week if that. Is my fitness pal accurate in sodium calculation?
Do you have an example? Most foods prepared from scratch don't have much sodium unless it's added via salt.
I mean, if it comes in a package or box or can from the store/it's been frozen, it's going to have a lot of sodium in it.
I would say MFP is usually accurate, I saw one day where you logged pork chops, it seems odd to me that it has 400mg of sodium, but then again I don't eat meat so maybe that's a normal amount for it to be injected with at the store.0 -
make as much as you can from scratch and whole foods if possible, nothing from a box or package
and absolutely no fast food or restaurant food, loaded with sodium0 -
I make most of my own foods. I search online for low sodium recipes. I use lime, garlic and other things to spice up my foods instead of salt. I use unsalted broths to help flavor foods. My husband has a little bit of high blood pressure so I am doing my best to reduce the amount of salt/sodium he consumes. Hope this helps!0
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I hear that and it was one of my first issues when I joined MFP. There are certain foods like bacon for example that you might enjoy too much to give up completely but it is loaded with sodium. There are reduced sodium bacons out there that taste every bit as good as regular bacon and the levels are like half to one third of regular bacon as far as sodium is concerned.
Once you get used to cutting it down, you will notice that foods that you may have added salt and pepper to in the past--now taste salty w/o adding any. Cottage cheese comes to mind. There is reduced sodium cottage cheese and it isnt as drastic a reduction as the bacon but it brings it down to a much more acceptable and manageable level. Just keep watching those sodium levels in everything you are eating and you will get a much better feel for it. You will also start to learn what foods have that hidden sodium in them too which should also help. Good luck--I am sure you will get better at it over time. FWIW--I am an avid cook so that helps quite a bit but it is never to late to learn to cook and as they say--practice makes perfect.0 -
Sorry, but pretty much the only way I've found is to prepare everything myself. I make my own spaghetti sauce, bbq sauce, beans, salad dressing etc. I don't eat anything from a box or can unless it has zero or extremely low sodium. Even with doing this my sodium tends to be 1500-2000 a day, which isn't so bad as my potassium levels are 3500 or higher so the ratio is good.0
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The VAST majority of what you eat should come from the perimeter of the grocery store if you want to keep sodium down (and really, it should come from there anyway). Fresh fruits, veggies, dairy, eggs, meat.0
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Don't use anything canned. Nothing 'processed' as in a box, unless it is something in it's natural form, such as dried beans. Nothing frozen unless its fruit or vegetables without added sauces. Be careful with sauces, mustards. They are loaded with sodium.
I try to cook most meals and avoid ingredients with any added sodium. I use a lot of herbs, spices, jalapenos and citrus for flavor. I've found that I really can't stand stuff loaded with salt anymore. Especially soups and restaurant dinners. Blahhh
I had to do it to help control my blood pressure, so I'm allowed only 1500mgs per day. It sucks and it's hard, but not dying from a heart attack is worth the trouble.0 -
Actually now that I think about it most meals my wife makes do come from a box, bag or can, at least the side dishes. My family has always eaten like this so it never occurred to me I guess.0
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Read the labels. There's a lot of sodium in packaged meals, condiments, cheese, and most marinades, salad dressing, and seasoning packets, like taco seasoning. Also in fast foods. Pretty much anything good. Lol. You can also drink lots of water to flush out the sodium. Good luck!0
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I struggle with sodium, too. My diary's open, feel free to take a look.
If most of your stuff is truly 'scratch made' (e.g. plain raw chicken breast NOT the breaded, or prepped, or marinated stuff) then I'd look to the sauces and spices that you use. McCormick has a series of "no salt" seasonings that I swear by! Sauces/condiments are a big issue as they often have >300mg sodium per tbsp. Here are a few that I use that have 'lower than average' sodium:
• La Choy Sweet N Sour sauce
• La Choy Duck sauce
• Panda Express orange sauce
• Mrs. Campbell's Chow-Chow (great sub for pickle relish)
Additionally, I rarely eat cold cuts and usually sub with my own alternatives:
• Pork loin subs for ham
• London broil subs for roast beef
• Boneless, skinless chicken breast subs for... DUH!
• Turkey breast... you get the idea
There are several recipe websites (e.g. AllRecipes) that offer low-sodium recipes as well, especially for sauces/condiments/dressings. Google that!
*ETA: I still eat boxed/canned stuff, but in moderation and sodium is the FIRST thing I look at in the store. If I want that 900mg sodium/serving entree for dinner (e.g. Chicken Parmigiana, Hamburger Helper, etc.), then I need to spend my breakfast and lunch with low/no sodium items (e.g. fresh fruits and vegs, etc.) to save room in my 2,500mg/day. For sides, Gunnoe's has 'lower than average sodium' for slaws and salads. Frozen bag veggies are WAY better than most canned ones, but Walmart has some "no sodium added" canned veggies as well. If I want a restaurant meal, then the day before or the day after should be low sodium all day with plenty of water throughout.
The proof is in the pudding. This approach has gotten me off of HBP meds (3 weeks and counting).0 -
I need to learn to cook then lol. I really don't think I'd like cooking but I'll try anything to keep seeing positive results.0
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I need to learn to cook then lol. I really don't think I'd like cooking but I'll try anything to keep seeing positive results.
Well sodium doesn't prevent fat loss, but it can definitely stall the scale, which may make you feel discouraged.0 -
Actually now that I think about it most meals my wife makes do come from a box, bag or can, at least the side dishes. My family has always eaten like this so it never occurred to me I guess.
Yes, just because you aren't eating out at fast food places and eating foods prepared at home, doesn't mean they are low sodium. Deli meats are extremely high and the breakfast turkey sausage. Most easy to make things in box, can, freezer ready meals, etc are high in sodium. So just try making more foods from scratch where you can control the salt and seasoning. You have to read your labels and just try little by little to incorporate more whole foods and less processed foods.0 -
Actually now that I think about it most meals my wife makes do come from a box, bag or can, at least the side dishes. My family has always eaten like this so it never occurred to me I guess.
Well start slow, I know it can seem overwhelming, pick one thing per meal to make from scratch. Like rice, buy it in bulk and add your own low salt seasoning to it, there are a lot of recipes online.
Once you have that down, try something else with a different part of the meal. Before you know it, it will be second nature.0 -
Is there a medical reason you are watching your sodium intake? If you are a healthy man with no heart/kidney issues then eating 2000-2500mg a day is not a big deal. I've got kidney issues that have me restricted to 1500-1700 a day.
Are you "preparing" canned and packaged foods? If it comes in a box or a can it's going to have substantial amounts of sodium in it.
So, looking at your food log....
Lunch meat. Always SUPER high in sodium. Even the low sodium brands are high because of the preservatives.
Sausage.... almost always high in sodium but especially the precooked sausage (heat and serve).
Frozen prepared veggies (the heat and serve kind that they season for you and MORE especially the kind with cheese) always high in sodium
Packaged and seasoned rice... going to be high in sodium because they seasoned it for you.
KFC - I can't eat it, even occasionally. They are the SALTIEST of all the fast foods.
Buy yourself a turkey breast and cook it/slice it yourself for sandwiches. Even better, buy a nice roast beef and cook/slice it up. It will be AMAZING and you can control how much sodium is going into it.
Sausage, I buy Jimmy Dean 'Tube' sausage and break it down into patties and freeze it with wax paper between the patties. It's just a few more minutes to cook. I can get away with one patty a day if I'm careful.
You can still eat frozen veggies with cheese, just make them yourself. Buy plain frozen veggies and cook in microwave..add 1/2 ounce of cheddar and nuke for a few seconds more. That will still give you similar with a fraction of the sodium.
Packaged seasoned rice... Rice is a rather nutritionally devoid food anyway, you don't need it. Eat a baked sweet tater instead for more fiber and way more vitamins/minerals.
KFC - Just no.
Feel free to add me/send me a PM if you want to chat about it or have questions.0 -
Try upping your potassium. On paper, your sodium will still be high, but the potassium will help you expel said sodium.0
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The fat loss I can handle. Even when the scale stalls I still see results when I look in the mirror but I don't want to retain the weight either. It does feel like the work you put in is for nothing though when the scale stops moving or creeps up.0
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Easy- Don't eat anything from a package or chain restaurant. I have high-ish blood pressure and that is the easiest way to keep in down.
Also, keep in mind that if something needs a lot of salt to taste good, it's because it isn't good (tasting or for you).
It's pretty easy to bake a huge pan of chicken breasts on a weekend, make a large pot of rice and a huge thing of veggies to pack into smaller containers to take with you. Snacks should always either be a piece of fruit, unsalted nuts, veggies, or something like an avocado, and none of those have salt.
My day usually goes like this:
Morning: 1/2 cup oatmeal (easy to make in the work microwave) with cinnamon and maybe a little dried fruit
+ 1 mini "quiche" (egg whites, chopped veggies and spices, baked into a cupcake tin. I put it in the microwave for 30 seconds to heat it up)
Snack - piece of fruit and some unsalted nuts (8ish)
Lunch - Chicken + 2 cups of veggies + 1/2 cup of brown rice (made at home, microwaved at work)
Snack - 1/2 avocado and a few nuts (8ish)
Snack - Raw veggies
Dinner - Brown rice pasta, 2 cups veggies, 1 tablespoon olive oil, garlic, spices, chicken, shrimp, cut up Trader Joe's turkey burger or tofu.
As I said, I cook all my chicken and eggs on a day off, which takes about 1/2 hour. I also cook a huge thing of veggies and rice for meals.
Dinners take 1 pot and 1 pan tops, with 5 minutes of prep time, 10 minutes of cook time and 10 minutes of clean up.
I don't spend a lot of time cooking and I don't cook with much, if any salt. It is a largely unnecessary seasoning when food is high quality and prepared correctly. Eating healthy throughout the week is easy, if you devote 1 hour to shopping and one hour to cooking and prepping each week.
Cooking for yourself is really the way to go. I come in WAY under my sodium limits for the day, save money (my meals average $2.00 - $4.00 per serving and don't have to worry about what is in my food near as much as I would otherwise.0 -
There's nothing wrong with watching your sodium intake, but you also don't need a very low target unless there is a specific medical reason and you are being advised to do so.
Please read this article from the NY Times for a good discussion of the changing views on sodium intake: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/15/health/panel-finds-no-benefit-in-sharply-restricting-sodium.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
For those who don't like popular press articles on nutrition and want studies, there are links to two of the studies used by the panel in the NYT article, but this discussion is actually pretty well written and balanced, at least IMHO.0 -
No health reasons why I can't have certain amounts of salt, I guess I just want to have preventative measures in place. I want to be as healthy as possible and based on the comments I have major changes to make still.0
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I checked our your diary and I see what you mean. One tip I'll give you is that you can make your own breakfast sausage to reduce sodium. You can get the protein and a filling breakfast without all the sodium. I make a batch of sausage and put it in the freezer. Thaw in the microwave as needed.
Here's a recipe that I use all the time. You can cut down on the salt called for if you want to. You can use ground turkey or pork.
http://queenofthereddoublewide.com/homemade-seasoning-for-breakfast-sausage/0 -
Food in tins (like soup or beans) often tend to be high in sodium, as do smoked foods like smoked salmon or cheese. The best way to avoid high sodium is to eat whole, natural foods and limit the processed stuff. :flowerforyou:0
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I generally do not like alot of salt, and cook alot from scratch, so my families sodium intake is usually very low. I hope I am not crossing a line here, because it is not an advertisement, but Bragg Liquid Aminos is made from Soy, but is not processed likd Soy Sauce. It still has some sodium, but it is much less than table salt or Soy Sauce.0
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Everything I've read or have heard from others says turkey sausage is best for protein as well as the egg whites - I get my breakfast from a deli right next to my job. I figured it was pretty healthy but if it's too salty I'll try your alternative.0
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First I'd like to say that my weight is starting to fall again after 3 weeks of no loss or gains (I think sodium is one cause of the stall) but sodium just seems to be so high in everything. Aside from cooking everything I eat, has anyone had success at maintaining low levels of sodium?
Not I. I cook most of my food.
But if you can't keep sodium down, then get your potassium up. It is the ratio of sodium and potassium that makes you bloat. Add more foods high in potassium to your diet. I glass of low sodium V8 or tomato juice may do the trick. Be careful if you use supplements as too much potassium can also cause problems.0 -
Try upping your potassium. On paper, your sodium will still be high, but the potassium will help you expel said sodium.
^^^This^^^...in addition to cooking with fresh ingredients, without packaged or canned foods and staying away from lunch meats.0
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