Boiling canned goods reduce SODIUM?
deniseg31
Posts: 667 Member
Do any of you know if boiling canned goods (corn, cactus, other veggies) reduce the sodium originally contained in them? Let me know if you know. THANKS!
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Replies
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No it doesn't.0
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Darn! Thanks.0
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Not sure if this is a myth, but I hear if you rinse them well, you'll be lowering the sodium content a little. It's not too hard to find low sodium canned goods if you do a little label-reading.0
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Not sure if this is a myth, but I hear if you rinse them well, you'll be lowering the sodium content a little. It's not too hard to find low sodium canned goods if you do a little label-reading.
I had heard this as well. A nutritionist that my mom used to go to once told her this but I can't seem to find anything online regarding the subject. The thing is that being Lent I was craving Cactus - yes cactus. However, I hate messing with the prickly raw ones so I got the canned ones. Ate them and the calories were very low but I just realized that the sodium is sky high. I did rinse them very well and I also boiled them for about 20 minutes before I even prepared them for dinner (garlic, onion, tomato, green peppers and a little bit of cumin & EVOO). Oh well. :ohwell: I've eaten them now so I guess I'll just need ot steer clear of them.
Thank you. :flowerforyou:0 -
nope. some water will evaporate, but the salt won't.0
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Do any of you know if boiling canned goods (corn, cactus, other veggies) reduce the sodium originally contained in them? Let me know if you know. THANKS!0
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I've heard that rinsing canned beans, tuna, and veggies reduces the sodium, but I've never heard anythign about boiling.... I mean I'm sure scientifically there's probably some osmosis happening, but I don't know how significant it is.0
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Boiling would most likely concentrate the salt.0
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If you rinse them and cook them in clean water it will reduce the sodium but by how much is hard to say. You could do this until you are finished what you have on hand but If you truly want low sodium I would by no salt and add a dash at the table.0
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Eden Organics makes a lot of no/low sodium canned goods. Check that out. Rinse once, then rinse again to get rid of about 40% of the sodium.0
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@amccord2
thank you for the link. i frequently go over my sodium, even when i buy low sodium products, rarely add salt to my food while eating, and i don't buy buy chips, etc so going over my sodium intake was very frustrating. the article was very helpful. knowing that draining & rinsing will remove the majority of sodium will make tracking my sodium less frustrating. i've also decided if it's naturally occuring (ie plain celery sticks, or fresh apples) i'm not going to count those sugars or sodium. again, thanks for the article.0 -
I agree with rinsing the product before cooking it to get rid of a lot of the sodium.0
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I have started buying frozen veggies because of the sodium content in canned. But if it must be canned, I agree with rinsing and boiling in fresh water.0
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i'm all for the frozen also if you can't get fresh. I work at a school and we are getting away from the canned goods as they are so high in sodium.0
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Eden Organics makes a lot of no/low sodium canned goods. Check that out. Rinse once, then rinse again to get rid of about 40% of the sodium.
I love Eden Organics. Have a stash of their black beans and red beans.0 -
Rinsing, yes. But only a small amount. Most of the sodium is going to have absorbed into the food item before you open the can, so rinsing is only going to get rid of whatever happens to be stuck on the outside.
Boiling, no. You are bascially boiling whatever is in the pot right back into the item being cooked. So you're not leeching out any of the salt, you're just cooking it in it's own salt. When you boil foods whatever you add to the water cooks straight into the food, not the opposite way around. That's why people suggest boiling foods in broth or seasoned water to increase flavor in the finished meal.
You'd have more luck with rinsing, then soaking the food item in room temp water for a few hours. Draining and rinsing and then soaking again. The soaking, without boiling, will help to release some of the sodium, but since you're never know how much rinsing or soaking really gets out, you could never really accurately record that food item.0 -
No, boiling does not.
I'm not sure where I found this quote as I just saved it and not the source but likely from who it is quoting -- "In a Duke University study, 76% of the sodium was reduced when canned tuna was when rinsed for one minute. For canned vegetables, rinsing under water for one minute removed 41% of the sodium content."
So not sure where above post info was gathered but doesn't match what I have found at respected sites. I now always rinse since studies show it reduces sodium considerably.0 -
Ancient thread, but putting up this link for others that may stumble upon this topic in the future.
Indeed a study was done at Duke University in 1983 on this subject & rinsing canned foods does lower sodium content significantly. So does heating beans in tap water: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/68336850 -
Try rinsing them very well, this should remove much of the rubbish attached to the tinned foods.0
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Boiling canned goods only concentrates the sodium which was present. Rinsing well will help depending on the commodity.
If you can, it is best to avoid canned goods like the plague.0 -
why don't you use fresh vegetables instead of canned stuff?0
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why don't you use fresh vegetables instead of canned stuff?
Have you ever tried cooking with fresh cactus?0 -
If its a choice of canned beans or a big mac then you're better off with the canned food :-)0
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If you drain the brine and boil them in plain water, yes, it will. The salt will move from the high concentration of the vegetable to the low concentration of the water. If you boil them in the brine, it will increase the concentration as the water evaporates
Soaking the vegetables in plain water will have the same effect, it just takes a bit more time, but then again you won't be over cooking your vegetables.
ETA: old thread, whoops0
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