Lose weight /High blood pressure Need Low Sodium suggestions

fh10003
fh10003 Posts: 7 Member
edited November 29 in Food and Nutrition
Hi, I'm new here. I need to lose 16lb to get to the weight i need to be so that I won't have to go on blood pressure medication which is over the roof !

My Dr wants me to lower my sodium intake to no more than 1500 mg per day and be on a 1200 calories a day.

My question is, any good suggestions for quick low sodium ,tasty calorie recipes? Or even ready frozen food suggestions ?

Also , will my fitness plan which I joined today let me know if I'm going above the sodium level?

Anyone here from the nyc area?

Replies

  • ForeverSunshine09
    ForeverSunshine09 Posts: 966 Member
    Frozen food will be super hard to eat on low sodium. Most everything I eat is not frozen because of the sodium. Same goes for the canned foods. If you are on the app you can look at your sodium on the nutrition tab. I am on a low sodium diet but, mine is 2000Mgs. You just learn to spice your food with things other than salt, garlic salt or onion salt. I have found paprika, chili powder,garlic powder and onion powder is my favorite spice mix for a wide variety of things. You can get Mrs.dash which are no or low sodium spice mixes but, I didn't like any that I tried. So I just have a wide variety of spices. You will learn overtime how to make recipes lower sodium. Less broth, more veggies.
  • amyllu
    amyllu Posts: 432 Member
    I'm on a Low carb and Low sodium diet and with 1200 cals per day .. have a look at my diary..Request "friend" in order to see it.
  • markrgeary1
    markrgeary1 Posts: 853 Member
    edited February 2016
    Good luck. I failed to do what you are doing. Foolishly went on meds for over twenty years. I needed to do something, but the meds were a real PIA. Ran out at the worst times, felt horrible. Actually hospitalized twice because of them. So I'm med free after losing weight and changing my diet. I hope you can.

    As someone said frozen foods are mostly loaded with sodium, there are exceptions like some vegetables. Many canned and processed foods are very high too. There are low or no added sodium(many foods naturally contain it) of many canned vegetables. If you look you should find low sodium soups, be careful they may still contain a lot so read the label expecially the number of servings. I can't emphasize the importance of reading labels till you learn what to be careful about.

    Restaurant food and fast food are difficult or impossible. Again nutrition numbers are your friends. Any McDonald's I've eaten has been 800 mg.+ for a single sandwich. Some are much higher.

    So what to eat? I mostly cook from scratch, even then there's foods to watch out for, for example processed pork(ham bacon) is loaded with sodium while pork contains little. Obviously that's the easiest solution, not possible for everyone. You can find alternative foods that are lower sodium if you are diligent.

    Logging what you eat is a great exercise as you can backtrack to what meals cause it and then into the data for the foods that contain it. All with MFP. To see your running daily totals go to Nutrition then to Nutrients and you can see the sodium, click it and MFP shows the meals that contributed to the total. Then go to Dairy and review the highest sodium meal foods. Using that technique and searching for lower sodium options is how I got mine down.
  • Kamikazeflutterby
    Kamikazeflutterby Posts: 770 Member
    edited February 2016
    Switch to kosher salt for cooking, too. A volume measurement of kosher salt has less salt than a volume measurement of table salt. I did not think it was a super significant difference, but I just checked the MFP database and it said that kosher salt is 280mg sodium per 1/4 teaspoon, and table salt is 590mg sodium per 1/4 teaspoon.
  • FitKat123
    FitKat123 Posts: 71 Member
    You can set sodium as one if your macros. I believe light salt is half sodium and half potassium. You can make fresh peanut butter at many health food stores with no added salt. I actually prefer it to commercial which is too salty for my taste, but it is definitely an acquired taste. Really read nutritional labels of processed foods, beverages too.
  • pdxwine
    pdxwine Posts: 389 Member
    I have been low sodium for a year and a half. It is actually easier than it seems (when you first get started).

    I use salt substitute and a lot of herbs and pepper to spice things up. You can make any recipe, that you currently enjoy, taste just as good without salt.

    Be sure to check labels, as you get started. Canned tomatoes and beans are high in sodium, so look for "no salt added" varieties. Frozen meals are a thing of the past. They are FULL of sodium. Canned fish is also high in sodium. I eat a tuna sandwich every day, made with no-salt added tuna.

    You can take a look at my diary, to see the variety of things that I eat.

    My Dr. told me to cut my sodium and lose 10 pounds. I cut sodium and lost 90 pounds (so far). I am almost back to my previous, healthy weight. Yea! My blood pressure went back to normal within two months, without medication. I have had a few spikes with it, this year, which looks to be stress related. Ugh! I do monitor my BP at home.
  • ejbronte
    ejbronte Posts: 867 Member
    I'm also watching my sodium and try to keep it below 1200. It started with having to cook low-sodium meals for my parents, and the congenital concerns have apparently been passed along to me.

    Agreed that from-scratch cooking is the best way to go, and you can actually have some fun flavoring things up. Like others here, I like a mix of spices, and I also like to cook with wine. Not long ago, because I had no wine in the house, I used some of an old bottle of spiced rum, and aside from a startling moment of unplanned flambe, the result was lovely. Now if I use the rum for cooking, I just take the pan off the heat first and the alcohol cook out off the flame before putting it back. A quarter cup of wine or other alcoholic beverage, used to de-glaze a pan and tossed with onions makes a very nice, quickie sauce.

    Other acids are great too: lemon, lime, vinegar of various types.

    Fresh garlic cloves, smashed and chopped fine, then thrown into a hot pan with a bit of olive oil. Low flame - don't burn the garlic!

    Toasted mustard seeds, also very nice, if you like your food to bite you back a little.

    Bread has a lot of sodium, too. Having promised my doctor to have oatmeal every day, I make a quick grind of dry oats into a flour and whip up variety of tortillas, pancakes, and this weekend I had fun practicing oat flour crepes. Takes very little time, and I know exactly how much salt (and other things) have gone into it.
  • rileysowner
    rileysowner Posts: 8,336 Member
    edited February 2016
    Frozen food will be super hard to eat on low sodium. Most everything I eat is not frozen because of the sodium. Same goes for the canned foods. If you are on the app you can look at your sodium on the nutrition tab. I am on a low sodium diet but, mine is 2000Mgs. You just learn to spice your food with things other than salt, garlic salt or onion salt. I have found paprika, chili powder,garlic powder and onion powder is my favorite spice mix for a wide variety of things. You can get Mrs.dash which are no or low sodium spice mixes but, I didn't like any that I tried. So I just have a wide variety of spices. You will learn overtime how to make recipes lower sodium. Less broth, more veggies.

    Frozen veggies usually don't have salt added, at least not in Canada. It is only the frozen prepared meals that have a bunch of it. There are also a bunch of canned veggies and beans that have no salt added. One just needs to read labels.

    I would suggest starting out for a few days to a week just worrying about calories. If you look at the sodium levels for what you normally eat at the lower portion sizes it will give you an idea on what it high in sodium and what isn't.

    Then you can start modifying things. My experience is that for me to significantly reduce sodium requires cooking my own food from scratch. If there are things you like that you are now purchasing prepared, find a recipe for it and make it with no added salt or minimal added salt. I find adding other spices goes a long way to getting flavor while not adding sodium.

    Finally, not all people with high BP have high BP because of sodium. There are a number of people with high BP for whom sodium levels make no difference in raising or lowering it. Then often can manage their BP with weight loss and exercise. Maybe you will be one of those.

    So in short:
    1) Start out tracking calories to get them in line
    2) Then tackle sodium because you can see the sodium levels of the foods you eat

    With all this, get active. Walking, running, cycling, swimming, any other exercise that works your cardio vascular system.
  • fh10003
    fh10003 Posts: 7 Member
    Thank you everyone for the great feedback. It's all making sense. Trying to figure out how to use this site still.
  • withoutsupport
    withoutsupport Posts: 1 Member
    It sounds like we got the same orders at about the same time. I'm new to this, too, so this was so helpful. Thank you for sharing and good luck!
  • exercise_lady
    exercise_lady Posts: 1 Member
    Look at doing DASH. The book is called DASH Diet Weight Loss Solution by Margo Heller. It was designed for people with high blood pressure but is now and has been for past 3 years number 1 diet beating out Weght Watchers. There is also a Facebook page called New DASH Diet group for those following the plan. It works!
  • fh10003
    fh10003 Posts: 7 Member
    Thank you!
  • ericGold15
    ericGold15 Posts: 318 Member
    Excellent advices above.
    Food in cans and processed foods are likely high salt.
    Factories often introduce salt into meats to increase their water content so that they weigh more.

    I am a mostly vegan. If I didn't have a soy sauce addiction my sodium intake is around 200 mg a day. As it is, I meander between 1000 - 1500 mg a day.
  • ljmorgi
    ljmorgi Posts: 264 Member
    Welcome to the club; I've been on a low-sodium diet since 2002.

    A lot of frozen meals and foods are high in sodium, as are many canned foods. (Frozen veggies, however, generally don't have salt added like canned ones do.) Even things like breakfast cereal can have ridiculous amounts of sodium.

    The biggest change I had to make to my life was to eat out a lot less and start cookinng for myself a lot more. Your tastebuds will adjust gradually; find places here and there to cut the salt to start, and then adjust more as you get used to lower levels.

    I haven't gotten an e-mail from them in yonks, but http://www.lowsodiumcooking.com/ has a lot of recipes. I have Donald Gazzaniga's cookbook (The No Salt, Lowest Sodium Cookbook) but honestly haven't opened it in so long that I don't remember how easy or convenient the recipes are.

    And if your blood pressure doesn't come down the way the doctor wants, being on medication doesn't make you a failure of a human being. Don't listen to the people who make being medication-free a moral issue; if it weren't for Big Pharma I'd be dead.
  • ironhajee
    ironhajee Posts: 384 Member
    When you shift to a low carbohydrate or a ketogenic diet, your body loses storage carbohydrate, and also begins excreting sodium and water. When this happens, your blood pressure quickly drops, and much of the low energy that is attributed to “low blood sugar” when eating low carbohydrates is actually due to this low blood pressure.

    Read more http://www.bengreenfieldfitness.com/2012/08/low-carb-diet-supplements/
  • farmerpam1
    farmerpam1 Posts: 402 Member
    I got off high blood pressure meds and track sodium also. I never use salt in cooking and find that most processed food has ALOT of sodium per serving. I always check out the labels and sometimes a food isn't worth it if the count is too high. I started using dried spices instead of my beloved chipotle tabasco and Frank's hot sauce, I had no idea the count was so high and just for one measly teaspoon. I used to use waaaaay more than one teaspoon. Good luck, it's not too hard once you become aware. :)
  • fh10003
    fh10003 Posts: 7 Member
    Thank you . Will purchase spices and see if it makes a difference
  • niamibunni
    niamibunni Posts: 110 Member
    Bragg's seasoning is good. As your taste buds and body get used to lower sodium, things that were once bland will start to taste just fine as is.

    I make a pressure cooker chicken soup that is just a whole organic chicken, carrots, celery, onion, garlic, black pepper and water. I take the meat off after it cooks and then shred it and add it back to the pot. It tastes way better than any chemical filled low sodium soups and broths you'd buy.
  • fh10003
    fh10003 Posts: 7 Member
    Sound easy and tasty. Thank you!
  • veggiecanner
    veggiecanner Posts: 137 Member
    Anything with my normal amount of salt tastes too salty to me now. I've been on the low salt salt diet for 4 monthes now.
  • farmerpam1
    farmerpam1 Posts: 402 Member
    Anything with my normal amount of salt tastes too salty to me now. I've been on the low salt salt diet for 4 monthes now.

    ^This.
  • kbmnurse
    kbmnurse Posts: 2,484 Member
    Read nutrition labels, simple.
  • Hope228
    Hope228 Posts: 340 Member
    About 6 weeks ago I was diagnosed with high blood pressure. My Dr. wanted me to try a low sodium (1500 mg) before starting any meds. All my life I always had very low BP. I stayed within the range he told me and it still didn't drop. Just started meds.
  • evileen99
    evileen99 Posts: 1,564 Member
    It's not the salt ON food that you have to worry about, it's the salt IN food (others have alluded to this very same thing).

    Example: a medium order of McDonald's fries has 190 mg of sodium; a tablespoon of ketchup has 160 (and how many people use only 1 tablespoon of ketchup for an order of fries?)

    a serving of Lays potato chips has 180 mg of sodium, a serving of jello instant chocolate pudding has 310.

    as a pp said, read those nutrition labels!
  • fh10003
    fh10003 Posts: 7 Member
    Thank you!
  • djackel93
    djackel93 Posts: 3 Member
    My BP went down by switching to a primal diet...no restriction of salt. Don't know if this is an option for you but my body's inability to properly handle carbs was ccaisong my insulin to raise my BP.
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