need to lower my salt intake but dont know how
him1025
Posts: 44
im on a very limited budget when it comes to grocery shopping. i have 5-6 people in my family depending if we have my stepson. my grocery budget for the month is $300.00 and we shop at super walmart and use coupons. my dilema is i need to lower my salt intake since i cant stomach drinking water. it taste really metalicy to me im going to ask my dr about it when i see her again, but in the mean while i would like to limit my salt intake to help with th water weight. we eat a lot of processed and boxed food since they are the cheapest to make. is there anything else that i can buy or try that wont break my budget?
0
Replies
-
Well one way is to start looking at the sodium level of all that processed foods you do buy and find the one with the lowest for one serving. Case in point, even bread can have alot of sodium. Start watching your sodium level on the nutritional information and put down the salt shaker!0
-
eat less salt0
-
Honestly, with boxed and processed meals...no. Even the lower sodium labels, are loaded with sodium.0
-
As far as not liking water, you could possibly research alternate ideas for water intake. Obviously it's a vital part of nutrition and I would definitely look into solutions for that. To help reduce sodium - don't put it on anything frozen, as they add enough of their own salt. Also, when you're at the grocery store is the best time to figure out which options have less sodium (compare two types of bread, for example), just like the PP stated. It's really just all about paying more attention to what your food has in it before you even bring it home.0
-
Stay away (as much as you can) from boxed and canned products.0
-
Something fairly inexpensive that you could add to your water is what I like to use: I drink either crystal light lemonade, which adds 70 sodium per packet, but you're drinking the water with it, and one bottle is only ten calories. For a lower sodium, try special k protein water, I get the pink lemonade, but they also have strawberry kiwi, that is 40g sodium, so 30g less than the crystal light, and it has I believe 5g of protein compared to none in the crystal light, and you need protein for building muscle, but it has 30 calories per bottle.0
-
Do yourself a favor and drink the water. I know you don't like it but we are humans and we do a lot of things we don't like just because we have to do. I have a love/hate relationship with Jillian Michaels but I still pop that DVD in the player. Because it works. So does water.
Stay away from the frozen food section. No processed stuff. No canned soups. Look for low sodium varieties of canned goods (but, nothing replaces fresh veggies and fruits, NOTHING). I swear they sell these things everywhere and my budget hasn't increase whatsoever. When you learn to shop around the outer parts of the grocery store, you'll learn you waste a ton of money on convienence foods. Buy a cookbook instead and make everything from scratch. Yes it takes time, but it's worth it!0 -
I take it you have done the obvious thing of not adding salt to anything as you either cook it or serve it?
When you are buying processed food you can look at the labels and try to choose products with less salt. It may also be worth checking whether the processed foods really are the cheapest in the various different categories for example I would expect that chicken nuggets would be cheaper than fresh chicken but are frozen chips cheaper than whole potatoes? Are baked beans in a tin cheaper than frozen peas?0 -
My water at my house doesn't taste very good from the tap either. While you're at walmart you could pick up mio to add to it or just buy a lemon and put a slice in every glass to mask the metallic flavor. That's what I do. Other than that you'll just have to do a lot of label comparison to see which foods have the least amount of salt. Good luck.0
-
You don't have to eat processed and boxed food to eat for cheap.
Buy brown rice in bulk. It seriously lasts forever, I haven't purchased rice in like 2 months. I also buy boneless, skinless chicken breast tenders in large quantities, cook about 3-4 days worth and freeze the rest. That way they're easy to heat up for dinners/lunches, one package of them runs around $6-$7 and lasts my family of 3 a couple days (including me eating chicken as a snack, lunch, and dinner). You can do the same thing with ground beef or turkey, although ground turkey can get pricey so just get lean ground beef and drain off the excess fat. I don't really eat bread or pasta, but you can buy pasta in bulk as well, and it lasts a long time.
Fruits and veggies can be a little tough, but you can either a. stock up on frozen veggies (they last a long time, have the nutritional value, and no added sodium), or hit up a local farmer's market for deals on produce. Buy what's on sale. My son LOVES strawberries, so I get them if they're on sale or if a farmer's market has a good deal on them. But if they don't, he's out of luck, I'll get whatever fruit is affordable at the time.
Don't add salt to your food. I know that seems impossible for some people, but I don't do it at my food tastes just fine. Instead, I have a well stocked spice cabinet (spices last a really long time too---I can't even remember the last time I had to buy any of my spices). You can season food with some lemon juice and basil/oregano/cilantro/whatever spice you like and you're good to go.0 -
A box of Hamburger Helper is $1.25 at Walmart.....it serves four, so you might make 2 boxes? That's $2.50. Add in a pound of ground beef for another $3 (I'm guessing....I don't buy ground beef at Walmart). That makes it $5.50. A can of green beans sets you back another $1. You're up to $6.50 for the meal. Add another $1.50 for bread (a can of crescent rolls). You made an $8 meal.
For $3 you can get a bag of potatoes.....with about 10 potatoes or more in the bag (depending on size). So, for 5 potatoes you have $1.50 worth of potatoes. Add a pound of carrots for about $1.25. Your meal so far costs $2.75. A local butcher where I live has pork loin on sale for $1.78/lb (you have to buy a larger quantity, but they will cut and package it however you want). A 2lb roast would be $3.56. Throw your roast, chopped potatoes, and carrots in the crock pot with some water and let it cook all day. This meal costs $6.31.....saves you money and costs less. It's really not more expensive to eat unprocessed food, if you plan it.0 -
I take it you have done the obvious thing of not adding salt to anything as you either cook it or serve it?
When you are buying processed food you can look at the labels and try to choose products with less salt. It may also be worth checking whether the processed foods really are the cheapest in the various different categories for example I would expect that chicken nuggets would be cheaper than fresh chicken but are frozen chips cheaper than whole potatoes? Are baked beans in a tin cheaper than frozen peas?
Actually, I've found that buying a bag of chicken nuggets is more expensive than buying your own chicken and making em yourself. I have a 5 year old who went through a phase of refusing all food except chicken nuggets, salad, and strawberries, so I started making my own for him, much more cost efficient and healthy!0 -
A box of Hamburger Helper is $1.25 at Walmart.....it serves four, so you might make 2 boxes? That's $2.50. Add in a pound of ground beef for another $3 (I'm guessing....I don't buy ground beef at Walmart). That makes it $5.50. A can of green beans sets you back another $1. You're up to $6.50 for the meal. Add another $1.50 for bread (a can of crescent rolls). You made an $8 meal.
For $3 you can get a bag of potatoes.....with about 10 potatoes or more in the bag (depending on size). So, for 5 potatoes you have $1.50 worth of potatoes. Add a pound of carrots for about $1.25. Your meal so far costs $2.75. A local butcher where I live has pork loin on sale for $1.78/lb (you have to buy a larger quantity, but they will cut and package it however you want). A 2lb roast would be $3.56. Throw your roast, chopped potatoes, and carrots in the crock pot with some water and let it cook all day. This meal costs $6.31.....saves you money and costs less. It's really not more expensive to eat unprocessed food, if you plan it.
I love how you broke that down!0 -
I take it you have done the obvious thing of not adding salt to anything as you either cook it or serve it?
When you are buying processed food you can look at the labels and try to choose products with less salt. It may also be worth checking whether the processed foods really are the cheapest in the various different categories for example I would expect that chicken nuggets would be cheaper than fresh chicken but are frozen chips cheaper than whole potatoes? Are baked beans in a tin cheaper than frozen peas?
Actually, I've found that buying a bag of chicken nuggets is more expensive than buying your own chicken and making em yourself. I have a 5 year old who went through a phase of refusing all food except chicken nuggets, salad, and strawberries, so I started making my own for him, much more cost efficient and healthy!
So agree with you! I make chicken nuggets at home for my daughter too. I wait till chicken is on sale and then I have her help me make them. She learns about cooking and eating healthy, and I know exactly what's going into her body, all while saving some $$.0 -
A box of Hamburger Helper is $1.25 at Walmart.....it serves four, so you might make 2 boxes? That's $2.50. Add in a pound of ground beef for another $3 (I'm guessing....I don't buy ground beef at Walmart). That makes it $5.50. A can of green beans sets you back another $1. You're up to $6.50 for the meal. Add another $1.50 for bread (a can of crescent rolls). You made an $8 meal.
For $3 you can get a bag of potatoes.....with about 10 potatoes or more in the bag (depending on size). So, for 5 potatoes you have $1.50 worth of potatoes. Add a pound of carrots for about $1.25. Your meal so far costs $2.75. A local butcher where I live has pork loin on sale for $1.78/lb (you have to buy a larger quantity, but they will cut and package it however you want). A 2lb roast would be $3.56. Throw your roast, chopped potatoes, and carrots in the crock pot with some water and let it cook all day. This meal costs $6.31.....saves you money and costs less. It's really not more expensive to eat unprocessed food, if you plan it.
Ditto this.... it is really less expensive to make your own meals especially if your on a budget. There are loads of sites that help you fix healthy budget friendly meals.0 -
We are on a strict budget with food. I stopped buying canned veggies and started buying either fresh or frozen. yes you can get a can for 50 cents and a bag of frozen is about $1.50 or so, but the bag has about 4-5 cans worth.0
-
im on a very limited budget when it comes to grocery shopping. i have 5-6 people in my family depending if we have my stepson. my grocery budget for the month is $300.00 and we shop at super walmart and use coupons. my dilema is i need to lower my salt intake since i cant stomach drinking water. it taste really metalicy to me im going to ask my dr about it when i see her again, but in the mean while i would like to limit my salt intake to help with th water weight. we eat a lot of processed and boxed food since they are the cheapest to make. is there anything else that i can buy or try that wont break my budget?
One thing you can try is frozen veg instead of canned. Canned Veg has a lot more salt in it.0 -
just eat only fruits, veggies, and beans! it will save you money, make you healthier, and totally cut down on your sodium! seriously, try it! google "plant-based diet" or read dr. furhman's book "eat to live" - definitely changing my life.0
-
Frosted Mini-Wheats have ZERO sodium.0
-
Get rid of processed foods. That's the only real way. Or choose low/no sodium food options.0
-
I would suggest you try shopping in other smaller stores..like Aldi's or local international markets or Asian markets...they arent fancy but their produce is a LOT cheaper.
It helps if you cook from scratch..cheaper and healthier too.
processed foods and boxed stuff WILL have tons of sodium..there is no way out of that. :grumble:
im on a severely chopped budget myself, but i found , shopping around. saving receipts and comparing prices with different stores...it really helps.
and you need to start drinking more water...that is the only way you can flush the salt out...you have to ask yourself..how bad do you want this:flowerforyou:0 -
You don't have to eat processed and boxed food to eat for cheap.
Buy brown rice in bulk. It seriously lasts forever, I haven't purchased rice in like 2 months. I also buy boneless, skinless chicken breast tenders in large quantities, cook about 3-4 days worth and freeze the rest. That way they're easy to heat up for dinners/lunches, one package of them runs around $6-$7 and lasts my family of 3 a couple days (including me eating chicken as a snack, lunch, and dinner). You can do the same thing with ground beef or turkey, although ground turkey can get pricey so just get lean ground beef and drain off the excess fat. I don't really eat bread or pasta, but you can buy pasta in bulk as well, and it lasts a long time.
Fruits and veggies can be a little tough, but you can either a. stock up on frozen veggies (they last a long time, have the nutritional value, and no added sodium), or hit up a local farmer's market for deals on produce. Buy what's on sale. My son LOVES strawberries, so I get them if they're on sale or if a farmer's market has a good deal on them. But if they don't, he's out of luck, I'll get whatever fruit is affordable at the time.
Don't add salt to your food. I know that seems impossible for some people, but I don't do it at my food tastes just fine. Instead, I have a well stocked spice cabinet (spices last a really long time too---I can't even remember the last time I had to buy any of my spices). You can season food with some lemon juice and basil/oregano/cilantro/whatever spice you like and you're good to go.0 -
Go with as unprocessed as possible and remember that you don't need much meat.
One of my favorite meals is mujadarrah - basically rice and lentils with caramelized onions. I like to add some spinach (fresh or frozen), or have some roast or steamed veggies on the side.
1.5 cups of brown rice - about $1
1 cup of lentils - about $1
2 onions - about $2, maybe less depending on where you leave?
salt, pepper, olive oil shouldn't add up to more than 50 cents or so.
Bag of steamed veggies on the side - get something on sale for $1-2.
For $6 you have a super healthy meal that can easily feed six! The biggest thing is to plan your meals. Plan every single meal, and make sure you have a use for leftovers. I buy dried beans instead of canned, that saves a lot. Buy a whole chicken and cut it yourself; eat what's in season and what's on sale!0 -
I'd stop buying cheap processed *kitten*. You aren't doing youself an favors. Frozen veggies are pretty cheap if you buy the store brand. Brown rice and dry beans are also cheap. As far as meat and fresh produce don't be loyal to one store. Keep an eye on the prices for all the stores in your area and buy whats on sale. When meat is on sale buy extra and freeze it.0
-
thanks for all the suggestions i will be looking coupons for fresh products and fyi i dont add salt to my food the only salt i get is in my food cause my family has heart problems. but thanks everyone for the great ideas0
-
it's actually cheaper to make the non processed versions yourself but might not be easier in terms of time.
just stop buying so much of the processed stuff. farmer's markets have cheaper produce and when you go grocery shopping, make sure the majority of your items come from the outer edges, the more you go into the aisles, the more likely you'll be getting processed foods0 -
Cut out all canned unless it is no salt added. Frozen veggies are better than canned anyways.
No boxed meals (hamburger helper, potatoes, etc.)
No lunch meat (none are acceptable on salt limits)
Review your condiments (soy sauce isn't the only bad one. Ketchup, BBQ, steak sauce -- all super high)
Breads - Buy a bread machine. Make your own and you know what goes in it.
Frozen Meals - Only buy veggies frozen, rest are bad (some meats okay but some they dip in sodium solution before they freeze)
Throw the salt shaker out. You don't need it nor does the rest of the family. Your taste buds will change after a while and you will not miss it.
Search net to find low sodium alternatives to items like spaghetti sauce, ketchup, soy sauce, etc.
Read all labels before you buy
Watch your cheeses. Unless it specifically says low sodium try to stick to Swiss it is naturally low.0 -
#1 you need to drink water, period! Try flavoring it with cucumbers, mint, orange or lemon slices if you don't like the flavor.
#2 stop buying processed food. I am an avid Dave Ramsey follower and I too live on a very strict $300 a month budget for groceries, for 4 people and this includes paper products like TP and paper towels, personal toiletries like shampoo, soap, razors, toothpaste etc, cleaning products, and diapers so I know you can eat healthy on a budget. Here is how I save money:
I make everything from scratch and I mean everything. I bake my own bread. I make my own soups and spaghetti sauce and freeze them. I even make my own cleaning products, laundry detergent and hand soap. By making everything from scratch I can control what and how much goes in it.
I grow a garden in my backyard. What I can't grow I buy at the farmers market in season and it is alot cheaper than Walmart. Last week I got a huge grocery bag Probably 15#'s of Broccoli for $5. I then put these fresh veggies in the freezer or can them. I go to the local U Pick farm and buy strawberries, blackberries and blueberries for aroun $1 a LB. I have made friends with local farmers and get alot of produce for free. For example last week a guy let me pick up a 50# sack of onions for free another farmer let me dig a 5 gallon bucket of red potatoes for free and I buy tomatoes for $8 a 5 gallon bicket at another u pick farm and I can them every summer. I grow all of my herbs myself and dry them to use all year long.
My husband hunts and we butcher 2 deer every year. We use ground venison instead of hamburger and eat deer steaks instead of beef. As for chicken I only buy it when it is on sale and freeze it. I buy bone in chicken breasts for .89 to .99 a LB and debone it myself. I buy pork tenderloins and make my own pork chops and freeze them. You can typically get these for $1.99 a LB (SAMS Club has them for this price all of the time.) I try to buy my seafood direct from the fisherman. We live on the coast and you can get shrimp, heads on, for around $2 a LB. I buy these in season and freeze them. As for seafood I can not get from fisherman I buy it at Kroger (typically on wednesdays) when they mark it down because it is within 2 day of the expiration date and I either eat it right away or freeze it.
You can live on a budget and be healthy one of my favorite summer treats is fresh salsa which is easy to make it is tomatos, onions, cilantro and a jalapeno chopped up and seasoned with cumin. I eat it by itself with a fork. You can toss in an avacado if you want or black beans to add protein. I also make veggie soup which is whatever I have in my freezer with a can of tomatoes and a can of beer. It is about 85 calories a 1 cup serving. Another one of my favorites is cauliflower carrot soup. It is cauliflower and carrots boiled in water then you strain off half the water puree it and add ground ginger for seasoning. It is about 50 calories per serving. I like to serve any of these with a simple protein like a grilled chicken breast (which I season with ACV or regular vinegar), a grilled pork chop or baked fish.
Eggs are another cheap yet often forgetten about protein. I like to make spinach quiche and fritattas. I also like them just boiled or scrambled on bread as a sandwich.
You need to stop using money and not liking to drink water as an excuse buy a cookbook, read some forums on healthy scratch cooking and make a lifestyle change.0 -
Certain medications can cause things to taste metallic. Talk to your doctor or pharmacist and see if a medication could be causing the problem, maybe you could be switched to something else. Or if it's just the tap water where you live, you could try drinking bottled water or (since I know you're on a budget) getting a Brita filter?0
-
I also need to lower my salt intake, incidently I already knew the reason. So, I will have to agree with what most of the people here already did. Just Say No to processed food! Also with the water thing, I live in a small city that has the most horrible tasting water ever known to man. I get Culligan water delivered (water cooler and 5 gallon jugs). It costs me about $25 a month, but it is totally worth it. If you can't afford that, maybe try getting a Britta pitcher. I used those before and they do a good job for most water and they're not real expensive. Otherwise, as a last resort Walmart does sell cases of bottled water for very cheap too. No matter what you do, it is imperitive that you start drinking water.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 176K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.6K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.4K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions