gleam wrote:Can I assume that we've all seen the news that Frito Lay has developed a new salt crystal formation that will allow them to cut sodium levels by 25% in their potato chips without reducing the saltiness the consumer perceives?
PepsiCo Develops 'Designer Salt' to Chip Away at Sodium Intake
aschie30 wrote:Kennyz wrote:jesteinf wrote:I guess my only point is, if there's a little less sodium in the little circle of turkey product that one finds in a Lunchable...that's probably not such a bad thing, and the world will remain safe for democracy.
Sure, but what if you find out that the lunchable actually has the same sodium content as the Iberico ham you're buying from a gourmet grocer? How could the FDA get away with restricting one, but not the other?
Easy. You're assuming that all regulations are written blindly and applied fairly across the board to all foods (and, by extension, food manufacturers).
snip from article wrote:Sixteen food companies plan to cut the amount of salt in bacon, flavored rice and dozens of other products as part of a national effort to reduce American's sodium consumption by 20 percent.
snip from article wrote:"Sodium is a major cause of high blood pressure, which in turn can lead to heart attack and stroke," Bloomberg said.
ronnie_suburban wrote:As was predicted above, we now have bacon, a food in which bacon is an essential component, being targeted for salt reduction.
Kennyz wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:As was predicted above, we now have bacon, a food in which bacon is an essential component, being targeted for salt reduction.
There have been reduced salt bacon products on the market for years, maybe decades. The Bloomberg initiative simply provides Kraft and its ilk with increased marketing strength for a crappy product it's been trying to sell forever. I wouldn't ring the alarm bells over this. These proposed regulations and initiatives are a boondoggle for the processed food companies they supposedly target.
riddlemay wrote:There are two separate issues, it seems to me. One is whether too much salt is unhealthy for too many people...... Ronnie is sure that the answer to the first question is no......So I'll just say that if we can stipulate (if only for the moment) that high salt levels are harmful to health........
riddlemay wrote:Ronnie is sure that the answer to the first question is no.
riddlemay wrote:So I'll just say that if we can stipulate (if only for the moment) that high salt levels are harmful to health, the government has just as much cause to regulate this as it does the levels of mercury in our foods. (Granted it doesn't do a perfect job of regulating this, either, but I want it to.)
kenji wrote:What would make you believe the opposite? Scientific proof?
Just wondering........
Darren72 wrote:Katie, I think if you read the earlier posts you'd see that we are talking about regulating salt in processed foods, not salt you put on food yourself. 75 to 80 percent of salt consumption comes from processed foods.
andI understand the concern for people with high blood pressure - I grew up in a home with a parent with serious high blood pressure
Perhaps because of my dad's health concerns, I've always kept a corner of my eye out for news on salt's role in health, and I've never come across anything that persuaded me that salt was harmful to people with normal blood pressure.
bacon, a food in which bacon is an essential component
Edzo said:But if you're buying something that you believe is healthy, like a "healthy choice" frozen dinner, you might be surprised to see the label and think twice.
Jonah wrote:The article does, however, beg the main question. It does not surprise me that lowering salt intake could lower blood pressure in those who do not have hypertension, but the question is, what is the benefit of that? If your blood pressure is normal, is there a benefit to keeping it a touch below normal, at the cost of eating less tasty food?
elakin wrote:I think most of the posters here (as well as most people who seem to be discussing this issue, more widely) are missing the main issue here, which is salt in *processed* food.
The problem isn't restaurants putting salt on french fries. It's restaurants that buy frozen, processed fries that have salt added as a preservative. Often the salts used as preservatives are formulated in such a way that they don't add a lot of perceived salty taste to the end product, or they're counter-balanced by added sugar. The salt (in various forms) is there to lend a longer shelf life for the product, not for any qualitative reason.
This is the same with *many* processed foods--canned soup, frozen dinners, rice-a-roni type rices and noodles, anything with a "flavor packet", etc, etc, etc....The sodium levels on these things are through the roof, often meeting the amount recommended for a full day's intake.
Jonah wrote: Are they suggesting that by eating too much salt when you have normal blood pressure does permanent damage in that it could lead to hypertension when you would not develop it with lower salt intake? That is the key question.
Jonah
Jonah wrote:Beyond avoiding canned soup and processed foods, the whole measurement thing gets very obscure.
kenji wrote:Sodium content concern is way bigger than Campbells soup and Mcdonalds. Example, a fresh Kaufmans' or Chicago B&B bagel, yeah that huge thing, depending on which one you choose, can have 800mgs of sodium. That's more than 25% of what I ingest a day.
Darren72 wrote:kenji wrote:Sodium content concern is way bigger than Campbells soup and Mcdonalds. Example, a fresh Kaufmans' or Chicago B&B bagel, yeah that huge thing, depending on which one you choose, can have 800mgs of sodium. That's more than 25% of what I ingest a day.
Huh?
kenji wrote:For a person wanting to watch sodium they can't assume one company's product info translates to another company's product.
Darren72 wrote:kenji wrote:For a person wanting to watch sodium they can't assume one company's product info translates to another company's product.
This is exactly the mistake you made. Your 800mg of sodium figure seems pulled from thin air, and then applied to a different company's product.