Authors: C.N.S. Ph.D. Ann Louise Gittleman
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Don’t concern yourself with the sodium content of natural foods
in recipes. If the food is fresh and unprocessed, the sodium content really is too small to worry about.
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Instead, focus your attention on avoiding salt-laden processed foods;
this is the key to cutting sodium in recipes. When a recipe calls for any of the following ingredients, substitute the corresponding lower-sodium alternative:
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Table salt:
herbs or salt-free herbal blends of your choice. (Salt-free all-purpose blends are the most common substitution.)
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Celery salt:
celery flakes.
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Garlic salt:
garlic powder.
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Onion salt:
onion powder.
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Tomato paste:
salt-free tomato paste.
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Tomato sauce:
a tomato sauce with no salt added—or make your own by blending two cans of water with one can of salt-free tomato paste.
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Canned tomato juice or vegetable juice cocktail:
low-sodium tomato juice or low-sodium vegetable juice cocktail. If the taste of the low-sodium version is too bland for you, make it zestier by pouring the juice into a glass bottle and adding one whole green onion and several pieces of diced celery. Let it sit for a few hours, strain it, then taste the flavorful transformation.
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Canned tomatoes:
canned tomatoes that are salt-free or have no salt added.
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Soy sauce or tamari sauce:
reduced-sodium soy sauce, reduced-sodium tamari sauce, or Braggs Liquid Amino Acids. (See tips 63 and 64.)
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Canned soup or broth:
homemade or low-sodium canned soup or broth. (See
chapter 4
for more information.)