Re: salt free meals:(
Originally Posted by
Silver Tabby
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You can buy something called Lo-Salt - but I am not sure what it tastes like.
Lo-Salt
http://recipes.howstuffworks.com/fre...ly-healthy.htm
"It promises all the flavorful goodness of salt without the sodium and could be very helpful for those interested in lowering their sodium intake.
The problem is that you can't have salt without sodium. It'd be like taking the hydrogen out of H2O -- it just doesn't make a whole lot of sense. Salt is called sodium chloride for a reason: It's 40 percent sodium and 60 percent chlorine, and cutting out most of the sodium makes it, well, something that isn't salt. In fact, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), low-sodium salt isn't even food, as food-grade salt is required to consist of at least 97.5 percent sodium chloride."
"But if low-sodium salt isn't food, what is it? Low-sodium salts typically replace some of the sodium in sodium chloride with potassium, so they're a mixture of sodium and potassium chloride. Potassium chloride does have a salt-like taste, but there's a reason we've been sprinkling our steaks exclusively with sodium-infused crystals for thousands of years --
potassium chloride can kill you."
"Potassium chloride is the principle positive ion in our body's cells and can help lower blood pressure. Unfortunately, it can also stop your heart. In fact, potassium chloride, while safe in small dosages, is the toxin of choice for many states' lethal injection procedures, so it's definitely not something you want to ingest in excess. Most low-sodium salts advise you to consult a doctor before consuming, but if you ask us, it's safer to just stay away from non-food products, especially if they can kill you."
TLC Tip
"Instead of low-sodium salt, you may want to try organic herb seasoning salt. It's not a complete salt substitute, but the sodium content is lessoned through the addition of other all-natural ingredients, such as onions, celery leaves, garlic, thyme and rosemary"