| salt association |
| salt & health | ||||||
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nutrition nutrition - salt in food - balanced diet - salt in the body salt in food the role of salt For thousands of years, salt has been used to preserve food and improve taste. It has a wide range of uses:
Based upon ‘Sodium Halides, Sodium Chloride’ Bruce M Bertram, Salt Institute. The amount of salt we consume depends on our individual eating habits, but typically about 20 per cent of our salt intake is from foods that naturally contain salt, such as eggs, meat and fish. At the table, a typical person adds an estimated 15 per cent of his or her intake to food. The remainder of the salt in our diet is added during cooking or comes from processed foods. Many foods contribute to total salt intake without being perceived as being salty. For example, white bread and cornflakes both contain salt but, unlike potato crisps or nuts, the salt is contained within the food and not on the surface, where it is more easily detected.
labelling Manufacturers are legally required to label processed food with nutritional information, to allow consumers to make educated judgements about their diet. The levels of fat, carbohydrate, energy and protein should always be listed, and more manufacturers are now detailing the amount of sodium, saturates, dietary fibre and sugars. Some labels now display the salt - as well as the sodium -content of the product. For those that do not, you can work out the approximate amount of salt per 100 grammes, by multiplying the sodium content by 2.5. Click for more information about labelling from BUPA and the British Nutrition Foundation.
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