Thanksgiving meals loaded with salt, health advocates warn
WASHINGTON (AP) — Health experts are concerned that people will still be saying "pass the salt" this Thanksgiving, even when many prepared foods already are loaded with it.
From the stuffing mix to the green bean casserole to even pumpkin pie, a lot of people can reach their daily sodium allotment or more with just the fixings alone. And even the turkey can be injected with salt water to plump it before it reaches the store.
The total amount of sodium for a Thanksgiving meal can be as much as 2,000 milligrams. The nation's new dietary guidelines say no one should eat more than 2,300 milligrams of sodium per day, and half the population should eat even less.
Registered dietitian Bethany Thayer of the American Dietetic Association says one way to get around a lot of salt on turkey day is to prepare the meal from scratch as much as possible.
Some suggestions:
Use homemade cornbread for stuffing instead of the stuff in a box. And try onion, garlic and a variety of herbs in place of salt, but watch out for things like poultry seasoning, which can contain salt.
RecommendedRecent Facebook Activity
Only On 7
-
ABC7 takes you backstage at Dancing With The Stars
ABC7 News has your backstage ticket to the Dancing With The Stars Finale! Join ABC7's Cynne Simpson from Hollywood for all the excitement Monday and Tuesday on ABC7 News At 5 and 11. Click here for all the latest news leading up to the crowning of the Dancing With The Stars champ!
TBD Blogs What you need to read
-
@TBD Arts
Gary Oldman thinks our red carpets are lame
-
The Market Report
Giant promises to open all lanes in Columbia Heights
-
@TBD On Foot
Here's the Metro map sewn out of threads
Best of TBD In case you missed it
-
'Fight Night' gets wild
Redskins cheerleaders, councilmembers, and boxing legends all came out for the annual fundraiser.

4 Comments
Post a Comment