If I do not add
salt to food in cooking or at the
table
will my diet be low in salt? NO .
Audio Transcripts
Bread
and breakfast cereals provide 30% of Na intake
Bread is a major contributor, containing high concentrations of salt
at around 400-725 mg/100g; a vegemite sandwich contains more Na in the
bread than in the vegemite. Salt-reduced bread is still quite high in
salt at about 345mg/100g. The only widely available bread on the Australian
market which is salt-reduced is Pritikin bread, some country life breads,
some Burgen breads and some raisin breads.
Some breakfast cereals can mask the flavour of high concentrations of
salt in the same remarkable manner as bread e.g 200mg Na / 30g serve
= cornflakes, rice bubbles, oat flakes, granola, bran plus; <100mg
Na/ 30g serve = weetbix, sustain, guardian, just right. Choosing low
salt foods is essential for anyone who wishes to observe the Recommended
Dietary Intake (RDI) for Na. A low salt processed food is defined as
having a sodium content of <=120 mg/100g. In other words, table salt
can be sprinkled on food at the table without exceeding the RDI for
Na if the overall diet is low in processed food such as salty snack
foods and if the bread and breakfast cereals consumed are salt reduced.
Is
it better to add salt to cooking rather than at the table?
A study was able to show (Beauchamp et al., J Am Med Assoc
1987; 258: 3275-78) that on low salt meals subjects used far more salt
from the salt shaker as would be expected. However, despite explicit
pressure to use as much salt as they liked, they used only a fraction
of the amount which was needed to restore the salt content of the meal
to that of an 'ordinary' high salt meal which had been cooked with salt.
The explanation offered by the investigators is "that salt added
at the table remains on the surface of the food and is nearly all tasted,
whereas much of the salt used in cooking is not tasted (an example being
the difficulty of detecting much of the heavy salt load in bread".
The choice of low salt unprocessed foods makes a considerable difference
to the total amount of salt consumed even when salt is sprinkled liberally
on food at the table.
Should
I prefer iodised salt over un-iodised salt?
There is emerging evidence that Australians are not consuming
enough iodine, possibly because of the quality of our soil resulting
in plants which are low in iodine and because only about one sixth of
the salt consumed in Australia is iodised.
The salt used by the food industry tends to be uniodised.
Iodine keeps your thyroid working properly which can affect your metabolic
rate and it is also necessary for brain development and intelligence.
Professor Basil Hetzel from the University of Adelaide
has carried out a lot of work in developing countries to increase the
amount of iodine in the soil as well as in salt in an attempt to reduce
the occurrence of iodine deficiency. Professor Hetzel is now encouraging
the introduction of legislation in Australia to ensure that all salt
is iodised to protect our future children from iodine deficiency. Iodine
deficiency can result in a mean reduction in IQ of 13.5 points and it
is the most common form of preventable brain damage in the world today.
In Australia, a recent check of urine iodine in a group
of pregnant women in Sydney indicated mild iodine deficiency. This cannot
be ignored as there is now definite evidence that brain damage can occur
even with mild iodine deficiency. This reflects changes in food habits,
reduction of iodised salt intake, changes in food technology, phasing
out of iodophors as disinfectants in milk. Recent urine iodine data
from Tasmanian school children are also a cause for concern, because
they indicate a big reduction in iodine intake to undesirably low levels.
Professor Hetzel believes that more systematic information is needed
in Australia as iodine deficiency is now looming as a threat to the
IQ of our future children and wants this matter to be considered urgently
by Ministers of Health in Australia.
In
other words, prefer iodised salt to un-iodised salt for cooking and
for the salt shaker, especially if you don't eat foods high in iodine
such as fish or seaweed on a weekly basis.
Read
more about iodine on HEC website
More
Information
On-line summary written by Choice Magazine June 2000 "Salt
- should you cut down"
Brochure on salt
written by Dr.Rosemary Stanton
If you are interested read a full review of the literature on salt
read the on-line report on the Australian Dietary Guidelines for
adults and
elderly
Next