The Bellevue Gazette

Salt subtly trimmed from many foods amid campaign

By JENNIFER PELTZ

Asso­ci­ated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — Salt has qui­etly been slip­ping out of dozens of the most famil­iar foods in brand-name Amer­ica, from But­ter­ball turkeys to Uncle Ben’s fla­vored rice dishes to Goya canned beans.

A Kraft Amer­i­can cheese sin­gle has 18 per­cent less salt than it did three years ago. The salt in a dol­lop of Ragu Old World Style pasta sauce is down by 20 per­cent. A serv­ing of a Wish­bone salad dress­ing has as much as 37 per­cent less salt. A squirt of Heinz ketchup is 15 per­cent less salty.

Their man­u­fac­tur­ers are among 21 com­pa­nies that have met tar­gets so far in a vol­un­tary, New York City-led effort to get food man­u­fac­tur­ers and restau­ra­teurs to lighten up on salt to improve Amer­i­cans’ heart health, Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced Mon­day. While it’s unclear whether con­sumers have noticed the changes, cam­paigns aim to get more salt out of the national diet in the com­ing years — a chal­lenge for an ingre­di­ent that plays a role in the taste, preser­va­tion and even tex­ture of food.

Salt reduc­tion has become a recent focus of pub­lic health cam­paigns in the city and else­where. Salt, or sodium chlo­ride, is the main source of sodium for most people.

Sodium increases the risk of high blood pres­sure, a major cause of heart dis­ease and stroke. Dietary guide­lines rec­om­mend no more than 2,300 mil­ligrams of sodium a day, equal to about a tea­spoon of salt; the Amer­i­can Heart Asso­ci­a­tion sug­gests 1,500 mil­ligrams or less. But aver­age sodium con­sump­tion in the U.S. is around 3,300 mil­ligrams, the fed­eral Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol and Pre­ven­tion have found.

Offi­cials said the first step was a mean­ing­ful one.

The prod­ucts they’re mak­ing health­ier are some of America’s most beloved and iconic foods,” noted Bloomberg, a fan of Subway’s meaty Ital­ian BMT sand­wiches, which are now 27 per­cent less salty.

Health offi­cials say Amer­i­cans get the vast major­ity of their salt from processed and pre­pared foods, and not nec­es­sar­ily the foods they’d imag­ine: Bread and rolls are the No. 1 source.

The prob­lem is not the salt on the table. The prob­lem is the salt on the label,” city Health Com­mis­sioner Dr. Thomas Far­ley said.

The amount of salt in any given food item can vary widely. A slice of white bread can have between 80 and 230 mil­ligrams of sodium, for exam­ple. A cup of canned chicken noo­dle soup has between 100 and 940 mil­ligrams. A 1-ounce bag of potato chips ranges from 50 to 200 milligrams.

In one of a series of healthy-eating ini­tia­tives on Bloomberg’s 11-year watch, the city announced vol­un­tary salt guide­lines in 2010 for var­i­ous restau­rant and store-bought foods. Besides trim­ming salt lev­els in the foods by 25 per­cent by 2014, the cam­paign aimed to reduce con­sumers’ over­all sodium intake by 20 per­cent in the same time­frame. Interim tar­gets for the foods were set for 2012.

For instant hot cere­als, as an exam­ple, the guide­lines called for a 15 per­cent salt reduc­tion by last year and a 31 per­cent cut by 2014.

A com­pany can hit the tar­get for a cat­e­gory, such as canned soup, even if not every prod­uct makes the mark.

Boston-based cafe chain Au Bon Pain low­ered salt in sand­wiches and breads by get­ting sup­pli­ers to use fresh veg­eta­bles, whole grains and herbs, CEO Sue Morelli said in a release.

Kraft Foods Inc. squeezed salt out of prod­ucts rang­ing from steak sauce to bacon partly by sub­sti­tut­ing potas­sium chlo­ride, research Vice Pres­i­dent Russ Moroz said. It’s also salty-tasting, but potas­sium low­ers blood pres­sure, and most Amer­i­cans don’t get enough of it, Far­ley said.

The switch works up to a point — gen­er­ally, about 10 to 15 per­cent of the sodium con­tent — before potas­sium chlo­ride causes a bit­ter or metal­lic taste, Moroz said. North­field, Ill.-based Kraft can use other fla­vors to mask that, but main­tain­ing the taste is “really the chal­lenge in con­tin­u­ing to reduce sodium,” he said.

If you don’t make foods that taste good, peo­ple don’t buy them, and, in the end, we haven’t really done any­thing to impact the diet in the coun­try,” Moroz said.

Bloomberg has seized on improv­ing New York­ers’ eat­ing habits as a pub­lic health pri­or­ity, lead­ing charges that have banned trans fats from restau­rant meals, forced chain eater­ies to post calo­rie counts on menus and lim­ited the size of some sug­ary drinks.

He and city offi­cials say they’re mak­ing pio­neer­ing, rea­son­able efforts to save lives and cut health care costs. Some food indus­try inter­ests and con­sumers have said New York is turn­ing into a nutri­tion nanny.

But the salt effort has been less con­tro­ver­sial. Indeed, some com­pa­nies have embarked on their own salt-reduction plans.

ConA­gra, which makes Chef Boyardee and Marie Callender’s prod­ucts, is fol­low­ing its own 2009 com­mit­ment to shave the amount of sodium in its foods by 20 per­cent by 2015.

Salt was sim­ply reduced in some recipes; oth­ers have swapped some table salt with potas­sium chlo­ride or sea salt, which has lower sodium lev­els, said Mark Andon, vice pres­i­dent of nutri­tion at Omaha, Neb.-based ConA­gra Foods Inc. Another tech­nique is using finer salt par­ti­cles, which spread the taste over more sur­face area; that approach has reduced salt in its Orville Reden­bacher and Act II pop­corn by 25 percent.

But ConA­gra hasn’t broad­cast the changes on its food labels.

If you put that on your pack­ag­ing, that can be a neg­a­tive taste cue,” Andon said.

Pep­siCo Inc., which makes Frito-Lay prod­ucts, announced in 2010 that it would cut sodium in key brands by one-fourth in five years. Spokesman Christo­pher Wyse said Mon­day the Pur­chase, N.Y.-based com­pany was look­ing for alter­na­tives after a plan to use smaller salt crys­tals didn’t work.

The com­pany offers “lightly salted” chips that have half the sodium of the reg­u­lar ones, however.Salt sub­tly trimmed from many foods amid campaign

Becky Brooks Posted by on Feb 13 2013. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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