How To Order "Salt-Free" in Restaurants
Most Americans today eat too much refined salt. While our bodies
do need some sodium to survive, the amount is very little. Many
health experts say that 220 milligrams (mg) to 500 mg per day is
more than enough.
The federal Dietary Guidelines now say that Americans should eat
no more than 2300 mg of sodium per day. That's just less than
one teaspoon of added salt.
While it's easy to cut down on salt at home, what about when you
eat out in restaurants? There you could get several days
allotment of salt in a single meal. But with a few easy
guidelines, you can keep your salt intake well within reason and
still enjoy a delicious meal.
How Refined Salt Affects Your Health
Salt, as it occurs in the Earth, is a complex crystal containing
eighty-four elements that are vital to life. These include
sodium, magnesium, silicum, chloride, calcium, titanium,
manganese, iron, copper, zinc, selenium, zirconium, silver,
iodine, platinum, gold, and many more. These nutrients are the
same elements originally found existing in the "primal ocean"
where all life originated, and the same elements our bodies need
for good health.
By contrast, refined table salt contains none of its original
minerals. To make refined table salt, natural salt from the sea
or mines is refined to pure sodium chloride. Then sodium ferro
cyanide and green ferric ammonium citrate are added as anti
caking agents. If you purchase iodized salt, it also contains
potassium iodine, dextrose (that's refined sugar) to help
stabilize the iodine, and sodium carbonate to preservative the
color of the salt. Instead of building health, eating refined
salt destroys body health.
Whether or not we are aware of the dangers of sodium chloride,
our bodies recognize sodium chloride as an unnatural
substance--a poison--and try to eliminate it as quickly as
possible. The problem is, we eat more salt than our bodies can
process out. Here in the United States, our average daily
consumption of table salt is between 0.4 ounces and 0.7 ounces.
Our bodies are only able to excrete 0.17 ounces to 0.25 ounces a
day through our kidneys, depending on our age, constitution and
sex.
Our bodies then try to neutralize whatever sodium chloride is
left in the body by surrounding it with water molecules in order
to break it down into sodium and chloride. For this process, our
bodies take water from our cells. Without water, our body cells
die.
The result is edema, or excess fluid in the body tissue. This is
why doctors tell us to avoid salt. If there is more sodium
chloride in a body than it can neutralize by pulling water out
of cells, the body get rids of the excess sodium chloride by
making it into new crystals. These are deposited directly in the
bones and joints and are known as arthritis, gout, and kidney
and gall bladder stones. Refined salt also contributes to high
blood pressure, which greatly increases the risk of developing
heart disease or stroke.
Why So Much Salt is Used in Restaurant Foods
About 93 percent of the salt produced throughout the world is
used directly for industrial purposes. It is essential to make
products such as laundry detergent, varnish, plastics and other
products.
For these industrial uses, chemical processes require pure
sodium chloride. To obtain sodium chloride, all the essential
minerals and trace elements that make natural salt so vital to
life are removed discarded as impurities.
Since sodium chloride is already being produced for industry in
massive amounts, it is easily available as an inexpensive food
preservative. This is why so many ready-to-eat food products are
heavily salted with industrial sodium chloride. The sodium
chloride inhibits the natural breakdown of the food, increasing
its shelf life of foods that would naturally spoil very quickly.
Since foods break down in our bodies with the same processes
nature uses to break foods down outside of our bodies, sodium
chloride in food products also makes them more difficult to
digest.
Refined Salt in Restaurants
Refined salt is present in many foods in restaurants. Most
restaurants cook with refined salt, and it is also an ingredient
in most packaged prepared foods that restaurants use.
Because many people are now on low-sodium diets, restaurants are
now accustomed to their customers wanting to minimize salt.
Here are four simple tips for reducing your intake of refined
salt while eating in restaurants.
1. Choose restaurants that make dishes from fresh ingredients
rather than "fast food" establishments that serve pre-prepared
dishes. While you will spend more on the meal, you will save on
medical bills.
2. Choose dishes that are likely to be prepared from scratch and
ask that your dish be prepared without salt.
3. Watch out for condiments such as catsup, pickles, mustard,
mayonnaise, and salad dressings that contain a lot of refined
salt (ask for oil and vinegar or lemon juice for your salad or
ask for the dressing to be served "on the side".
4. Watch out for ingredients that contain a lot of salt, such as
bacon and ham, and avoid them. Canned soups and soups made with
bouillon cubes also contain a lot of salt, so only order soups
that are made from scratch in the restaurant's own kitchen.
Bring Your Own Natural Salt
Now, just because you are reducing the amount of refined sodium
chloride you eat doesn't mean that you need to eat completely
salt-free. The health affects associated with salt--edema,
arthritis, gout, kidney and gall bladder stones, high blood
pressure, heart disease and stroke--are the result of eating
refined sodium chloride, not from eating natural salt.
When we eat natural, living salt, which contains all it's
original elements, our bodies receive the salt it needs to
thrive. Though you probably won't find natural salt in the
shaker at most restaurants, you can carry a small amount of
natural salt with you to use when you eat away from home. The
perfect container for carrying salt is a small cotton bag (4" x
3") with a drawstring (don't use metal or plastic containers,
such as a pill box, as they may leach toxic components into the
salt).
By carrying your own natural salt, you can enjoy the enhanced
flavor of foods with salt that will add to your good health,
naturally.
Read more about healthful salt at
http://www.HimalayanLivingSalt.com