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Ossie-Sharon 10 years ago

Hi, bookwoman. You’re right, of course. The input you got may have been influenced by the fact that other products can be so much higher (generally more than 600 mg per serving), and it’s well-known that CostCo products generally beat out others quality-wise, which explains why Kirkland is about half the usual. The accepted definition of “LOW-sodium” (not the “REDUCED-sodium” to which she referred) is indeed 140 mg per serving. The maximum amount in a serving to be healthy depends in large part on the rest of the foods. The fact that pasta sauce is high in potassium helps a great deal, so the 330 per serving is not too bad if you don’t have a problem with sodium; if you do, then your 240 number is closer to the recommended.

bookwoman100 10 years ago

Hi Ossie: I’d like some guidance on sodium levels for soups, broths and sauces. At Costco they had a bottled red sauce that was 430mg of sodium per 1/2 cup serving. The lady who was presenting it said that it was low in sodium but I told her I thought that was pretty high. Farther down the row was Kirkland’s brand that was 330mg/1/2 c. serving. That seemed better but still high to me. I have some organic chicken broth in my pantry that is 140mg/1/2 c. serving and that seemed more in line with what it should be. I didn’t think anything over 240mg/1/2 cup serving would be healthy eating but before I buy anything more, I’d like to know what the guide lines are. I don’t have high blood pressure but I don’t want to develop it either. Also doesn’t salt cause you to retain water and that couldn’t be very helpful for those of us who are trying to lose weight.

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