I love salt. Too much really. I salt my food while I'm cooking. I salt my food at the table. Sometimes, I just eat salt by itself — mostly just delicious seasoning blends, not plain table salt. Paul eats salt by itself too, and in much higher quantities than me. Amazingly, we still have totally normal, healthy blood pressure.
But we're not getting any younger, so cutting back on sodium might be a good idea. That said, I'm just not willing to sacrifice taste. But Salt For Life sent me some samples of their alternative salt blend to review, and I think it just might be the answer.
Billed as "nature's alternative salt," this is a blend of sea salt (from ocean water off Brazil's coast) and potassium salt (sourced from ancient sea beds in Canada). The potassium salt has much less sodium than sea salt (or iodized for that matter), and so the blend ends up having 75 percent less sodium than table salt.
One-fourth teaspoon of Salt for Life has 140 mg of sodium, while table salt has 590 mg of sodium for that same amount. It's a huge difference.
Salt for Life is white and the granules are much larger than regular table salt, and when you sprinkle it on food, you can see the white flecks. I kind of like that because it's easier to see how much you're using.
But how does it taste? Well, that depends. Sprinkled over food, it tastes like salt. And just a little goes a long way. But sampled by itself, you get a saltiness right away, but it's followed by a weird aftertaste. I wouldn't recommend eating it by itself, but why would you do that anyway (unless you're a weirdo like Paul and I)?
For the past two weeks, I've been subbing Salt for Life in my recipes and at the table, and I can't tell a difference in taste. My food seems just as well-seasoned as always, but I know I've probably cut my sodium intake in half. Plus, I've probably boosted my potassium intake as well. I'd definitely recommend this stuff!
But we're not getting any younger, so cutting back on sodium might be a good idea. That said, I'm just not willing to sacrifice taste. But Salt For Life sent me some samples of their alternative salt blend to review, and I think it just might be the answer.
Billed as "nature's alternative salt," this is a blend of sea salt (from ocean water off Brazil's coast) and potassium salt (sourced from ancient sea beds in Canada). The potassium salt has much less sodium than sea salt (or iodized for that matter), and so the blend ends up having 75 percent less sodium than table salt.
One-fourth teaspoon of Salt for Life has 140 mg of sodium, while table salt has 590 mg of sodium for that same amount. It's a huge difference.
Salt for Life is white and the granules are much larger than regular table salt, and when you sprinkle it on food, you can see the white flecks. I kind of like that because it's easier to see how much you're using.
But how does it taste? Well, that depends. Sprinkled over food, it tastes like salt. And just a little goes a long way. But sampled by itself, you get a saltiness right away, but it's followed by a weird aftertaste. I wouldn't recommend eating it by itself, but why would you do that anyway (unless you're a weirdo like Paul and I)?
For the past two weeks, I've been subbing Salt for Life in my recipes and at the table, and I can't tell a difference in taste. My food seems just as well-seasoned as always, but I know I've probably cut my sodium intake in half. Plus, I've probably boosted my potassium intake as well. I'd definitely recommend this stuff!
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