Joel Fuhrman - Eat To Live

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Eat to Live 241

of platelets to clot. I recommend that people resist adding salt to


foods and look for salt-free canned goods and soups. Since most salt


comes from processed foods, bread, and canned goods, it shouldn't


be that hard to avoid added sodium.


That said, if you desire to salt your food, do so only after it is on

the table and you are ready to eat it. It will taste saltier if the salt is


right on the surface of the food. You can add lots of salt yet hardly


taste it if the salt is added to the vegetables or soup while they are


cooking. Vege Base instant soup mix by Vogue has a nice salty flavor


and can be added to salads or sprinkled on food. Use herbs, spices,


lemon, vinegar, or other non-salt seasonings to flavor food. Condi-


ments such as ketchup, mustard, soy sauce, teriyaki sauce, and relish


are very high in sodium, so if you can't resist them, use the low-


sodium varieties sparingly.


Ideally, all your foods should have less than one milligram of

sodium per calorie. Natural foods contain about half a milligram of


sodium per calorie. If a food has a serving size of 100 calories yet con-


tains 400 mg of sodium, it is a very high salt food. If it has 100 calo-
ries and less than 100 mg of sodium, it is a food with hardly any

added salt and is an appropriate food for your diet. Try to rarely use


products with more than 200 mg per 100 calories. Within these

guidelines, you should be able to keep your average daily sodium in-


take around or below 1,000 mg.

If you don't use salt, your taste buds adjust with time and your
sensitivity to taste salt improves. When you are using lots of salt in
your diet, it weakens your taste for salt and makes you feel that food
tastes bland unless it is heavily seasoned or spiced. The DASH study
observed the same phenomenon that I have noted for years — it
took some time for one's salt-saturated taste buds to get used to a low
sodium level. If you follow my nutritional recommendations strictly,
without compromise, avoiding all processed foods or highly salted
loods, your ability to detect and enjoy the subtle flavors in fruits and
vegetables will improve as well.

What about coffee?


Clearly, excessive consumption of caffeinated beverages is danger-
ous. Caffeine addicts are at higher risk of cardiac arrhythmias that
could precipitate sudden death.^21 Coffee raises blood pressure and
raises both cholesterol and homocysteine, two risk factors for heart
disease.^22
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