Healthy Living
Four Ways to Order Low-Sodium Fast Food
There's way too much sodium in fast food, a new study shows. But there are low-sodium options when you just have to hit the drive-through.
By Emily Main
RODALE NEWS, EMMAUS, PA—Eating out can be a headache these days
for people who are trying to stick to a healthy diet. Meals are
intentionally loaded with sugar, fat, and salt to make them more palatable, and while most chains are making efforts at cutting down on fat, a new study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine
finds that they're doing a pretty poor job of reducing the salt,
exposing a large percentage of Americans to more than an entire day's
recommended sodium allotment of 2,300 milligrams (mg) in a single
entrée. Concerns about America's over-salted diet have prompted the
federal government to consider regulating the use of salt in packaged and restaurant food.
"In all fairness to these places, if you conducted a similar study at sit-down restaurants,
you'd get similar results," says Joan Salge Blake, MS, RD, spokesperson
for the American Dietetic Association and professor of nutrition at
Boston University. "This is why the industry really needs to step in to
help us. Between, calories, fat, sugar and sodium, we have the consumer
looking for so many things when they go eating out, it's easy to get
confused about what the best food choices are." Fortunately, there are
ways to navigate the drive-through and still have a relatively healthy
meal.
THE DETAILS: Representatives from the New York City
Department of Health asked customers of major fast-food chain
restaurants to give them their meal receipts, and the researchers
analyzed the sodium content of each entrée on that receipt (they didn't
look at side dishes like french fries and small salads). In total, they
collected 6,580 receipts from a variety of fast-food restaurants,
including burger joints, pizzerias, sandwich shops, fried-chicken
chains, and Mexican-food chains. On the whole, the findings with regard
to salt content were pretty grim. The average entrée contained 1,751 mg
of sodium, and 20 percent of the meals contained greater than 2,300 mg.
The highest levels were found in Popeye's fried-chicken restaurant
entrées, at an average of 2,497 mg of sodium, with Domino's Pizza coming
in a close second, at 2,465 mg per entrée. The lowest levels were found
at McDonald's, with an average of 1,477 mg per entrée.
WHAT IT MEANS: Even at the low end of the sodium
spectrum, eating a single fast-food meal can put some people in the
danger zone for daily sodium intake. Imagine what that means for people
who eat fast-food fare multiple times per week—or per day. While 2,300
mg of sodium per day is the maximum safe level recommended for the
average healthy adult, the authors write, the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention advises that several demographic groups,
including African Americans, middle-aged and older adults, and people
with hypertension, should limit their consumption to 1,500 mg per day.
Together, those groups make up 69 percent of the adult population in
this country.
Avoiding fast-food restaurants is the best way to avoid their
heavily salted food, but that's not always possible. Here are some
things to keep in mind when ordering:
• At burger chains, pay attention to hidden sources
of salt, which are usually in toppings and condiments like bacon,
pickles, processed cheeses, and ketchup. Flavor your burgers with extra
vegetables, says Blake, such as lettuce and tomatoes. If you're ordering
a salad, she says, light dressings are lower in fat and calories but
not necessarily lower in sodium, so use half of the dressing packet. And
decline the offer of croutons or other toppings that add even more
sodium.
• In sandwich shops and delis, the most prominent
source of sodium is the deli meats, which helps explain why Subway,
despite its focus on healthier fare, still averaged 1,883 mg of sodium
per entrée. Ask if low-sodium meats are available, Blake advises. If
not, cut the meat in half. "If they're piling on turkey, tell them to
give you half the amount they're piling on," she says. "In some cases,
that's three to four ounces—a substantial amount." Grab extra vegetables
from the salad bar and pile those onto your sandwhich. Extra cucumbers,
carrots, and sprouts can make your sandwich more filling, less salty,
and healthier in general. And ask for whole grain bread while you're
ordering. "Any meal that has whole grains and a lot of fresh vegetables,
right out of the gate, will be naturally low in sodium," Blake says.
• Fried-chicken restaurants can be a salt minefield.
Fatty and artery-clogging, fried-chicken meals are among the saltiest
out there, and opting for grilled chicken isn't necessarily better for
your sodium intake. "In the calorie department, grilled chicken gets an
A++ over battered and fried. But you just don't know about the sodium,
because you don't know how it's been seasoned," Blake says. For
instance, according to KFC's nutrition information, grilled drumsticks
have about two-thirds the sodium of their Original Recipe fried
drumsticks, but at McDonald's, the grilled chicken sandwiches are
essentially equal to their fried counterparts when it comes to sodium.
Wherever you are, go for grilled chicken, Blake says, but cut the
portion size in half when you get it, and finish out your meal with a
salad or a baked potato.
• When ordering pizza be as veggie-focused as
possible, as the toppings are often the only thing you can control.
"When you go to a pizzeria, the crust is the crust, the sauce is the
sauce, and the cheese is the cheese," she says. But you can keep from
adding more sodium to your pizzas by topping it with vegetables, say,
green peppers, mushrooms, and tomatoes, rather than salty processed
meats like pepperoni and sausage. "If you just put vegetables on top,
you've lowered the sodium content significantly."
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