-1 points

50% less salt. They fill up half the can and sell it to you for the same price?

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-12 points

ITT: people not getting the joke.

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41 points

It’s not a good joke

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30 points

“No you don’t get it. First, just pretend you think salt is 100% sodium”

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-12 points

I don’t need to pretend

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9 points

Sodium is not a salt.

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9 points

You’re happy just being wrong? Alright then.

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8 points

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4 points

It’s a really stupid joke.

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57 points

They can’t call it a salt substitute because it still has salt. Some people are told to cut down on salt, so would be attracted to something that tastes salty but has less salt in it. I get why it’s funny, but it seems reasonable to me.

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-3 points

And then put twice the amount because it’s only half as salty. Still dumb imo.

It’s only good if you are deficient in potassium though, which I believe a lot of people are (although I don’t know how easily our body can get potassium from KCl)

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6 points

KCl is 60% as salty as NaCl, which means lite salt is ~80% as salty as regular salt, so it should still result in less sodium being used overall. KCl also reduces blood pressure, acting like an opposite to NaCl, which raises the blood pressure. Lite salt is great for people with high blood pressure.

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5 points

At least it doesn’t say organic… since salt is an inorganic compound and that’d be straight up silly.

What I’m wondering is does this salt have extra filler or is it made of something else that tastes salty without being actual salt? How does one make it have 50% less sodium without selling a smaller size container? Marketing is fucking ridiculous sometimes. Just say what’s in it!

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-1 points

At least it doesn’t say organic… since salt is an inorganic compound and that’d be straight up silly.

Except that, in food, “organic” just means no pesticides or synthetic chemicals were used in making it.

No fillers, just two ingredients: iodized sodium and potassium chloride.

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1 point

Isn’t that what all salt is? When they put stuff like that on a product like salt it starts to lose meaning and is clearly a marketing gimmick aimed at health conscious people.

I’m not okay with taking advantage of people who want to be healthy. As with everything marketing its about stretching the truth to outright lying and it seriously needs to be more regulated so words like organic actually mean something to consumers and we know what we’re buying. If they want to lable salt as organic, it should say “uses organic cornstarch as an anti-caking agent.” The cornstarch is organic, not the salt itself because it can’t be.

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3 points
*

but is it asbestos free?

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7 points
*

It’s less sodium as in NaCl, and more potassium (why do English have so awful names for elements?) KCl. It’s still salt, and it taste similar to NaCl.

Normal table salt is ~99% NaCl

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1 point

Thanks for the info! I found it super confusing the way the packaging advertised the product.

I’m also a bit cynical when it comes to “health” food so I assumed it was some bullshit marketing ploy. Good to know it’s an actual thing this time.

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6 points

It’s also great for those on keto diets since potassium can be difficult to get from that diet.

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31 points

It’s half potassium chloride, that can cause you heart issues too if you get to much of it.

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3 points

Stay hydrated and have good working kidneys and you should be fine. But that can be said for sodium chloride as well.

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11 points

True, but doctors will still recommend it because of you tell people they can’t have any seasoning they might just ignore you.
If you tell them they can have the other stuff, they’ll find it much easier to comply and it’s still much better.

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20 points

There is a risk if you have an extreme intake, but it’s going to be pretty hard to do that by seasoning your food with lite salt unless you’re doing something really extreme. Most people have a RDA of at least 2g of potassium, and I would hazard a guess that most people who are being told by their doctors to cut down on sodium intake probably aren’t getting a ton of potassium from what they’re eating.

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16 points

Wikipedia quotes an LD50 of 2.6 g/kg in rats, so assuming (big assumption) that the figure is similar for humans, an average 80 kg human would need to consume 208 g of the stuff. Which is probably the whole container’s worth.

I’m sure you’d die of other problems from eating that much salt before you die of KCl poisoning.

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8 points

Also depends on how that LD50 was measured. Oral lethal dose is a lot higher than intravenous.

Fun fact: KCl is used in lethal injections to stop the heart.

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3 points
*

Hey, we invented fat-free “butter” so why not

(Edit: sarcasm, to be clear)

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