Let's talk sodium.
Numerous studies over the past 30 years have linked overconsumption of sodium to high blood pressure. And high blood pressure can lead to heart disease, which, as the number one killer of women in America, claims more lives than all cancers combined. Experts estimate that excess sodium kills 150,000 people yearly,
To fight this dietary epidemic, the American Heart Association recommends that we keep our sodium consumption below 2,300 milligrams per day, equivalent to about 1 teaspoon of salt.
Cutting down on sodium isn't as easy as it sounds. That's because years and years of scarfing salty foods has left our taste buds dulled yet dependent—dulled so that we can't explicitly taste sodium, but dependent enough that it often defines flavor. We know the instant it's not there.
At first, these dietary changes will make the food you're eating seem bland. But according to Graham MacGregor, a professor of cardiovascular medicine and director of the Blood Pressure Unit at St. George's University of London, that's just your taste buds shaking off the cobwebs. Before long—usually within 3 weeks—they'll recover, he says, and you'll be enjoying the true taste of food.
"If you reduce your salt intake, the salt taste receptors regain their sensitivity," says MacGregor. "High-salt foods taste unpleasant, and you appreciate the real, natural flavors of food."
Clearly the first step in curbing your salt intake involves awareness.
Rosemary Yurczyk, MS, RD, CDE, dietitian and diabetes educator at the University of California Davis Medical Center in Sacramento gives foods these designations:
Low-sodium food: less than 140 milligrams per serving
Moderate-sodium food: less than 400 milligrams per serving
High-sodium food: more than 400 milligrams per serving
Your homework is to rate the following foods
(without looking them up

) as L, M, or H based on Yurczyk’s designations.
Panera's Greek Salad, with dressing
A grande Starbucks Java Chip Frappuccino
a 24-ounce bottle of Propel Fitness Water
One cup of canned creamed-style corn
1 cup of canned green beans
Dehydrated onion soup mix (1 packet)
Seasoned bread crumbs (1 cup)
Spaghetti sauce (1 cup)
Canned chicken noodle soup (1 cup)
Frozen turkey and gravy (5 ounces)
Canned cream-style corn (1 cup)
Teriyaki sauce (1 tablespoon)
Vegetable juice cocktail (1 cup)
Beef or pork salami (2 slices)
Canned jalapeno peppers (1/4 cup, solids and liquids)
One cup seedless raisins,
A piece of angel food cake
a croissant
one slice of whole-wheat bread
Fast food:
biscuit with egg and sausage
6-inch submarine sandwich with cold cuts
"Live your life so that you are not afraid to sell the family parrot to the town gossip."