For health reasons.

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submitted 6 days ago by Flying Squid

For health reasons.
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166 Comments

NeverNudeNo13 6 days ago

Yeah but it says right on the front that it’s half potassium chloride and half sodium chloride.

z00s 6 days ago

It’d be funnier if the package was just half empty

papertowels 6 days ago, edited 6 days ago

Let me introduce you to the rapid ramen cooker, a microwaveable tray that claims to make ramen with only half the regular amount of sodium.

You know how the cooker enables this?

You add half the flavor packet.

Can’t make this shit up.

nilloc 5 days ago

I’ve always done this then, use the leftover flavor pack (salt) for seasoning a more homemade meal.

Rai 5 days ago

I have so many leftover packets because I always make mine with better than bullion, hoisin sauce, and chili flakes.

bastion 5 days ago

Better than bullion ftw.

idiomaddict 3 days ago

I moved to Germany and the only products I’ve requested from visitors are better than bouillon and molasses.

z00s 5 days ago

😂 absolute gold

ggppjj 5 days ago

Nothing better than selling a single-purpose bit of plastic intended to go into the microwave and boil water that is functionally a replacement for a bowl that you presumably already have that expressly states that you can only use it for up to 5 years.

papertowels 5 days ago

Yeah it’s an absolute travesty. At least it seems people have gone the opposite way and it looks like folks use it as a bowl, so there’s that.

Kairos 6 days ago

It’d be illegal as as those statements are regulated to a standard serving. Except for net product amount.

xantoxis 6 days ago, edited 6 days ago

Well I’m glad they used KCl, I thought this was going to be a container half-full of chlorine–concerning, if you intend to put it on your food.

Dave 6 days ago

Half the sodium, double the chloride! Perfection 👌

mkwt 6 days ago

Quadruple the reactivity!

(I am not a chemist, and I am not your chemist. These statements should not be construed as chemistry advice.)

Alteon 6 days ago

I can have my own chemist? I can keep them?

We have chemist at home

Beacon 6 days ago, edited 6 days ago

Chloride, not chlorine

Phineaz 6 days ago

I think they meant chlorine, as in Cl2 (g). Certainly not edible, thus the joke.

xantoxis 6 days ago

Chloride is the ionic form

Beacon 6 days ago

Right, and that's the form it's in in both NaCl and KCl

Wrufieotnak 6 days ago

Correct and that was the supposed joke. Instead of chloride, the anion, which would occur in some form of a salt, the container would contain half NaCl and the other half just chlorine gas, Cl2. Thereby making the statement (50% less sodium) technically true. (Disregard the pressure you would need to put the same molar amount of gas into the volume of a solid)

NeverNudeNo13 6 days ago

I mean technically… At least half of the elemental construction of both of those ingredients is chlorine… So… Technically it is.

almost1337 6 days ago

By weight or by molarity?

Shapillon 6 days ago, edited 6 days ago

Molarity.

If my quick calculations are right it’s 53% chlorine ions by weight

robolemmy 6 days ago

As stated right there on the label, some of the NaCl has been replaced with taster’s choice KCl. So it was never pure sodium to begin with, due to all that pesky chlorine and now about half of the Na has been replaced with Potassium.

disguy_ovahea 6 days ago, edited 6 days ago

Imagine making pasta and salting the water with pure sodium. There’s a reason they don’t sell that in the supermarket.

robolemmy 6 days ago

Big badaboom!

Lycist 6 days ago

Multi-pass

ba-da-boom

Empricorn 6 days ago

That’s how you become a meat popsicle.

Akasazh 6 days ago

Don’t tell me what I can and cannot do! I like my pasta with a little danger and a dash of kaboom!

buddascrayon 6 days ago

I tried adding pure sodium to some soup once. It did not end well. 💣💥😬

🔍🦘🛎 6 days ago

It’s not the best choice, it’s Spacer’s Choice!

Beacon 6 days ago

Fyi it's chloride, not chlorine, but otherwise spot on

felbane 6 days ago

So uh, what do you think the Cl in NaCl stands for?

chickenf622 6 days ago

I had to read this like 24 times to make sure I didn’t miss anything, but I’m 98% certain you’re correct. When referring to the individual components it should be chlorine not chloride. I’m not a chemical doctor, but this is my understanding.

Phineaz 6 days ago

Horrible at chemistry, but I’m 98% sure it is chloride - the chlorine is present as an anion, and as such is called chloride. Even if you refer to it as an individual component, you still observe Cl-, not Cl (or rather Cl2).

cowfodder 6 days ago

No, the element is chlorine. Chloride denotes a compound or molecule containing a chlorine ion, or a compound with a non-charged chlorine atom bonded.

YeetPics 6 days ago

“Pure sodium”

OP is as deranged as Morton.

buddascrayon 6 days ago

Being somebody who has to watch their sodium intake due to heart health concerns I would say that Morton is not at all deranged in creating this especially considering I’ve got a container of it sitting on my spice rack right now.

Though it should be noted I do my best not to think about the fact that KCL is used in lethal injections. 😒 I just thank the gods I don’t have any ulcers.

ryathal 5 days ago

It’s more the pure sodium part. Stop, drop, and roll would be a lot more important if it was pure sodium.

buddascrayon 5 days ago

Yes LoL, I referenced that in a joke further down the post. 💥😂

Potassium is totally normal and required by the body. It’s actually hard to get the RDA of potassium.

It’s just that too much stops your heart.

captainlezbian 5 days ago

It’s also important to note that unless you’re on medication that prevents your body from releasing it (such as spironolactone) it’s extremely hard to od on it. Your body can release it in the urine if you have a bit too much

Kiernian 5 days ago

would say that Morton is not at all deranged in creating this especially considering I’ve got a container of it sitting on my spice rack right now.

It has an additional use, too.

The non-“salt” ingredient here, potassium chloride, is the “harder to find” ingredient in a simple four ingredient rehydration solution.

The other ingredients are sodium chloride, sugar, and water.

So equal parts this and sugar in a glass of water and you’ve got yourself the world health organization’s answer to dehydration.

“Morton”

The ‘t’ is silent

qjkxbmwvz 5 days ago

Not at all the statement of a moron: in colloquial usage yeah, salt is sodium chloride, but in in a chemistry setting it is not just sodium chloride. In this case it probably has potassium chloride — a sodium-free salt.

frogfruit 6 days ago

I don’t understand this post. Salt doesn’t mean sodium. NaCl and KCl are both salts, and this is a 50/50 blend with less sodium (Na) for the people who need/want that. Am I missing something?

macrocarpa 5 days ago

you’re not missing anything, you paid attention in chemistry.

I think you’re exactly right

UnbalancedFox 5 days ago

Oh thanks. My mom buys that and I never understood what is was 😂

Buddahriffic 5 days ago, edited 5 days ago

50% table salt

50% bath salt

jerkface 5 days ago

What you’re missing is illiteracy.

So much worse for people with Potasium limitations? Like dialysis patients.

frogfruit 5 days ago

Yes, usually such people are advised by their doctors to avoid such ingredients.

Treczoks 5 days ago

Hopefully…

T156 5 days ago

They could just get the normal salt, or no salt at all.

Maggoty 5 days ago

Sir that’s too many facts for this joke.

SailorMoss 5 days ago

No, no let’m cook. Everyone knows jokes are funnier after you explain them.

volvoxvsmarla 5 days ago

The point is that there is no joke in here to begin with

frogfruit 5 days ago

Right. I have difficulty suspending disbelief so sometimes jokes like this just confuse me.

Maggoty 5 days ago

I get that too sometimes.

ivanafterall 5 days ago

Could also be amphetamine salts.

Noodle07 5 days ago

Now we’re cooking!

areyouevenreal 5 days ago

The part you’re missing is that potassium chloride used to be used in the lethal injection. Somehow it still has a lower LD50 than sodium chloride.

frogfruit 5 days ago

How was that alluded to in the OP? Eating it isn’t the same as injecting it. It’s a normal ingredient in electrolyte drinks and rehydration salts. It’s also prescribed for hypokalemia.

captainlezbian 5 days ago

Also yes hyperkalemia is really effective at killing as is hypernatremia. This is not only known but also evolved around. Your body works pretty hard to ensure you don’t ingest so much of either ion that you develop these conditions.

iCy619 5 days ago

Well, let’s hope the doctor doesn’t prescribe enough, that their hypokalemia develops into hyperkalemia.

jj4211 5 days ago

It’s what plants crave

calcopiritus 5 days ago

I would be surprised if water isn’t used in lethal injections.

BowtiesAreCool 6 days ago

Does it still work against demons and spirits?

Okokimup 6 days ago

Yes but you have to use twice as much.

NorthWestWind 6 days ago

Unless you just want the 9 salt pictures

DragonTypeWyvern 6 days ago, edited 6 days ago

This demon is trying to trick you into spending twice as much on summoning salt because they have stock in the company!

Also it won’t work and demons will eat your ass in a non-consensual way, salt is used as a symbol of purity and the additives/mixture by definition make it non-pure (salt).

No, the question really is whether potassium chloride by itself would work, also being pure (potassium) salt.

bionicjoey 6 days ago, edited 5 days ago

Imagine getting murdered by faeries because you used low-salt salt for your magic circle like an idiot.

explodicle 6 days ago

Yep! Any kind of powder will work. Salt, sugar, cocaine, whatever.

That’s just propoganda by big demons. They want to you to buy salt so they can season you. Why do you think people say garlic will repel vampires. Sheple, all are sheple. That’s just vampire propoganda.

jerkface 5 days ago

/r/confidently_incorrect

kindenough 6 days ago, edited 6 days ago

We Dutch call it “Kalium zout” or Low Sodium Salt. The brand I buy is iodized and has 70% less natrium. And yeah, it is for health reasons, like heart condition, high blood pressure and other medical ailments, or people who want to eat less salt in their diets.

Anyway, what you are looking at is 100% salt and original op (the one on xitter) is an idiot.

wieson 6 days ago

For englishers: Kalium (K) is potassium and Natrium (Na) is sodium.

kindenough 5 days ago

Yes you are absolutely right, thank you for elaboration.

I always mix those up because we also use Kalij and Natrij for K and Na and potassium and sodium is just off. At least sodium I can get from sodium bicarbonate.

Pure sodium you say? that will surely give your dishes an extra kick

Rubanski 6 days ago

Less sodium means more chloride for me!

Tenkard 6 days ago

The government doesn’t want you to know that you can pair that with a nice glass of pure chloride

lightsblinken 5 days ago

i’ve seen salt with high fructose corn syrup added to it… so technically less salt?

Treczoks 5 days ago

That is one product I would expect in an American supermarket. …

Kusimulkku 6 days ago

Kinda embarrassing for the original poster on Twitter

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.

SpaghettiYeti 6 days ago

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

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!

UndercoverUlrikHD 6 days ago, edited 6 days ago

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

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.

Delta_V 6 days ago, edited 5 days ago

but is it asbestos free?

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.

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.

No, they replaced half of the sodium chloride with potassium chloride. It really is half salt. No one is being taken advantage of.

There are a lot of words on packaging that are unregulated, but “organic” isn’t one of them. If they use it, it has to mean what the FDA says it means, and that’s not the opposite of inorganic.

Rinox 6 days ago

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)

SuperIce 6 days ago

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.

MTK 5 days ago, edited 3 days ago

Would be cool to find out it’s 50% sodium chloride and 50% chlorine.

Open the box to eternal peace.

irreticent 5 days ago

50% sodium chloride and 50% potassium chloride

tobiah 5 days ago

Wait until you see “lite Vodka” which is just Vodka watered down to 40 proof and sold at the same price.

BillMurray 5 days ago

My wife bought that from a local distillery, she kept telling me “but it’s low calories”. It was such garbage.

AngryCommieKender 4 days ago, edited 4 days ago

Well that explains at least one of the divorces. Was that Butler or Kelly?

SonicBlue03 6 days ago

The container is only half full.

Flying Squid [OP] 6 days ago

Or is it half empty?

It’s twice as large as is necessary to contain this volume of product.

KingJalopy 6 days ago

They have to put air in it so your salt isn’t crushed during shipping.

Fetus 6 days ago

Bought salt flakes, received salt powder.

Delta_V 6 days ago, edited 6 days ago

Sodium (Na): 25%
Chlorine (Cl): 25%
Nitrogen (N₂): 39%
Oxygen (O₂): 10.5%
Argon and other trace gases: 0.5%

It’s half empty and half full, at the same time, in some quantum overlapped state. The actual state, either half empty or half full, collapses as soon as it’s open.

AbidingOhmsLaw 6 days ago

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

subignition 6 days ago

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.

NateNate60 6 days ago

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.

Fetus 6 days ago

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.

NateNate60 6 days ago

Yes, the method of intake is oral. The intravenous lethal dose is irrelevant in this conversation. Nobody is injecting salt in their veins.

Zagorath 6 days ago

Speak for yourself

Fetus 6 days ago

Some of us like our blood to be seasoned!

ricecake 6 days ago

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.

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

Good product for when you’re on furosemide, bad product for spironolactone.

captainlezbian 5 days ago

As someone who naturally craves lots of salt spiro was rough. About 5 years of constant cravings for a level of salt most people around me couldn’t handle

✺roguetrick✺ 5 days ago, edited 5 days ago

The fun part of that one is it’s potassium sparing. So you start using this stuff while taking that medication you’ll get hyperkalemia. Lasix, on the other hand, makes you piss out all your potassium.

So… is it just half full? Or is just it mostly chloride? 🤔

Liz 5 days ago

Potassium chloride is the other half. I mean, sure, if you need to limit your sodium intake, this is one way to do it, but maybe just put less salt in your food?

GaMEChld 5 days ago

Does potassium chloride have a salty flavor, or is this product actually less salty tasting?

__dev 5 days ago

See www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJh9yTIBY48 for potassium chloride as well as the other alkaline metals.

AngryCommieKender 4 days ago, edited 4 days ago

Use less salt! Use MSG! Food cocaine!

Fuy-yuh!

caboose2006 6 days ago

Double the chloride. Yum

xia 6 days ago

Technically true, proportionally.

qjkxbmwvz 5 days ago

While this uses potassium chloride to cut down on sodium, does a mix of sodium chloride and MSG have the same effect? MSG has sodium, but it looks like not much per unit weight.

sik0fewl 5 days ago

I’m guessing no? You’re probably still using around the same amount of sodium.

Some studies have shown that reducing sodium salt intake by replacing it with potassium can help reduce blood pressure, so that’s why this exists (or at least why it has some credibility).

Of course, I am not a doctor, so take this all with a grain of salt 😅.

AA5B 5 days ago, edited 5 days ago

Yeah, I’ve been looking into this for that exact reason. It does seem medically beneficial to replace an appreciable portion of your sodium with potassium, for those of us with high blood pressure.

However I don’t really see the point of this. Maybe there are some people who add a lot of salt to stuff, but I believe most of us consume excess sodium through processed and restaurant food. Added salt is not enough of overall sodium intake to matter. It’s much more important to watch the sodium content in your food choices, notably eat less processed food

sik0fewl 5 days ago, edited 5 days ago

If your doctor asks you to reduce salt intake to 50% and everything you eat you make yourself, the equation is simple - use this product.

If you get most of your salt intake from restaurant and processed foods… this will only make a minor improvement.

AA5B 5 days ago, edited 5 days ago

Or maybe it’s just me not using much added salt. I do use it when a recipe calls for it or it seems important (like with bread), but it takes several years to work through a canister of salt.

I’ve found that using good spices or fresh herbs make a huge difference over using more salt to perk up weak spices. And I’ve found that many cheap spices are mostly salt, but better spices are more of the intended flavor

I have tried to cut out processed food, partly for this reason. However even once a week of eating out or processed food (or soy sauce) totally dwarfs anything I intentionally add

✺roguetrick✺ 5 days ago, edited 5 days ago

Oh bread salt is totally for taste. The yeast doesn’t like it. Shit even the sugar in bread recipes isn’t important. If you have enough time all you really need to make bread is water, flour, and an oven. Of course said bread will taste like shit.

AnimalsDream 5 days ago

The thing about these salt substitutes is that more studies are needed, just because there’s few of them. The evidence is very promising though, and people switching to these substitutes has been shown to distinctly lower blood pressure, and appears to make a difference for all-cause mortality.

Experts and industry leaders are looking into incorporating added potassium salt into their foods, so it’s probably only a matter of time before virtually everything that everyone eats will have lower sodium and higher potassium.

www.ahajournals.org/…/HYPERTENSIONAHA.123.21343

AA5B 5 days ago

Now that would be a hugely welcome change

iAvicenna 6 days ago

could be rock salt too, ie mix with other minerals

is the sodium interchanged with sugar? i would be dissapointed if not, its the least they can do

Wogi 5 days ago

It’s salt. It’s 100% salt. Half of it is sodium chloride and, to keep the label honest, the other half is potassium chloride.

i know. so potassium chloride only

fireweed 6 days ago, edited 6 days ago

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

(Edit: sarcasm, to be clear)

Fizz 6 days ago

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

Technus 6 days ago

ITT: people not getting the joke.

Psychodelic 6 days ago

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

Fizz 6 days ago

I don’t need to pretend

TachyonTele 6 days ago

You’re happy just being wrong? Alright then.

Fetus 6 days ago

Sodium is not a salt.

BearOfaTime 6 days ago

It’s not a good joke

mriormro 6 days ago

It’s a really stupid joke.