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From Our Kitchen: A Simple Salad

IMG_0059We eat a fresh, tossed salad almost every night as part of our dinner. While in Italy, we stopped using bottled salad dressings and embraced dressing a salad the typical Italian way: plenty of olive oil, a tiny bit of vinegar—and this makes all the difference—enough salt to  make it taste good.

When I cook with minimally processed foods, I don’t feel bad about adding salt to my real foods. Chances are I’m not adding nearly the sodium that is in the processed foods of a typical American diet. Further, with regard to blood pressure, decreasing dietary salt doesn’t help everyone control their blood pressure.1 There appears to be more to it, and some recent research has linked sugar and insulin resistance (a metabolic problem in which carbohydrate isn’t used properly by the body) to blood pressure.2,3 In most cases, if we are cutting back on processed foods and sugar, somewhat liberalizing the use of the salt shaker to make real food taste good is not likely to have a negative effect on blood pressure and may actually improve it, especially with weight loss.

My Dressing “Recipe” (for a family-size salad):

Other Salad Tips:

 

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