If you eat cereal for breakfast, and perhaps a slice of toast, chances are you have consumed a quarter of
your daily sodium allowance by the time you leave the house.
Not exact matches
The average New Yorker consumes 40 percent more
sodium than the recommended
daily allowance, according to the health department.
I assume they misheard you, since most of the Stouffer's meals seem to have a
sodium content of between 25 % and 40 % of the
daily recommended
allowance for an adult in one serving.
One serving typically contains 1,000 milligrams of
sodium, about half your
daily allowance.
A 1 - cup serving contains just over 450 milligrams of
sodium, which is about 20 percent of the recommended
daily allowance.
Because its
sodium content is negligible, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Nutrient Database lists watermelon as contributing no
sodium to the recommended
daily allowance of the mineral for healthy adult men and women following a 2,000 - calorie diet.
It's as real as the 1000 percent of the recommended
daily allowance of
sodium in a bag of truck - stop beef jerky, my friend.
A scoop of mashed potato alone might contain your maximum
daily allowance of calories,
sodium and fat.