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"We think people won't notice," he said.
ConAgra Foods Inc., which makes products including Chef Boyardee canned pasta meals, Healthy Choice frozen dinners and Swiss Miss hot chocolate, has pledged to reduce the salt in its consumer food products by 20 percent by 2015, in part because of consumer demand. It said its initiative would eliminate about 10 million pounds of salt per year from the American diet.
Still, processed-food companies have historically been extremely reluctant to tinker with recipes, especially when dealing with a key ingredient like salt, where even minor adjustments can affect taste. Salt also helps to preserve food and make bread rise.
Health officials acknowledged that the program faces hurdles.
"It isn't simple for them to just change the amount of sodium in their products," said Farley.
And some of the changes the city is asking for are substantial. The target goals call for a 40 percent reduction in the amount of salt in breakfast cereals, a 25 percent reduction for breads and cold cuts and a 30 percent cut for salad dressing.
But, Farley said, simply asking the public to be more careful about what they eat hasn't worked, in part because consumers have too few low-sodium choices.
"Eighty percent of the salt we eat is in the food already when you buy it," he said. "Even if you are reading the back of a package, there is often no choice there."
New York City's program is modeled in part after a similar initiative in the United Kingdom that has been under way since 2003.
[Associated
Press;
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