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Low Blood Pressure

4 foods in our reference help with Low Blood Pressure.

Also covers Hypotension
Spices

¾–1 Teaspoon Sea Salt

Sea salt is a culinary salt obtained by evaporating seawater. It is used primarily for seasoning and preserving foods and is nutritionally similar to table salt in sodium content.

Sea salt provides sodium and chloride, with only trace amounts of other minerals depending on processing and source.
Condiments

Dill Pickle Juice

Dill pickle juice is the brine from pickled cucumbers, typically made with water, vinegar, salt, dill, and spices. It is a very high-sodium condiment liquid sometimes consumed in small amounts or used in marinades.

It provides sodium as its main nutrient and may contain small amounts of potassium, vinegar-derived acids, and trace minerals depending on the recipe.

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Spices

Kosher Salt

Kosher salt is a coarse-grained culinary salt used primarily for seasoning, brining, and koshering meat. It is composed mainly of sodium chloride and is typically less processed than standard table salt, often without iodine or anti-caking agents.

Kosher salt provides sodium and chloride, essential electrolytes, but contributes no meaningful calories, protein, fat, vitamins, or fiber.

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Spices

Salt

Table salt is a crystalline seasoning made primarily of sodium chloride and used to enhance flavor in foods. “Salt to taste” usually indicates an unspecified amount added during cooking or at the table.

Salt provides sodium, and iodized table salt may also provide iodine in small amounts.