(Low in Fat and Cholesterol; High in B Vitamins, Iron and Fiber)
6 or More:
1 slice bread
1/4 cup nugget or bud-type cereal
1/2 cup hot cereal
1 cup cooked rice or pasta
1/4 - 1/2 cup starchy vegetables
Breads and Rolls:
wheat, rye, raisin or white bread
English muffins
frankfurter and hamburger buns
water (not egg) bagels
pita bread
tortillas (not fried)
Crackers and Snacks:
animal, graham, rye crackers, soda, saltine, oyster
matzo
fig bar, ginger snap, molasses cookies
bread sticks, melba toast
rusks, flat bread
pretzels (unsalted)
popcorn (see "Fats and Oils" for preparation)
Many kinds of crackers and snacks are now available with no added salt or unsalted tops. Some are high in saturated fatty acids, so read the labels.
Quick breads: Homemade using margarine or oils low in saturated fatty acids, skim or 1% fat milk and egg whites or egg substitutes (or egg yolks within limits): biscuits, muffins, cornbread, fruit breads, soft rolls, pancakes, French toast, waffles.
Hot or cold cereals: All kinds (granola-type may be high in fat or saturated fatty acids)
Rice and pasta: All kinds (pasta made without egg yolk).
Starchy vegetables: Potatoes, corn, lima beans, green peas, winter squash, yams, sweet potatoes.
Soups: Chicken noodle, chowders, minestrone, onion, split pea, tomato-based seafood.
If you use any egg yolks in cooking quick breads, be sure to count them in your daily allowance.
Cereals, pasta and rice cooked without salt are lower in sodium than instant or ready-to-eat types of these foods.
Most soups are high in sodium and some are high in fat. When buying soups, read labels and choose those low in sodium and fat. You can also make your own soups and control both sodium and fat.