I found this very informative. I hope this is accurate.
Accent IS MSG.I use Accent and MSG.
You're looking at the wrong product:Accent is a Brand:
The ingredients for Accent flavor enhancer are:
MSG:
- Monosodium glutamate
- Salt
- Chili pepper
- Tricalcium phosphate (anticaking agent)
- Cumin
- Oregano
- Paprika extractives (color)
- Garlic extractives
- Onion extractives
- Yellow 6 Lake and Yellow 5 Lake
Monosodium glutamate (MSG) is made of water, sodium, and glutamate:
- Glutamate: An amino acid that's naturally found in many foods, including tomatoes, mushrooms, anchovies, and Parmesan cheese.
- Sodium: A salt.
I think that is because your body doesn't care where you get the sodium from. It will use that sodium. It can come from other ingredients than NaCl salt. For example, it comes in MSG.If Sodium is not a salt then why does every single jar/bottle/container I have lists the mineral sodium in the Nutritional columns and not the chlorine which is also a mineral? Chlorine becomes chloride + sodium = salt.
They list salt as an Ingredient so why not Sodium Chloride in the Nutritional listing? Why not list it as Sodium Chloride? Both are important to the body, both in slightly different ways, both are minerals. Or why not just list it as Salt in both lists?
Edit: It is not as if it is manmade... it exists as that, mined as that, used as that.
What I'm saying is that there is more than one version of the product on the market with the Accent name.I could not find anywhere on the Ac'cent blog what their ingredients were but I did find this....
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The glutamate in Ac'cent is derived from corn, and the fermentation process used to make it is similar to the process used to make vinegar, yogurt, and beer.
Ac'cent also contains other ingredients, including:
Salt, Chili pepper, Tricalcium phosphate, Cumin, Oregano, Paprika extracts, Garlic extracts, Onion extracts, Yellow 6 Lake, and Yellow 5 Lake.
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Just like msmofet posted, I'm not sure what you are saying, Andy?
Sodium is not a salt. Sodium chloride (NaCl) is a salt. Potassium Chloride (KCl) is also a salt. It is also used in food. There are undoubtedly other salts that we use in food. While KCl has a salty taste, it doesn't have any sodium. It would be ambiguous to simply list it as "salt". If someone needs to keep track of their sodium consumption, they need to keep track of all the sodium they consume, not just the sodium in "salt". There are salts without sodium and there food sources of sodium that aren't salts.If Sodium is not a salt then why does every single jar/bottle/container I have lists the mineral sodium in the Nutritional columns and not the chlorine which is also a mineral? Chlorine becomes chloride + sodium = salt.
They list salt as an Ingredient so why not Sodium Chloride in the Nutritional listing? Why not list it as Sodium Chloride? Both are important to the body, both in slightly different ways, both are minerals. Or why not just list it as Salt in both lists?
Edit: It is not as if it is manmade... it exists as that, mined as that, used as that.