Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The sodium is over 3x what it should be. I personally wouldn’t eat them, but as a very very very occasional treat.. but why not make buttermilk biscuits from scratch and freeze the dough, then bake as needed? Healthier.
It wouldn't be a daily thing, just when I make the kids eggs. I have no idea how much sodium is in the bread I buy from the bakery (wheat/seed or sourdough). Safe assumption two slices of bakery bread have 1/3 less sodium than these muffins?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The sodium is over 3x what it should be. I personally wouldn’t eat them, but as a very very very occasional treat.. but why not make buttermilk biscuits from scratch and freeze the dough, then bake as needed? Healthier.
It wouldn't be a daily thing, just when I make the kids eggs. I have no idea how much sodium is in the bread I buy from the bakery (wheat/seed or sourdough). Safe assumption two slices of bakery bread have 1/3 less sodium than these muffins?
If it’s a true bakery that makes their own bread from scratch, yes.
Oh, god, not "bakery bread" again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The sodium is over 3x what it should be. I personally wouldn’t eat them, but as a very very very occasional treat.. but why not make buttermilk biscuits from scratch and freeze the dough, then bake as needed? Healthier.
It wouldn't be a daily thing, just when I make the kids eggs. I have no idea how much sodium is in the bread I buy from the bakery (wheat/seed or sourdough). Safe assumption two slices of bakery bread have 1/3 less sodium than these muffins?
If it’s a true bakery that makes their own bread from scratch, yes.
Anonymous wrote:Of all those ingredients, very few have anything to do with actual food