The Family Budget Survey, performed in Brazil between 2008 and 2009, important national research about Brazilian family budgets showing how Brazilians consume foods and about their nutritional conditions, showed that the average daily sodium intake reached 3,238.7 mg (IBGE, 2011), much higher than the Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL) from Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI, 2005a), which is 2,300 mg for adults and lower than this for children. Such a sodium intake is also higher than the 5 g of salt/ day recommended by WHO (2012), since it corresponds to 8.3 g of salt. Indeed, other research shows that the Brazilian population consumes 9.3 g of salt/day (Mill et al., 2019), and, unfortunately, high consumption of salt is not restricted to Brazil (WHO, 2014).