Category Comparison

Frozen Meals Comparison: Sodium, Additives & What to Watch

Frozen meals are a convenient option for busy households, but many contain high sodium, a long list of additives, and ingredients that are hard to recognize. This guide covers what shoppers look for, which additives are most common, and how to find frozen meals with cleaner labels.

What Shoppers Usually Look For

Most shoppers look for a reasonable sodium level (under 600mg per serving), recognizable ingredients, and a balanced macronutrient profile. Many also check for preservatives, artificial colors, and the type of oil used. Frozen meals marketed as 'organic' or 'clean' are popular, though these claims don't guarantee low sodium or additive-free formulations.

Ingredients to Watch

Sodium is the most significant concern in frozen meals — many contain 800–1200mg per serving, which is 35–50% of the daily recommended intake. MSG (E621) and disodium inosinate (E631) are common flavor enhancers. Modified food starch (E1422) is used as a thickener. Sodium nitrate (E251) and sodium nitrite (E250) appear in frozen meals containing processed meat.

Common Additives in This Category

Modified food starch (E1422) is the most common thickener. MSG (E621) and disodium inosinate (E631) are common flavor enhancers. Sodium nitrate (E251) and sodium nitrite (E250) appear in meals with processed meat. Carrageenan (E407) is used as a thickener in some sauces. Soy lecithin (E322) is a common emulsifier.

Hidden Sugars or Sweeteners

Frozen meals often contain more sugar than expected. Sauces, glazes, and marinades frequently include sugar, corn syrup, or honey. Teriyaki, barbecue, and sweet-and-sour sauces can add 8–12g of sugar per serving. The 'Added Sugars' line on the nutrition facts panel is the most reliable way to assess total sugar content.

Better Buying Rules

Look for frozen meals with fewer than 600mg of sodium per serving and fewer than 20 ingredients. Choose meals where the protein source (chicken, fish, beans) is the first ingredient. Avoid meals with sodium nitrate or nitrite if you prefer to minimize processed meat additives. Frozen meals with a short, recognizable ingredient list are generally the cleaner options.

Homemade Alternative

Batch cooking and freezing homemade meals gives you the convenience of frozen meals with full control over ingredients. A simple mac and cheese made from pasta, real cheese, and milk contains far fewer additives than most commercial frozen versions. Soups, stews, and grain bowls freeze well and reheat easily.

Scan Products with BioBrief

BioBrief scans any frozen meal barcode and flags MSG, sodium nitrate, carrageenan, and other additives by name and safety level. You can set dietary rules and BioBrief highlights any product that violates them before it goes in your cart.

How BioBrief Helps With This Category

BioBrief scans any product barcode and flags the additives most common in this category. Here's how it compares to other food scanner apps.

BioBrief vs other food scanner apps — Frozen Meals
FeatureBioBriefOther food scanner apps
MSG / flavor enhancer detectionYesSometimes
Sodium nitrate flagsYesVaries
Carrageenan flagsYesRare
Allergen detectionYesVaries
AI food questionsYesRare

More Category Comparisons