Calories in Digiorno Rising crust pizza sausage & pepperoni

320Calories
How many calories should you eat?
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Nutrition Facts Digiorno Rising crust pizza sausage & pepperoni

Amount Per 0.33 pizza
Calories 320 Kcal (1340 kJ)
Calories from fat 126 Kcal
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 14g 22%
Saturated Fat 6g 30%
Cholesterol 30mg 10%
Sodium 850mg 35%
Total Carbs 35g 12%
Sugars 7g 28%
Dietary Fiber 2g 8%
Protein 14g 28%
Vitamin A 0.2mg 6%
Iron 1.2mg 7%
Calcium 150mg 15%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Find out how many calories should you eat.

Ingredients And Nutrition Overview

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  • WeightWatchers Points: 7.2, PointsPlus: 9, SmartPoints: 11
    WeightWatchers Points are estimated by carbohydrates, fats, protein and fiber in product. They are not an affirmation of better quality or nutritional value of the product or its manufacturer. Only way to count for dieters. Less points are better.
    Read more at Weight watchers diet review
  • Over 30% of daily saturated fat!
    Bad! More 30% of daily saturated fat!

    For years Saturated fat was claimed to raise cholesterol levels and give us heart attacks. Today different studies refute this claim. They say, that replacing saturated fat with carbohydrates or refined starch or sugar is not changing the heart disease risk. Not processed carbs nor saturated fats are good for you. Only if you replace it with polyunsaturated fat, you'll get a reduction in heart disease risk. So try to have a balanced diet.
  • Salty! Has over 35% of the daily sodium max
    The average American consumes 5,000 mg of sodium daily — twice the recommended amount amount of 2400mg for healthy adults, this is 1 teaspoon of salt.
    For medical reasons many people should not exceed 1500mg of sodium.
    Surprisingly, you're responsible for only 15% of the sodium in your diet the bigger part - 75% of the sodium that you consume each day comes from processed foods, not home cooking or the salt shaker.
    Excess sodium intake increases the risk of high blood pressure, hypernatremia, hypertension, cardiovascular disease and other heart problems.
    Are these reasons enough to cut the sodium intake? No doubt!
  • Convert Salt tsps to Sodium mg easily
    Salt (NaCl) is not excactly sodium (Na).
    It is not right to use these terms as synonyms.
    The FDA recommended limit of sodium is 2,300 mg per day (or even less - about 1500 mg while one is on low sodium diets).
    This is much less than the weight of salt.
    (5,750 mg per day or 3,750 mg for low sodium diet) and not so convenient to calculate.
    Know how much sodium is in your salt - without a calculator:
    1/4 tsp salt = 600 mg sodium
    1/2 tsp salt = 1200 mg sodium
    3/4 tsp salt = 1800 mg sodium
    1 tsp salt = 2300 mg sodium
  • 3 tsp of sugars per serving
    This volume includes both naturally occurring from ingredients and specially added sugars.
    USDA tells us that last years each American consumed an average 130 pounds of caloric sweeteners per year!
    That works out to 30 tsp of sugars per day approximately 480 extra calories!
    Just to think: Eating just 200 more calories daily than your body requires for body functioning and exercise leads to a 20-pound weight gain in a year.
  • More than 8% daily fiber!
    Eat more fiber. You've heard it many times. But why it is so good for your health?
    Dietary fiber is best known for its ability to make our digestion going right.
    So want to prevent or relieve constipation - eat more fiber!
    There are also other great health benefits as well, such as lowering your risk of diabetes, heart disease and cancer, and helping to maintain a healthy weight by helping to feel you full longer.
    The best source of fiber are fruits, vegetables, whole grains and legumes and not processed foods with added fiber.
  • A naturally good source of Calcium
    You get real, natural easy absorbing Calcium from this product, not as an artificial fortified ingredient.
    This is great! Let's try to get the best from the real food, because we get too much from artificial ingredients nowdays.
  • Controversial additive BHT present
    BHT (butylated hydroxytoluene) is primarily used as an antioxidant food additive, mainly to prevent oils and fats in foods from oxidizing and becoming rancid.
    It is GRAS in the US, but forbidden as food additive in Japan (since 1958), Romania, Sweden, and Australia.
    Some studies have shown that it is carcinogenic.
    Avoid it, there are foods available without this danger.

Allergens

Gluten Allergy, Wheat Allergy, Milk Allergy, Lactose Allergy, Corn Allergy, Soy Allergy

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Rising crust pizza sausage & pepperoni Ingredients

Wheat Flour, Water, Shredded Low-Moisture Part-Skim Mozzarella Cheese (Part-Skim Milk, Cheese Culture, Salt, Enzymes), Tomato Paste, Cooked Italian Sausage (Pork, Spices and Flavoring, Water, Salt, Sugar, Sodium Phosphate, Paprika, Caramel Color), Pepperoni (Pork, Beef, Salt, Pork Stock, Spices, Dextrose, Lactic Acid Starter Culture, Paprika, Smoke Flavor, Oleoresin Paprika, Sodium Ascorbate, Sodium Nitrite, Flavorings, BHT, BHA, Citric Acid), Sugar, Contains Less Than 2% of Wheat Gluten, White Corn Meal, Soybean or Corn Oil, Salt, Yeast, Sodium Stearoyl Lactylate, Sodium Bicarbonate, Sodium Aluminum Phosphate, Datem, Spices, Garlic, Ascorbic Acid, Yellow Corn Meal.

% RDI of Main Nutrition Facts

16%
of RDI* (320 calories) 0 g
  • Cal: 16 %
  • Fat: 21.5 %
  • Carb: 11.7 %
  • Prot: 28 %
  • 0%
    25%
    75%
    RDI norm*

Calories Breakdown

  • Carbs (43.5%)
  • Fat (39.1%)
  • Protein (17.4%)
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