Brunswick Sardines in Tomato & Basil Sauce: Labelgrade B- (72/100)
B- 72 / 100 — Very low saturated fat, low sugar load, and high sodium per 100g.
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Brunswick Sardines in Tomato & Basil Sauce delivers 16g of protein and 151 calories per 1 CAN (USDA FDC 2018037). Per 100g that’s 15.1g of protein; per oz, 4.3g. The Labelgrade is B- (72 / 100): Very low saturated fat, low sugar load, and high sodium per 100g.
Why this Labelgrade
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | B- | 73 / 100 | 15.1g per 100g — moderate; the per-serving total matters more than the per-unit density |
| Ingredient quality | B- | 74 / 100 | 12 ingredients, recognizable, no significant additive flags |
| Saturated fat load | A | 92 / 100 | 1.5g per serving (1.4g per 100g) — very low |
| Sodium load | D | 47 / 100 | 530mg per serving (142mg per oz) — meaningful per 100g |
| Sugar load | A | 92 / 100 | 2g sugar; USDA omits the added-sugar line, but the ingredients list a sweetener — scored as added, not naturally-occurring |
| Fiber | F | 30 / 100 | 0g fiber, expected for animal-protein products |
| Overall | B- | 72 / 100 | Weighted blend: protein 25% · ingredients 22% · saturated fat 18% · sodium 15% · sugar 12% · fiber 8% |
The fiber “F” is structural — no animal protein has fiber. The honest weak spot is sodium, and the next section is about where it comes from, because it isn’t the fish.
The sauce is what pulls it to B-
Strip the tomato-basil sauce off and you’d be looking at a plain sardine — an A-range food. The sauce is what tips the grade, and it does so in three small ways. First and biggest: sodium. A water-packed sardine runs around 200mg per can; this one is 530mg, and that 330mg gap is the seasoned sauce, not the fish. Second: the sauce adds 3g of carbs and 2g of sugar that a plain tin wouldn’t carry — the ingredient list names tomato paste and sugar. Third: it dilutes the protein density a little, because the sauce is part of the can’s weight, so 100g of this product reads 15.1g protein where a water-pack concentrates more.
None of that is a strike against eating it. The sauce is genuinely good — it turns a plain tin into something you can pour over toast or greens with zero prep, and that convenience is the entire reason flavored sardines exist. The point is just honest accounting: the tasty sauce is also where the sodium and the little bit of sugar live, so if you want the same fish with a cleaner number, a plain water- or olive-oil pack scores better. This is a “delicious but salty” food, and the B- says exactly that.
What’s under the sauce is nutritionally excellent
It’s easy to let the sauce distract from the fish, but the fish is the reason to buy this. Sardines are one of the few proteins that bring a real micronutrient payload along with the macros. You eat them whole — soft, edible bones included — which is why this can lists 200mg of calcium, the kind of number you essentially never get from a boneless fillet or a chicken breast. Most of the 8g of fat is the sardines’ own omega-3 oil (EPA and DHA), not saturated fat; only 1.5g is saturated. And because sardines are small, short-lived fish near the bottom of the food chain, they carry far less mercury than long-lived predators like albacore tuna, so they’re safe to eat often.
The Labelgrade formula has no column for calcium, omega-3s, or vitamin D and B12 — the four things that actually make a sardine special — so a flat B- undersells what’s in the can. Read it this way: nothing here is wrong with the fish; the grade is held back by the sauce’s sodium, and the genuine nutritional case for eating small oily fish is fully intact.
How it compares
| Product | Protein per serving | Per 100 g | Per oz | Calories |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brunswick Sardines in Tomato & Basil Sauce (this product) | 16g | 15.1g | 4.3g | 151 |
| King Oscar Sardines In Pure Spring Water | 15g | 17.6g | 5g | 150 |
| Chicken Of The Sea Pink Salmon | 10g | 17.9g | 5.1g | 59.9 |
| Beach Cliff Sardines in Soybean Oil | 17g | 20.2g | 5.7g | 150 |
| Plain cooked chicken breast (benchmark) | — | 31g | 8.8g | ~165 |
Scope
This page covers Brunswick Sardines in Tomato & Basil Sauce (3.75 oz/106 g), UPC 066613019617, as represented in USDA Branded Foods FDC 2018037. Brunswick sells multiple variants in this product line — other sizes, flavors, or fat levels may have different macros and Labelgrade scores. Manufacturers periodically reformulate; always cross-reference the actual package label, especially if you have allergies or dietary restrictions.
Ingredients (from the USDA Branded Foods entry)
SARDINES, WATER, TOMATO PASTE, MODIFIED CORN STARCH, SALT, SUGAR, BASIL, SOYBEAN OIL, CITRIC ACID, EXTRACTS OF PAPRIKA AND OTHER SPICES, XANTHAN GUM, POLYSORBATE 80.
Where to buy
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Quick Facts
Per serving · 1 CAN
See how this fits your day — protein calculator · macro calculator
Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (1 CAN) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 151 |
| Protein | 16g |
| Total Fat | 8g |
| Saturated Fat | 1.5g |
| Trans Fat | 0g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 3g |
| Dietary Fiber | 0g |
| Total Sugars | 2g |
| Sodium | 530mg |
| Cholesterol | 99.6mg |
| Calcium | 200mg |
| Iron | 1.8mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Sardines in Tomato & Basil Sauce (3.75 oz/106 g) · UPC 066613019617. Other sizes, flavors, or formulations may differ.
How this fits each diet
Each score is computed from the same USDA nutrition + ingredient data, against the published rules of each diet. They tell you "does this food fit this diet" — not whether the diet is right for you.
contains no listed animal products
contains no listed meat or fish
no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Brunswick Sardines in Tomato & Basil Sauce healthy?
Yes. Underneath the sauce these are real sardines — 16g of complete protein for 151 calories per can, with the omega-3s, bone calcium (200mg) and vitamin D and B12 that make small oily fish one of the most nutrient-dense things in the aisle. The tomato-basil sauce makes them tastier and more meal-ready than a plain tin. The one honest caveat is sodium: the sauce pushes it to 530mg, which is why this grades B- rather than B.
Why does it score a B- (72/100) and not higher?
The fish is excellent — very low saturated fat (1.5g) and a low sugar load score well. Two things pull it down. Sodium scores a D (530mg per can, 142mg per oz), and most of that comes from the salt in the tomato-basil sauce, not the fish. Protein density also reads moderate (15.1g per 100g) because the sauce is part of the can's weight — a water- or oil-packed tin concentrates more protein into the same 100g. Fiber is an F, structural for any animal protein.
Does the tomato-basil sauce change the nutrition math? Yes — here's how.
It does, and sodium is the headline. A plain water-packed sardine runs around 200mg of sodium; this can is 530mg, and the difference is the seasoned sauce. The sauce also adds the 3g of carbs and 2g of sugar that a plain tin wouldn't have (the ingredient list includes sugar and tomato paste). None of that makes it unhealthy — it's still a strong protein with real omega-3s — but if you compared this side-by-side with a water-pack sardine, the water-pack would score better purely because it skips the sauce's salt and sugar.
What's a serving, and how much protein does it deliver?
The serving is one full can (106g, 3.75 oz) — 16g of protein, or 15.1g per 100g and about 4.3g per ounce. That clears the FDA 'high in protein' bar (16g is 32% of the 50g Daily Value), and because you eat the whole can in one sitting, the per-serving protein is what matters more than the per-100g density.
Any tips, or a lower-sodium sardine option?
If sodium is your main concern, reach for a plain water-packed sardine (King Oscar in spring water, or a no-salt-added tin) — same fish, same bone calcium and omega-3s, far less salt, and you can add your own tomato and herbs. If you want the convenience of the sauce, eat the whole can over greens or whole-grain toast so the sodium lands inside a balanced meal rather than a snack. Don't drain this one — the sauce is the flavor you're paying for.
When was this data last verified?
2026-06-05, against USDA FoodData Central FDC 2018037. We re-verify top-traffic pages monthly and update within 7 days when a manufacturer reformulates.