Hebrew National Beef Franks: Nutrition & Labelgrade C (60/100)
C 60 / 100 — A kosher all-beef hot dog with a cleaner reputation than most — no by-products, no fillers beyond potato starch and soy protein, zero sugar. But it's still a cured, processed meat, and the numbers show it: 500mg of sodium per frank is very high, the saturated fat is meaningful, and the recipe relies on sodium nitrite for curing. Honest read: among mass-market hot dogs this is one of the better ones, but 'better hot dog' is a low bar, and the sodium alone keeps it in C- territory.
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Hebrew National Beef Franks deliver 5 g of protein per frank at about 100 calories (USDA FDC 1935303), from a kosher all-beef recipe with no pork, no by-products, and no mechanically separated meat. The Labelgrade is C (60 / 100). The good is genuine: zero sugar, a short ingredient list that opens with plain beef, and a cleaner sourcing story than the cheapest mixed-meat franks. The bad is decisive: 500 mg of sodium in a single frank (an F on that dimension), 8 g of fat against just 5 g of protein, and a recipe cured with sodium nitrite. Among mass-market hot dogs this is one of the better-built ones — the kosher all-beef standard is a real step up from bargain franks. But “better hot dog” is a low bar. This is a cured, processed meat to enjoy at a cookout, not a protein you organize a meal around.
Why the C
| Dimension | Grade | Score | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein density | C+ | 67 / 100 | 11 g per 100 g — modest. A frank carries 8 g of fat to every 5 g of protein, so 5 g per link is the ceiling, not a shortfall to fix |
| Ingredient quality | C+ | 67 / 100 | Cleaner than most franks — all beef, no by-products, list opens with beef — but still a cured meat closed out by sodium nitrite, hydrolyzed soy protein, and a stack of sodium/potassium salts |
| Saturated fat load | C | 62 / 100 | 3 g per frank (~6.7 g per 100 g) — meaningful. Two franks is most of a day’s saturated-fat budget |
| Sodium load | F | 11 / 100 | 500 mg in one frank — very high, and the main reason for the overall grade. Structural for any cured meat |
| Sugar load | A+ | 100 / 100 | 0 g sugar — genuinely no sweetener in the recipe, which sets it apart from glazed or honey-style franks |
| Fiber | F | 30 / 100 | 0 g — expected for any meat product |
Read top to bottom, the table tells the story plainly: the two things in this frank’s favor — clean ingredients and zero sugar — are exactly what a kosher all-beef recipe is built to deliver, while the two dimensions that define cured meat, sodium and saturated fat, drag it to C. The grade isn’t punishing Hebrew National for being a bad hot dog; it’s recording that even a well-made hot dog is a salty, fatty food, and no recipe sidesteps that.
The number that defines it: 72% of the calories are fat
The “5 g of protein” on the front of the pack invites you to file a frank next to chicken or eggs. The calorie math says don’t. Of the roughly 100 calories in one link, about 72 come from fat (8 g × 9) and only 20 come from protein (5 g × 4). By calories this is closer to three-quarters fat than a balanced protein — a flavor-and-richness food that happens to carry some protein, not the reverse. It’s why two franks, a normal serving for one person, gives you 10 g of protein but also 16 g of fat and a full 1,000 mg of sodium. You’d hit your protein target faster, and far leaner, almost anywhere else.
What the kosher all-beef standard actually buys you
This is where the reputation is earned. The kosher standard forces two things the cheapest franks skip: it’s 100% beef — no pork, no mechanically separated meat (the slurry that lets bargain brands cut cost) — and kosher rules forbid by-products and demand a cleaner cut, which is why the ingredient list opens with plain beef and stays short. That’s a genuine quality floor, and the reason ingredient quality lands at C+ rather than lower.
What it does not change is the curing. Everything after the beef — the salt, the sodium lactate and diacetate, the sodium nitrite that fixes color and preserves the meat — is standard frank chemistry, kosher or not. You’re paying for a cleaner cut wrapped in the usual cured-meat system: worth it for the sourcing, not a path around the 500 mg of sodium. (Note this page covers the classic full-fat link; the Reduced Fat, 97% Fat Free, and Uncured variants move those numbers, so check the package you actually buy.)
How it stacks up against other franks
The fair comparison is other hot dogs, not chicken, and on that field Hebrew National holds up. Against bargain mixed-meat wieners (the Oscar Mayer tier), the all-beef kosher recipe is a clear step up on what’s in the link. Against bigger all-beef franks like Nathan’s or Ball Park, this standard link is lighter on calories simply because it’s a smaller frank — the jumbo dogs pack more of everything per piece. Where it loses is to the cleaner-label premium tier: an uncured frank like Applegate’s drops the added nitrites and runs lower on sodium, at a higher price. Honest placement: the upper-middle of the category, beaten only by the premium uncured options. For a hard floor, the meat it’s made from — a 45 g portion of plain cooked chicken breast — carries roughly 14 g of protein at about 35 mg of sodium, nearly triple the protein at a fourteenth of the salt. A frank is a treat, not a protein strategy.
Ingredients
Beef, water, modified potato starch, contains 2% or less of: sodium lactate, salt, hydrolyzed soy protein, flavoring, paprika, potassium chloride, potassium phosphate, sodium diacetate, garlic powder, sodium erythorbate, sodium nitrite. (Verbatim from the USDA Branded Foods entry, FDC 1935303.)
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Quick Facts
Per serving · 1 frank (45 g)
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Full nutrition facts
| Nutrient | Per Serving (1 frank (45 g)) |
|---|---|
| Calories | 99.9 |
| Protein | 5g |
| Total Fat | 8g |
| Saturated Fat | 3g |
| Trans Fat | 0g |
| Total Carbohydrates | 2g |
| Dietary Fiber | 0g |
| Total Sugars | 0g |
| Sodium | 500mg |
| Cholesterol | 25.2mg |
| Calcium | 0mg |
| Iron | 0.72mg |
| Potassium | 180mg |
Scope: This page applies specifically to Hebrew National Beef Franks (11 oz (312 g) — 7 franks) · UPC 074956182851. 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 animal-derived ingredients
contains meat, fish, or gelatin
no wheat, barley, rye, or malt detected in USDA ingredient list
Frequently Asked Questions
How much protein is in a Hebrew National Beef Frank?
5 g of protein per frank (USDA FDC 1935303), at about 100 calories. That's roughly 11 g per 100 g — modest, because a frank is closer to half fat than lean meat. Two franks gets you to 10 g of protein, but also to 1,000 mg of sodium.
Is a hot dog actually a high-protein food?
No. Only about 20% of a Hebrew National frank's calories come from protein; 72% come from fat. The 5 g of protein per link is real, but it rides on 8 g of fat, so calorie-for-calorie this is a fat-delivery food with some protein attached — not a protein source you'd build a meal around.
Why is the sodium so high?
500 mg per single frank — about 22% of the 2,300 mg daily limit in one hot dog, and the single biggest reason for the C grade. Salt does double duty in a cured meat: flavor and preservation. There's no way to make a traditional-tasting kosher frank without a lot of it, and Hebrew National is typical of the category here, not unusually salty.
Is Hebrew National healthier than other hot dogs?
On the ingredient line, somewhat — and the reputation is partly earned. The kosher all-beef recipe means no pork, no mechanically separated meat, no by-products, and a relatively short list. That genuinely beats the cheapest mixed-meat franks. But it doesn't change the sodium (500 mg) or the fat (8 g) per link. 'Cleaner hot dog' and 'health food' are very different claims.
What does the kosher all-beef standard actually guarantee?
Two things that matter nutritionally. First, it's 100% beef — no pork and no mechanically separated meat, which the cheapest franks use to cut cost. Second, kosher rules forbid by-products and demand a cleaner cut of meat, which is why the ingredient list opens with plain 'beef' and stays short. It's a real quality floor; it just isn't a license to eat them daily.
Does it contain nitrites?
Yes. The recipe uses sodium nitrite (with sodium erythorbate as a curing accelerator) — the standard system that gives franks their pink color, cured flavor, and shelf life. Processed meats cured with nitrites are the category public-health bodies flag for limiting; if that matters to you, Hebrew National's own uncured (celery-powder) frank is the alternative, though it's still a processed meat.
Is it keto-friendly?
Yes, on macros. 2 g total carbs, 0 g sugar, 8 g fat, and 5 g protein per frank fit a ketogenic or low-carb diet easily — the fat is a feature there, not a problem. The 500 mg of sodium is still worth tracking, though on keto many people need more sodium, not less.