Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Rice, chicken, sardines, egg. First two are a sick-day food, last two are occasional treats. Kids leave him a bit of sausage on Sunday mornings and sometimes dump the remains of their lunchbox in his bowl if they haven't finished. The rest of the time, kibble it is!
That's awful. Would you eat that? I would never feed my animals someone else's old rejected food that's been sitting out for 8? hours.
Yes, I would eat it. Sometimes my kids do eat it when they get home from school. I make real meals to put in their bento boxes! But sometimes the dog gets it, and he doesn't complain![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Rice, chicken, sardines, egg. First two are a sick-day food, last two are occasional treats. Kids leave him a bit of sausage on Sunday mornings and sometimes dump the remains of their lunchbox in his bowl if they haven't finished. The rest of the time, kibble it is!
That's awful. Would you eat that? I would never feed my animals someone else's old rejected food that's been sitting out for 8? hours.
Anonymous wrote:
Rice, chicken, sardines, egg. First two are a sick-day food, last two are occasional treats. Kids leave him a bit of sausage on Sunday mornings and sometimes dump the remains of their lunchbox in his bowl if they haven't finished. The rest of the time, kibble it is!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend who used to make her dogs' food (and did not ever feed canned) would do boiled chicken, ghee, rice and carrots. That was the main food, but she also fed sardines once in a while.
I cook chicken or turkey twice/ month or so for my dog and cat, and feed canned the rest of the time. I always give the dog some Fromm dry food, a vitamin supplement and some shredded carrots/ cauliflower or diced blueberries (she is tiny- it all has to be small). Tonight she ate a diced scrambled organic egg (no milk/ butter, just egg) with a little dry food, almond milk and carrots.
This is helpful, thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there anyone that does this? Can you share your recipe? I'm not interested in doing raw. This is what I have been doing... any advice? Anything I'm missing?
~10% organs (i.e. chicken liver)
~70% meat and egg protein sources
~20% rice/vegetables
I also read to sprinkle crushed egg whites for calcium and he regularly gets bones to chew.
Do you mean crushed egg shells? If so, are the egg shells from raw eggs or hard boiled eggs?
Anonymous wrote:My friend who used to make her dogs' food (and did not ever feed canned) would do boiled chicken, ghee, rice and carrots. That was the main food, but she also fed sardines once in a while.
I cook chicken or turkey twice/ month or so for my dog and cat, and feed canned the rest of the time. I always give the dog some Fromm dry food, a vitamin supplement and some shredded carrots/ cauliflower or diced blueberries (she is tiny- it all has to be small). Tonight she ate a diced scrambled organic egg (no milk/ butter, just egg) with a little dry food, almond milk and carrots.
Anonymous wrote:When I was a kid, the dog ate the leftovers, which she seemed to enjoy. But to answer your question, the answer is no, I've never tried to make my own dog food. It seems like it would be a lot of effort for no reason. Dog food isn't that expensive that it would be worth me trying to make it.
Anonymous wrote:Is there anyone that does this? Can you share your recipe? I'm not interested in doing raw. This is what I have been doing... any advice? Anything I'm missing?
~10% organs (i.e. chicken liver)
~70% meat and egg protein sources
~20% rice/vegetables
I also read to sprinkle crushed egg whites for calcium and he regularly gets bones to chew.