Healthy Homemade Dog Food Diets

How to Make Healthy Well-Balanced Food and Treats for Your Dog

13 Comments
Join the Conversation
Make Your Own Dog Food Diets - bnb
Make Your Own Dog Food Diets - bnb
Since the 2007 dog food recall, many people have shied away from commercial diets and increasing numbers of pet owners are relying on homemade dog food diets.

There are numerous reasons a dog owner might decide to start using a homemade dog food diet for their dog instead of a commercially available diet.

  • Many people are concerned about the safety of commercial diets, especially since the massive pet food recall which occurred in 2007 as a result of melamine contamination.
  • Some people feel a homemade dog food diet allows fresher ingredients for their dog, thereby promoting their dog's health and well-being. These people dislike the idea of feeding preservatives to their dog and feel a homemade dog food diet is more natural for their dog.
  • Some people feel that cooking and preparing the foods for their dog allows them to bond more deeply with their dog.
  • Some dogs have medical issues such as allergies which some owners feel are better managed through the use of homemade diets.
  • Some dogs have multiple concurrent medical issues which no commercially prepared diet is specifically designed to treat. Homemade diets allow manipulation of ingredients to better allow managing specific nutrient requirements.

How to Make a Healthy Homemade Dog Food Diet for Your Dog

The main objective to formulating any dog food, homemade or otherwise, is to provide a nutritionally balanced food which provides all the essential nutrients necessary to maintain a dog's health and well-being. Evaluating a homemade dog food diet for complete and balanced nutrition can be difficult, especially if the diet changes from one day to the next as is often the case. One of the major concerns with any homemade dog food diet is that if the diet is not complete, it could lead to serious long-term health effects for the dog.

Any homemade dog food diet must start with a source of protein and a source of carbohydrates. Potential protein sources for a homemade dog food diet are:

  • skinless chicken breast - roasted
  • ground beef - pan browned
  • pork loin - broiled
  • lamb chop - broiled
  • Atlantic salmon - baked
  • whole egg - hard boiled
  • cottage cheese
  • tofu

Potential sources of carbohydrates for homemade dog food diets include:

  • long-grained white rice - cooked
  • long-grained brown rice - cooked
  • white potatoes - baked, flesh and skin
  • sweet potatoes - baked, flesh only
  • spaghetti - enriched, cooked
  • oats - cooked
  • barley - pearled, cooked
  • couscous - cooked
  • tapioca - dry

Once a proper protein and carbohydrate source are chosen, a recipe or number of recipes need to be developed and balanced to provide complete nutrition. For the average dog owner, properly balancing a diet to provide adequate nutrition over a span of years for their dog is a nearly impossible task. Ideally, a diet should be formulated with the aid of a nutrition expert who has the knowledge to develop a well-balanced, nutritionally complete diet for your dog.

If your dog is a young, healthy adult dog with no medical issues, it is possible to purchase a customized diet certified by a veterinary nutritionist for a nominal fee. These diets are not recommended for young puppies, for senior dogs which are debilitated or for dogs with medical health issues requiring a specialized diet. These diets can be purchased through companies such as Pet Diets and Balance It.

Some nutritional companies can also provide you with recipes for homemade dog treats in addition to a well-balanced dog food diet you can make yourself.

If your dog has medical issues, many veterinary nutritionists are willing to work in conjunction with your veterinarian to develop a homemade dog food diet which will meet your dog's individual needs. You should consult your veterinarian if you feel this option is one you wish to pursue for your dog.

Potential Hazards Associated with Homemade Dog Food Diets

As previously stated, the primary hazard associated with feeding a homemade dog food diet is that the diet may not be well-balanced nutritionally and may, over time, cause your dog to become malnourished. By making certain that well-balanced recipes are chosen and followed closely at home while making your dog's meals, this should not be a major concern. However once a balanced homemade dog food diet is formulated, you should resist the temptation to add to or change the diet.

Contaminants such as E. coli, Salmonella, Campylobacter, Yersinia and other bacteria can become a problem with raw meat. As with foods for human consumption, all meat and poultry should be well cooked to help control these contaminants.

When making your dog's homemade dog food diet, use the same precautions in the kitchen which you would use when preparing a meal for yourself.

  • Wash your hands thoroughly before handling any foodstuffs.
  • Use a dedicated cutting board for handling meats and poultry.
  • Thaw frozen meat in the refrigerator, not on the counter.
  • Do not allow meat to thaw and then refreeze.

By carefully choosing the ingredients for your dog's homemade dog food diet, it is possible to provide a good nutritious meal plan for your dog. However, no matter how well thought out and planned the homemade dog food diet is, your dog still needs to be monitored carefully for signs of malnourishment.

If feeding a homemade puppy food to a young growing dog, special care needs to be taken as puppies and young adult dogs can suffer the effects of malnutrition more quickly, often showing greater severity than adult dogs.

Lorie Huston, Feature Writer, Pet Care, Sears Photography Studio

Lorie Huston - Lorie Huston, DVM

rss
Advertisement
Leave a comment

NOTE: Because you are not a Suite101 member, your comment will be moderated before it is viewable.
Submit
What is 2+4?
13 Comments

Comments

Jul 21, 2009 2:55 PM
Guest :
nonsense, theres nothing wrong with modern sold petfood from reputable manufacturers, its eaten by humans in many countries apparently so has to conform to health rules. scare tactics, well meaning but pointless in todays society (theres always somebody wanting to push a conspiracy theory, it keeps their hands and minds busy !)
Aug 24, 2009 10:53 PM
Guest :
I'd like to address the comment made by a guest on July 21/09 @ 2:55 PM:

I seriously doubt that any of your pets became sick or died after eating tainted pet food during the most recent massive pet food recall by Menu Foods in 2007. I suspect that your opinion would be significantly different if you had found yourself in a position where you were hearing that your beloved pet’s kidneys were failing, that s/he may never recover and that treatment didn’t hold any guarantees. If you watched your precious companion as you were forced to make difficult medical and ethical decisions about your pet’s care after ingesting toxic melamine tainted food you’d understand why people are turning to their own kitchens to ensure the safety of their pets. Maybe you know something I don’t, but it really sounds to me like you’re busy making judgements with very little to support your opinions….Do you work in a factory that manufactures cat/dog food? Have you completed any courses pertaining to appropriate, safe, healthy and nutritionally complete diets for companion animals? Are you a veterinarian? (if so that doesn’t necessarily make you qualified to make nutritional recommendations since very little of your training is actually devoted to appropriate nutrition for every species you’d deal with within the field of veterinary medicine).

Many so-called “reputable” pet food manufacturers who claim to produce the highest quality pet foods have misled the public for some time. The same facility that makes some of the cheaper, low quality diets also produces the high quality, higher priced, premium pet foods and prescription pet foods sold in veterinary clinics. Check the Menu Foods recall list, you’ll note some well known, “reputable” companies are on it. Do you have pets at all? So many cats and dogs died after eating tainted pet food during the massive Menu Foods recall, many before the manufacturers finally admitted that there was a problem. How many deaths could have been prevented by Menu Foods if they had simply taken concerned pet parents and veterinarians calling in about a possible link between kidney failure and pet food? I think it would be wise to avoid judging pet parents who are pro-active enough to seek out information to help them make decisions about their pet's overall health and diet without actually providing concrete information based on legitimate, unbiased facts to back your position up.
Nov 29, 2009 12:07 AM
Guest :
I would also like to address Guest. I am just at the tail end of nursing 26 ill dogs, and on November 19th holding one of my angels in my arms, while he left this world in extreme pain, bleeding from the mouth. He left me with a huge hole in my heart and a memory that will remain with me forever. There is no doubt in my mind, that their dog food was toxic. If you have ever experience your beloved pets go through something like this, I think you would rethink your position.
Right now, it makes me sick to look at dog food and my hands are plenty busy without that extra worry, believe me. I'm afraid to make my own, afraid I won't get the right ingredients. When we were kids, all dogs got table scraps.lived long and healthy lives, so I wonder, what's worse, lack of knowledge on proper nutrition with homemade food, or toxic dog food.
Jan 5, 2010 3:39 PM
Guest :
I think that is was aq very helpful article....I am in the same boat with how I feel about commercial dog food. I have a 2yr old Red Boxer/Hound an since she was fixed 8 months ago she has managed to gain 20-25 lbs...So i am looking for alternative's to curve her weight gain,as well as trim her waist a bit..thank you so much an keep up the great work...was also looking for Homemade catfood...my cat need's to put on what the dog's going to be losing..ha ha ha..!!!!
Jan 10, 2010 6:48 PM
Guest :
My 10 year old dog is overweight, and so is my cat and I don't overfeed them. I realize now it's the corn meal and fat they've been eating all their lives. 3 days ago my small dog suddenly looked bloated and in pain. I took him to the vet and they could not find anything wrong with him. Then, the next day, as I was feeding my dogs and my cat. My cat would not eat the new pouch of moist food I just bought him. He looked at it, smelled it, looked up at me, kept smelling it like he wanted to eat cuz he was hungry but he just couldn't make himself eat it. So I gave him something else that I usually buy him. He ate it hungrily. Next day, my dog is still miserable, looking like he's in pain, barely moving. It's breakfast time, I open up another pouch of cat food. Again, the cat sniffed it, looked up at me the same way and would not eat it. It scared me. Something is wrong w/ that food. He's NEVER refused to eat any canned food before, so I threw it out and gave him something else. Then I got online to search what might possibly be ailing my dog. I happened to stumbled on a website about how cheap pet food can cause alot of health issues and worse - accidental death from contaminated pet food. So I started doing more research. I was horrified by what I read. Moldy grain and poisoned rats, and worse. The next day I went to the local Pet Store and bought my dogs the pricey stuff, quality food; Innova and California Natural food. After eating that quality food for 2 days, my dog fully recovered. He's his normal self again. The vets could not find anything wrong with him, the only thing I can deduce is that he was bloated from eating too much grain and fat. It finally caught up with him. He's 10 years old, he can't take it anymore. His new food is a lot more expensive, but it's worth it. In the long run it's going to save me money on vet bills and heartache watching my pets suffer with health issues from eating garbage. Tonight, I'm making my dogs a treat. Homemade stew. Beef chunks of stew meat, white potatoes, carrots, peas and low fat chicken stock. I'm throwing it in a crockpot to cook it. From now on I'm going to make them homemade stew as a treat to give them as a supplement around their Innova and CA Natural dry food and canned meat. It's not too late to switch your pets' food. Do it before they end up at the vet!
The comment by Guest on July 21 either doesn't want to face facts because then he doesn't have to feel guilty feeding his pets junk, or he works for one of those companies that he knows makes poor quality pet food.
May 10, 2010 5:13 AM
Guest :
It's reasuring to find this article so much in line with what I thought about homemade dog food versus store bought. I often felt that the giant bags of dry dog food's were pretty much along the lines of us eating at McDonalds, every meal, every day, always wondering why we didn't feel good....? I took up making homemade for my boyfriend's dog a year before he died, the happiest my boyfriend said that his dog had ever been. Since I've become auntie to another friend's dog, which I've now convinced the owner to switch over to homemade and to give it a try..... With time, I'm sure the owner and the pooch will be one big happy family! Thank you. Newport Beach, Ca.
Jul 18, 2010 6:13 AM
Guest :
very good
Aug 9, 2010 3:34 PM
Guest :
How would YOU like to eat cereal everyday for the rest of YOUR life? Dry dog food did not even exist until just recently (30 or so years --maybe less) when cereal companies were trying to figure out what to do with the unappealing crumbs and stale extras! And, moist dog food is ALSO made of stale and unappealing portions of processed human food, MAINLY from General Mills. Sooooo, the VERY SAME ingredients that caused these pets' ill health problems are the SAME ingredients that we eat when we eat a bowl of cereal! Anyone having kidney problems lately? --You just might want to check your own cereal bowl!
Aug 31, 2010 10:27 AM
Guest :
very helpful
Sep 1, 2010 11:10 AM
Guest :
As with humans, canned processed food is poison. I agree, animals ate table scrap and live long healthy lives. My friend from Eygpt commented how we don't feed animals what we eat, is it because we eat badly. Whe I prepare meats my dog goes crazy. I will not prepare her food for her as she keeps turning her nose and walks away from the canned food I was giving her. I can't even buy any anymore, she doesn't like it. I had hamburgers, homemade, gave her one, she gobbled it andwanted more. Made a sandwich, she wolfed down the meat yet she won't touch the canned food. She is 10 I just found out, I got her a year ago and was feeding her what I was told. Her teeth are falling out, which if she had been fed properly this may not have happened. Wish I could find receipes without buying a book, anyone please contact me at wonniebite@yahoo.com. Can't afford to buy book. Thanks
Sep 12, 2010 12:48 PM
Guest :
GREAT!! Helped me a lot!! Thank you!!!
Jan 19, 2011 4:37 PM
Guest :
My vet told me recently that wheat was very bad for dogs, yet I see some of the recipes contain pasta - I am now confused
Feb 28, 2011 4:00 PM
Guest :
Great article, and I disagree with "guest" who said on 7/21/09 that this was "nonsense." I have tried brand after brand of so-called "natural", expensive brands and they all gave my dog THE worst gas. If it is upsetting him so much on the insides, it can't be good for him. In addition, what I was paying was ridiculous. So I went to WalMart and spent $20 to buy a week's worth of "dog food:" sweet potatoes, potatoes, peas, brown rice, ground beef, and chicken. I cook up a big pot in the morning as I get ready for work. My Doberman and Great Dane love it, it's cheaper, there are no hidden ingredients, and guess what? NO MORE GAS!
13 Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement