On Sunday I made a big batch of pet food using the recipe for Spot’s Stew from The Whole Pet Diet. The recipe is filled with fresh vegetables and real meat, including organ meats, which is all very healthy for your pets. It looked good when I was cutting up all the ingredients, fresh organic carrots, sweet potatoes, zucchini and celery. I didn’t have enough fresh garlic to add a whole cup to the double batch I made, so I used some garlic powder from the pantry. I must admit, I have been using fresh garlic for so long I forgot how strong powdered garlic was. The smell was awful, way to weirdly garlicy. The house smelled terrible and the food as an overpowering fake garlic smell. I threw the powdered garlic into the compost pile and I might omit the garlic in the next batch. The cats wouldn’t touch the food, I’m guessing the overpowering garlic smell turned them off. Even the garage cats wouldn’t touch it. Lucy thinks it’s the greatest thing ever, she gobbles it down and licks her bowl clean. I did change the recipe a bit adding a few extra things I thought would make it healthier, I added those to the end of the recipe directions.
SPOT’S CHICKEN STEW
(recipe as listed in The Whole Pet Diet, my changes listed in description)
2.5 lbs whole chicken, including bones, organs, and skin, preferably organic pastured
1/4 cup chopped fresh garlic
1 cup organic green peas (I used 1/2 cup dried split peas)
1 cup coarsely chopped organic carrots
1/2 cup coarsely chopped organic sweet potatoes
1/2 cup coarsely chopped organic zucchini
1/2 cup coarsely chopped organic yellow squash
1/2 cup coarsely chopped organic green beans
1/2 cup coarsely chopped organic celery
1 Tablespoon of kelp powder
1 teaspoon dried rosemary
11-16 cups filtered water
For dogs only: add 8 ounces of whole barley and 6 ounces of rolled oats, and adjust water content to total 16 cups or enough to cover ingredients (grains not recommend for cats).
Combine all ingredients in stock pot with enough water to cover. Bring to a boil, turn down heat as low as possible, and simmer for 2 hours (the carrots should be soft). Remove from heat, cool and debone chicken. Put all ingredients back in pot and blend with an immersion blender (or you can blend in batches in a regular blender or food processor). Distribute into containers, meal sized serving are very convenient.
I put mine in wide mouth pint jars and will be giving Lucy 3 of these per day along with some yogurt. I have been putting the next meal’s jars on the counter to warm when I feed her. So before bed I put out her breakfast and when I feed her breakfast I put out her dinner portions. This way she’s never eating cold food straight from the fridge, which is not recommended for animals.
Changes I made: Since the chicken didn’t come with the heart and liver, I added a cup of venison heart. I included 1/4 cup of raw apple cider vinegar to help bring minerals from bones (I always do this when making soups & stocks) and 1/4 teaspoon of real sea salt for minerals. I added all zucchini in place of yellow squash and green beans since I didn’t have either of those and I had a zucchini in the pantry. I also added 1/4 cup crushed egg shells for added calcium, 1/4 cup of molasses for added minerals and iron, 1/2 cup of beef tallow for some added healthy fat, and 2 Tablespoons of Vita-Blend tea mix from Mountain Rose Herbs for added vitamins & minerals. I didn’t add the grains in the mix since I was hoping the cats would eat it, but they won’t.
Serving sizes for dogs:
up to 10 pounds – 1 to 1 1/2 cups daily
11-20 pounds – 2 to 3 cups daily
21-40 pounds – 4 cups
for each additional 20 pounds add 2 cups
Adjust according up or down according to your dogs activity level.
Cats will eat about a cup of this stew each day.
I must admit I was a little less than impressed with this stew when it was finished and I pureed it. It looked just like canned dog food, only slightly more watery. It looked great while I was chopping it all up, fresh and delicious. I think I’d rather feed raw, which we do sometimes. I just need to read up a bit more and start looking for good sources of local pastured meat for the pets. Although I do think this is much healthier than store-bought food and it was actually very easy to make. The double batch I made will last about 2 weeks for the dog, not much work involved and it is cheaper than human grade pet food. I think this will cost about half the prices of store-bought food (if you’re buying a good brand like Wellness or EVO). I probably spend about $90 a month on pet food for the 6 pets living at Chiot’s Run. The one thing I do love about making homemade food is that I can make it organic, the brand of pet food we buy is good quality, but it’s not organic. By making the food at home our pets can get organic for less that conventional and I know exactly what’s in it. Making pet food will also encourage me to grow a few more vegetables in the garden which will drastically reduce the price of the food and save even more money!
Have you ever fed raw? How much do you typically spend on your pet food per month?
I can also be found at Chiot’s Run where I blog daily about gardening, cooking, local eating, beekeeping, and all kinds of stuff. You can also find me at Ethel Gloves, Simple, Green, Frugal, Co-op, and you can follow me on Twitter.
It’s weird to me that they want you to go to all the trouble of blending it when dogs like to chew things.
My pups get Orijen dog food + fresh vegetables. I started adding the fresh vegetables when one of them ended up overweight (he’d slowed down as he got older and I hadn’t reduced his food accordingly) so that when I cut back on his food he wouldn’t feel as hungry. They pretty much like all vegetables – carrots, cucumbers, beets (makes their pee red), zucchini, cooked pumpkin (everything else I give them raw), turnip, etc. And I’ve been surprised they haven’t even been extra gassy. One day I’ll try feeding them homemade food, but I’m vegetarian and I want them to eat meat so I have to get over not really wanting to deal with raw meat in the house.
Normally I don’t blend the homemade pet food, but I wanted to follow the directions of the recipe to see what it was like. I probably won’t blend if I make it again, I may for the cats though.
That looks good. I may have to try that. I haven’t been able to feed my dog food containing chicken, it makes her pink skinned and itchy. But perhaps if I use a good organic chicken that might make a difference.
When I make my dog beef stew I just cut up the veggies & meat smaller, I don’t bother to blend it. Then again, she’s not a tiny dog so no chance of choking.
My monthly budget for dry dog food is $55. And that’s just for one dog who only eats 3 cups of food total a day. I used to do pro plan but switched to blue buffalo.
You could always use lamb instead of the chicken. The book listed above has a recipe for food using lamb as well. If your dog is allergic to chicken that would be a great option, as would venison, elk or buffalo.
thanks for this post. i’ve been wanting to try something like this, but didn’t want to waste all that good food on a recipe that may or may not turn out right.
how many cups does the recipe for dogs (with grain) end up making?
I doubled the recipe and it made about 50 cups of food and this was without adding the grains. I’m guessing the grain will add about 15% more. You could probably count on 30-35 cups of food from the recipe.
I’m feeding Lucy 5 cups a day along with a piece of whole grain sourdough bread and a half cup of yogurt and will adjust according to her needs. Lucy is a 65 pound lab mix.
I make my dog’s food .. sometimes with organic beef or chicken. My recipe uses brown rice .. so I find a good run through the food processor helps .. otherwise .. it looks like little rice patties in the yard 😉
I do raw, and the last cost analysis I ran, it worked out to $0.61 per day, per dog (my dogs eat ~1/2 a pound a day, each).
Now, I’m in Canada, and all that meat came from a standard grocery store. To put it in perspective though, “high-quality” kibble costs ~$1 per day (and when my one dog was last on kibble, he was actually loosing weight at that portion size).
I did receive some free venison from a co-worker, but that isn’t included in the cost, so it is possible to do raw *much* cheaper.
And raw is so much easier than cooking 🙂
I want to start making our dog food. At the moment our dog eats raw meaty bones, and the occasional carrot, cabbage, or brocolli stalks. I like the idea of mixing up a batch of food. I don’t think I would bother cooking it, apart from the grain/pulse components.
Onions and garlic are not good for your animals. I don’t think in small quantities are a problem but I would not add deliberately add it in.
When I googled it, a number of sites came up.
Nancy
http://dogear6.wordpress.com/
A bit more abrupt than I intended. Having said that, I also make a slop for the dogs to mix in with their dry food. The tired vegetables from making stock, leftover pieces of turkey that are not overly edible, pan drippings that we don’t use for gravy. The dogs love it and thrive on it.
Sorry – I posted twice on onions & garlic being toxic. Not sure where it keeps disappearing to.
I fed my kitty raw for awhile.
A lot of the home-made food, including yours, has veggies in it, and all the research I found said that cats are obligate carnivores, and that grains and veggies aren’t really good for them.
So, I fed her on raw chicken for a couple of months, it worked out alright, although she had trouble learning how to eat it at first. (She didn’t know how to chew, after living on dry food for years.) I got tired of dealing with the mess though, so she’s back on a high quality dry food. She does get raw treats when I’m cooking with meat and can spare a minute to carve her some.
I feed my dog raw and he loves it. I, like you, started out with the Whole Pet Diet book, then transitioned into raw. I recommend the book Raw Dog Food by Carina Beth MacDonald. I bought the meat grinder attachment for my mixer and it really takes about thirty minutes a week to grid up everything for the week and freeze them. The cost fluctuates for us between $60-$100, depending on the season. We’ve carved out a space in the garden for growing “dog food”.