Dog Food Recipe Video

Here’s a recipe that’s super-easy and it’s one Ginger really digs – she’s my dog!


Click here to see the book this tasty recipe came from, plus heaps more cool stuff in there for a longer living dog.

L8r,
Andy L

ps. every women I’ve shown this video to has said “I can’t see what you’re cooking Andy… (sigh)…. men!” So next time I promise to get the pan in the shot!

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • MySpace
  • MySpace

Filed Under: Dog VideosHomemade Dog FoodHomemade Dog Food Videos

Tags:

bottom

RSSComments (294)

Leave a Reply | Trackback URL

  1. Denise Baran says:

    Hi Andy,
    Thank you so much for getting the message out about how horrible commercial pet foods are. I was fortunate enough to see this information years ago. We have 3 mini dachshunds, and we have been making our own dog food for years now. We used to buy the well known expensive foods available at our vet, but when one of our boys became completely paralyzed in his hind quarters due to spinal disc disease, we took him to a homeopathic vet, who used homeopathic remedies, and also advised us to make our own food for him. He told us to buy good quality beef, and cut it up into chunks, drop into boiling water to kill bacteria and grind it up, mix with some brown rice, veggies, and some of the broth. We decided that since we were doing this for one, we would try it with all three. Not only did they all lose some weight, but they were much happier and no digestive distrubances as we had experienced before. We were told to add certain specific vitamins to the food, which we did. Needless to say, we still do this. It is easy, and cheaper. We make huge batches and freeze what we don’t use right away. Our boy who was paralyzed made a full recovery against the odds that the “experts” gave us. He was under chiropractic care, and we had to do water therapy with him as well, but as someone who has studied the benefits of good nutrition, I know that the food we made for him was a major reason for his recovery. Keep up the great work you are doing so that more people will wake up to what is best for there beloved pets.

  2. Dawn says:

    Hello Andy, Thank you so very much for your efforts to spread awareness on this issue. Like many of the comments I have read, I’m so very sad to say I lost both my dogs to now what I believe was eventually, due to their diet. My Lola was Staffordshire bull terrier, and she was euthanised at age 16 (6 years ago) after a year of illness diagnosed initially as Cushings disease, then lastly, liver cancer. Dave was a bull mastiff, who at age 12 deteriorated most rapidly from cancer. Both my dogs appeared to enjoy good health, their only trips to the vet was for the usual: neutering, vaccinations etc. Then in June, Dave had a ‘cough’ (that sounded like it belonged to an old man) for 2 days which I kept an eye on to monitor. During this 2 days, Dave had what I initially saw was a swelling appear on his cheek which I mistook to be a sting, then maybe an abscess developing, so I made an appontment with the vet. The next day when it swelled more , appointment in place, I took him into the vet who took one look at him and said ‘he’s a gonner’ – yeah, my legs buckled at that cold comment! Other than the swelling, his coat shone, he was as active and interactive as a dog his age would be. he just deteroirated so very quickly. The vet insisted that he was euthanised since she stated that he had cancer. I demanded a 2nd opinion to which she said she would have to cut him open which she did not agree to do to confirm this. i agreed, i was shocked and upset at her diagnosis.She said the swelling was his lymph glands ‘packing up’. This was 29.6.09 and I am now feeling even worse since I feel that I their diet could have been responsible. I bought what I believed to be the ‘best’ brand foods for them and now after reading your information I am stunned. I am so bereaved, Lola and Dave were my dearest, dearest friends and loved so very much. Maybe next year I will be able to have a dog, I’m just too upset to act at this time. I can assure you that I will home cook for my next four legged family member. I came across your site whilst checking out bull dogs. Please keep raising awareness, as I shall now. I will advise my friends and dog lovers I know of your site. Im overwhelmed at how this ‘best’ dog food impacts on those we love, they rely on us and we are, or were indeed ignorant.It is with a heavy but sincere heart that I thank you again for your efforts Andy. Kindest regards, Dawn

  3. jeanne says:

    HI ANDY!
    I just recently came across your website this morning as i was thinking of buying a Wolamute, and was astonished to see the truth of things! That is horrible, of course people like “them” would cover it up! It’s truly repulsive! Actually not too long ago my dog Buster passed away he lived for 17 years! but he had kidney failure, heart worms, and caner! He was always inside until my uncle passed away and gave the schnauzers to my grandmother…then she just left them outside! Shotsi passed away within a couple years of being outside! I was so mad my grandmother wouldn’t take them to get cleaned…they were soooo far gone she told me! so I stole him and took him to get cleaned and everything i tried cutting off the matted fur and yes…i said matted! but i was afraid i would hurt him so i took him to a close friend of mine and she didnt even recognize him because he was that bad. he was cleaned up and happy! but then a few months later we found out all his problems! and my mother took him to go get youthenized while i was at school! i didn’t know until i came back and called to my empty room. Now i cant help but think how betrayed i feel by many people i trusted. (Apparently it was poison that killed him!) now i feel very strongly about not feeling them that crap! but my stepfather wont allow me to feed my dog gunner the “good” food! because he is a big dog and he needs real food in order to maintain his energy for being a hunting dog! how can i persuade him to let me!? i need serious help! i already told him i dont “have” to buy anything although it would be preferred…but its just a book! i showed him pictures and your website, but to no avail.
    Please help me convince him, he is so hard headed and i don’t want my dog to suffer for his big ego!
    Thanks!
    :)

  4. Sara says:

    Hi I was pretty shocked at your video, I knew most dog foods (especially grocery brands,purina,iams,hills ect.) aren’t what they’re cracked up to be and DEFINATLY not worth the outragous price, but I had no idea how the ingreidents could harm my dogs!! I have two beautiful female pit bull terriers
    one is six years old and until just a year ago I had no idea about dog nutrition, I was feeding her Purina Dog Chow, but now I have them both on
    BLUE BUFFALO and i was wondering if that one is ok or not, I dont have alot of money but certainly dont want to feed my dogs crap, im not sure how cost effective feeding fresh food is but im thinking its more than i can afford right now And people just so you know these are a list of crappy dog food In the U.S. at least!! starting at the crappiest!! Ol’Roy(or any brands you can get at a dollar store!!)Purina (ALL VARIETYS, TYPES and sub brands))Iams, Pedigree,Pro Plan,Science Diet (even vet perscribed, if your dog hadnt been eating crap all its life it probably wouldnt nedd a persripction food in the first place!! think that over!!) Now these are some foods that are fairly decent,cost effective if you cant buy fresh(remember foods vary by state and country so you may not be able to get these foods easily or i may have left some out because they do not appear in my area of the country)
    BLUE BUFFALO, WELLNESS, SOLID GOLD, HALO, DOG WHISPERER, NATUAL BALANCE but nat. balance gets alot of ingreidents from other countries so be careful!!

    thats all i can think of right now

  5. Mila says:

    Hello Andy,
    thank you very much for the video, and for sharing with us your love and concern about the furry ones. I am totally agree with you that it does make a difference a food prepared with love and good thoughts about the little one who is completely depends on you, and whom you love unconditionally. And this is very kind of you to share this recipe with us. My dogs (Doberman and Scottie) are on Spot’s Stew diet (holistic nutrition for dogs) that I use to buy at the Whole Foods, and now it’s possible to get it from Petco. It seems better for my guys than a Solid Gold diet. However I always add once a day meats (organic from farms like buffalo, lamb, beef, chicken, beef hearts)/veggies stew that I make for them myself… I just add cooked barley instead of breads…and don’t include cheese/eggs. I heard that they shouldn’t eat the whole egg… don’t know if this is true. I give them small pieces of raw liver (organic from an organic farm), with a little bit of chlorella, which is good for them. I agree with you about the commercial food value. The only concern i have switching them completely to home made diet is about minerals and vitamins they should get…like the amount of flaxeed oil they should get… etc… Also weather I will be able to maintain their healthy diet in case if I move to a state or a place where there will be no farms or so or farms will be too far away from my place… I wouldn’t be able to get this type of food from the Whole Foods, it’s too expensive. Raw diet sounds good to me but it’s too expensive, and I wouldn’t want to switch back and forth… Could you explain the nutritional value of the recipe?

  6. Kay says:

    Thanks, I was looking for something to alternate with what I prepare for my dog. I do NOT trust any of the pet food companies.
    You might be interested in the high quality, easy and nutricious recipe I use for my dog. I\’ve checked with my vet who heartily approves (including the vitamins).
    Canned peas and carrots.
    I divide a can into 2 containers, using one and freezing the second, to insure freshness.
    Brown rice.
    I cook 2 cups at a time but keep a small zip-lock for daily use and the remainder divided and frozen…always fresh.
    Chicken thighs. (I cook about 5 lbs. at a time and freeze it.)
    These are meatier. breast meat is very dry. Remove skin and fat put in teflon coated skillet or spray lightly w/cooking oil. Cook slowly, turning frequently until cooked through-about 45 min.-1 hr. Drain on towel paper because there\’s still a lot of fat in the chicken even though you\’ve cleaned it. Put 3-4 pieces in zip-lock bags. Keep one out and freeze the rest.
    MEAL TIME
    Depending on the size of your dog (mine\’s 8 lbs.) i put a tablespoon each of vegestables and rice, then take the meat off the bone and chop it. You can include the white gristle/cartilage/joint at the end of the piece of chicken. Do not include any of the bone as chicken bones splinter!!!
    Sprinkle \"MISSING LINK\" dog vitamin powder over it (amount according to size of dog) to include alpha-lipoic acid, glucosamine, chrondoitin, etc.
    I tried combining and then freezing but she really didn\’t like it that way. ?? But put together at meal time is fast easy, nutricious and SAFE.
    The beauty of this is it can be prepared a week at a time as long as the ingredients are frozen to retain freshness.

    Good luck, keep up the good work looking out for our precious little critters.
    Kay

  7. Kristyl says:

    Hi there…a big thing that I think concerns most of us is the amounts to feed the dogs when we are cooking our own food etc. Also, I need to mention that your breads used was commericially prepared….you could make your own, or just not include the bread…and it should be toasted in a toaster, not put in a microwave oven in a plastic bag. There\’s no need to leave it in the plastic and plastic leaches. RE: the tuna…it contains mercury…there are better types of fish to use and you can find resources to buy it wholesale or buy fresh frozen at Costco etc. Dogs don\’t care what type of fish it is and the oily types provide all the fats they need without the cheese. You can grind it up so as to make sure no bones etc…you really don\’t need the cheese and bread at all. They will love straight fish and eggs, done in a non stick pan with no added oil…or a tiny bit of olive oil. Think HEALTHY if you\’re going to do this stuff. :D

    PS I also use By Nature Organics Kibble…sold at Petsmart. I have researched the company thoroughly…and has done wonders for my rescue dog who I got with diarrhea, hair loss, and itching. She\’s looking amazing now…thick, shiny beautiful coat, no stomach problems, happy, no itching….she eats a wide variety of things from certain fruits, veges, and meats, fish, with a small amount of kibble twice a day. She\’s weighed constantly and her weight is remaining consistent and healthy. I can\’t stand fat dogs and their owners either for making them that way. It\’s not love. Thanks for listening….

Leave a Reply

You can add images to your comment by clicking here.

Security Code: