calliecritturs
Posted : 9/1/2008 12:49:35 PM
About 36 years ago, I had a little street stray (a pom/peke mix) who was about 2, and she suddenly came up with a deathly bout of pancreatitis. that was back when I knew ***NOTHING*** about dog health issues, cooking, etc. Prissy hovered at death's door for almost 2 weeks (and the almost $400 vet bill almost crippled me financially).
As I left with her, the vet told me she'd have to avoid fats for the rest of her life -- particularly vegetable fats. And then he handed me a recipe. He said "If you want her to live, you'll cook for her and forget dogfood"
The "recipe" was 2 c. of minute rice plus the water needed to reconsitute it, 1/4 pound of ground beef and a little garlic powder for taste. As you take it off the heat, add 1 raw egg so the residual heat will cook it and stir it in.
She ate that for 15 years and in her late years I did give her *some* kibble.
Prissy lived to be almost 21 years old.
Rice has little nutritional value -- brown rice is almost never able to be processed by a dog's body no matter how much you over-cook it. White rice is pretty much white rice -- I worked then and do now and I've used it many millions of times.
It was for pris that I learned to mash up carrots, peas and other veg so she couldn't pick them out. (Back then I didn't think there WAS any other veg aside from corn and I couldn't mash that up so I didn't give it to her)
The only chicken I use is dark meat -- white chicken has darned little nutrition in it to be honest, and I don't even rotate it much because it's nut not all that great - red meat is better for them.
Today I use little grain because of the dogs I have -- but when you have a dog with digestive issues, sometimes you use what WORKS.
And -- you can make darned nice dog cookies using baby food -- you don't have to use "carrots" (as in slices of raw carrot) for treats -- you can use them in a different form (like pureed carrots that are cooked a bit) and make a nice treat that way. Use any treat recipe and substitute the veggies that are pureed for another food. Carrots, squash - they're sweet and most dogs like them. Combine it with a babyfood meat for a meaty taste and you'll get what you want.