I have two questions I would appreciate help with, please.
1st question:
I am homecooking. I give calcium citrate - which is a more absorbable form that carbonate. I don't want to just give "extra" b/c calcium competes with magnesium (good for energy) on the cell receptor sites.
So, right now I am giving canned food. First question is that I went to nutrition data and found the food, clicked on "stewed" figuring it would compare best with canned. This canned food is all meat, no additives at all. The cooked piece yeilds from 1 lb. of raw boneless weighing 299 grams. The canned food does have bones according to the manufacturer (cooked so well you can't tell it). The can food is 13 oz, just shy of 1 lb. and weighs 375 grams.
So, obviously my canned food retains more moisture than stewed once you figure in the weight difference, bones, etc. OK, per lb. the stewed nutrition data shows about 600 mg. more phosporus than calcium. So, that would be 37.5 mg. of calcium that I would need to add per
ounce of meat given.
BUT, there's so much more moisture in the can that the stewed version. And, the canned is less than a pound. So, since I give the citrate form (best absorbability) , I thought I would do a 1:1 ratio rather than a 2:1 calcium/phosporus ratio. I'm thinking this would make it about a 1.25 calcium : 1.00 phosporus or even up to a 1.5 :1.00 ratio once this is factored in. Ummm, does any of this sound about right to you guys?
2cd question:
So, it has, because of recent threads, occurred to me that I'm not feeding her nearly as much protein as I thought. I figured an all meat canned food would be more protein that it is. So, for some reason I can't figure out, the percentages only add up to 95%. They told me that they put whole pieces of the food in the can and cook it, no additives. So, I guess the other 5% is nutrients????
Protein is 10%. Moisture is 78%. That makes the protein at 45%
Here's my second question. Let's say I give homecooked 4 ounces of well cooked grain that was cooked with a lot of water. I give 4 ounces of cooked veggies (carrot, broccoli,cauliflower,zuchinni), and I give only
3 ounces of meat.
I
was thinking that she was getting 27% protein based on these figures. Actually, I figured it was less than that because I add in so much water to cook the grain so very well. But, now that I know the canned food is only 45% protein.
So, is she only getting 45% of the
3 ounces, which would be 1.35 ounces?
How would you figure up how much protein that was. 4 oz grain, 4 oz veggie, 3 oz meat of which only 1.35 is protein.
I look at it two ways which come up to about the same amount, and I don't know if that is coincedence or not.
Method A) divide 1.35 into 11 oz === 12 % protein
Method B) take the original thought of it being 27% protein and times that by 45%, which is the amount of protein === 12% protein.
[

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] Eeck, which is way less than what I thought she was getting.
How would you guys approach this problem solving?????
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So, to get it around 20%, I would have to add in 6 oz of meat????
4 oz well watered grain + 4 oz veggie + 6 oz meat ( which is 2.70 oz of protein) ==> 19% protein.
WOW,
I need another cup of coffee before I totally confuse myself. [8|]
Seriously, I truly appreciate any help / advise with this. I been thinking about this for a few days now. But, I'm really not sure if I've "got it all" understood.
Thanks very much,
Lynn