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Save Money with Homemade Dog Food
Home cooking helps you feed ’em well for less.

When suppertime rolls around, there’s nothing like a healthy home-cooked meal. This is true not only for the human members of your family, but for your dog as well. Cooking for your canine companion has many benefits, including fewer preservatives and additives, more varied and potentially better ingredients and, of course, more interest for the canine palate.

Homemade meals may even make it possible to feed your dog well for less. A 15- pound bag of high-end dry dog food costs approximately $42, and a 5.5 oz. can of high-end wet food runs approximately $2. Feeding a medium-sized dog two cans of wet mixed with two cups of dry food costs about $5 per day. That doesn’t include the treats, bones and tidbits that inevitably make their way into her tummy! Compare that with four cups of Puppy Stew (recipe follows) at $2.25 per day. Add the cost of a vitamin/ mineral supplement and calcium, and it is still less than the cost of feeding high-end commercial food.* (You can also combine homemade meals with commercially available dry dog food. This will, of course, change the nutritional calculations as well as the price, but your pup will still be pleased.)

As both able hunters and scavengers, dogs ate from a diverse menu when they began accompanying humans. An omnivorous diet of protein, carbohydrate and fat sources suits them; dogs in good health can also handle the fat in their diet more effectively than you can— their bodies use it for energy and then efficiently clear it from the bloodstream.

The caveats? Dogs have different nutrient requirements than people. For example, they need high-quality protein, more calcium and more minerals for their proportional body size. Calcium is particularly critical. In The Complete Holistic Dog Book, co-author Katy Sommers, DVM, notes that “calcium is perhaps the single most important supplement for a successful home-cooked diet. Even if you’re feeding a variety of foods, you’ll need to supply an extra source of calcium.” She recommends giving one 600 mg calcium carbonate tablet (or 1⁄2 teaspoon of the powder form) for each 10 to 15 pounds of body weight daily for most adult dogs. (She also points out that, if you’re mixing homemade and commercial foods, you don’t need to supplement as heavily, as commercial foods contain adequate or possibly even excessive amounts of calcium and phosphorus.) More good advice on this subject can be found in Dr. Pitcairn’s Complete Guide to Natural Health for Dogs and Cats by Richard H. Pitcairn, DVM, PhD, and Susan Hubble Pitcairn.

There are some human foods that dogs should never be given, including macadamia nuts, chocolate, tea, coffee, raisins, grapes, onions or excessive amounts of garlic. And, of course, check with your veterinarian before making big changes to your dog’s diet, particularly if she has any preexisting health conditions. Once you get the green light, make the changes gradually to avoid digestive upsets; introduce new foods slowly, substituting a small proportion of the new food for the old over time. Finally, be careful not to provide too many overall calories (energy), as obesity is just as unhealthy for dogs as it is for humans; your vet can help you determine how much your dog should be eating.

Food safety is also an issue. While dogs have many defenses against bacteria, parasites and other food-borne pathogens, they are not immune to them. Be sure to keep utensils clean, perishables refrigerated and ingredients cooked to appropriate internal temperatures to kill off any unwanted bugs. This is particularly important for puppies, old dogs or those with a health condition that makes them vulnerable.

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The Raw and the Cooked
Dogs can eat some vegetables raw; on that list are chopped parsley; alfalfa sprouts; and finely grated carrots, zucchini and other soft squash (with peel). Others should be cooked, among them, green beans, hard winter squash, broccoli and peas.

Source: Richard H. Pitcairn, DVM, PhD, Dr. Pitcairn’s Complete Guide to Natural Health for Dogs and Cats (3rd ed., rev.)

Recipes
Fifi’s Fishy (or Chicky) Affair
Puppy Stew
Bow Wow Brunch
Fido’s Fricassee
 

This article first appeared in The Bark, Issue 54, May/Jun 2009

Roschelle Heuberger, RD, PhD, is an associate professor of nutrition and director of the Clinical Nutrition graduate program at Central Michigan University.

Illustration by Vivienne Flesher

CommentsPost a Comment
Submitted by Anonymous on March 30, 2011.

I have found that feeding a homemade diet is actually more expensive if you do it right, by that I mean varied and balanced.

Submitted by Trudster on February 27, 2011.

My mother made her own dog food for years. OUr large dogs lived 15-17 years under her care. Many is the time I would arrive for a visit
and see two big kettles with simmering delicious smells coming from them...Many is the time also I mistakenly ate from the dog's kettle-
to which she would joking say "You should have asked first, stupe."
I wish she was here to read your articles...

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