Raw Dog Food: Homemade VS Store-Bought

The original article can be found here:https://www.dogsnaturallymagazine.com/raw-dog-food-homemade-vs-store-bought/

If you’ve looked into natural dog food, you’ve heard about all the benefits of raw feeding. Raw food advocates everywhere agree that uncooked, meat-based diets are far more beneficial to dogs than kibble for a number of reasons. Yet even once you’ve joined the raw food club, there’s one remaining debate to consider …

Is it better to make your own raw food or to buy it pre-made from a pet store or online?
Homemade Raw Food

Making your own raw dog food has the advantage of giving you complete control over what your dog eats. This makes homemade a great option for dogs with food sensitivities or health concerns. It’s also more cost effective to make your own than to buy pre-made raw food from a store.
More Than Meat

Creating your own doggy menu involves a lot more than simply serving chicken breast or ground beef every meal. Muscle meat on its own does not contain all of the nutrients that your dog needs for sustained health.

A special meal of steak or chicken breast once in a while is fine (your dog will agree!), but for regular feeding you’ll need to incorporate bones, organ meat, and, if you want, fruits and veggies, plus an essential fatty acid to prevent deficiencies.
Recipe for Success

It’s a good idea to follow a formula … at least until you get the hang of it … to make sure you’re not overlooking anything.

Homeopath Julie Anne Lee recommends the following formula to keep your homemade raw meals simple:

50% muscle meat
10% organ meat
15% uncooked bone
20% vegetables
5% fruit
An essential fatty acid – she recommends Atlantic-sourced phytoplankton (a better choice than fish oil, which is very unstable and turns rancid fast) and rotating between coconut oil and hemp oil
Recreational bones 2 to 3 times per week – These are the “fun” parts. Feet, necks, femurs or knuckles are good choices

You don’t need to feed a perfectly balanced diet at every meal … balance over time is what’s important.

Variety and Quality

It’s important to change up the type of meat and produce you’re using in order to give your dog the widest range of nutrients and health benefits. Choose high quality, ethically sourced, organic, non-GMO ingredients whenever possible.
Special Needs

If your dog has health issues, you can easily customize this formula to suit your dog’s needs. For example, add dried seaweed to support cell metabolism and thyroid function. Bone broth will help heal a damaged gut and support joints and connective tissue. This formula can be adjusted to meet the needs of geriatric dogs who might need a lower protein level, as well.

Making your own raw dog food also gives you the option to prepare meals fresh as you go along, or you can make large batches and freeze them for future use. Either way gives you and your dog the satisfaction of a healthy homemade meal.

If you’re worried about a balanced diet, or don’t like the idea of handling raw meat and organs on a regular basis … or if the homemade process seems too time consuming, pre-made raw food from the freezer section of your pet store might be a better option. These have the correct ratios of meat, organ, bone and produce already mixed and formed into easy-to-handle patties or nuggets. All you need to do to prepare these meals is thaw and serve!
Food Sensitivities

You’ll have to do some reading if your dog has food sensitivities, but most raw food companies are good about telling you exactly what’s in the bag. A quick check of the ingredient list will let you know if your dog can eat it or not. With their short ingredient lists and a wide variety of proteins (even novel proteins like rabbit, venison, and pheasant), store-bought raw can accommodate most diet restrictions.
Avoid Synthetic Ingredients

While you’re reading ingredients, check to see if the food contains synthetic vitamins and minerals. These will be toward the bottom half of the ingredient list and contain words like proteinate, sulfate, and hydrochloride. Synthetic vitamins are undesirable because they are chemically-based and are not absorbed and used in the body as efficiently as the naturally-occurring vitamins in plant ingredients.

So Which Do I Choose?

The good news is that either option is decidedly more beneficial to your dog than feeding kibble.

All things considered, there doesn’t seem to be a clear winner in the homemade vs store-bought debate. Both options have their strengths and weaknesses, so your lifestyle and comfort level will probably be the deciding factor.

If you really can’t decide, you can feed a store-bought meal for half of the week to save time and to make sure your dog is getting all her nutrients. The rest of the week feed homemade food to defray the cost. Even if you can’t justify feeding an all-raw diet all the time, your dog will benefit from just a few raw meals per week, whether homemade or store-bought.

The only way to feed raw food wrong is to not feed raw food at all!