- Location
- Argyll & Bute, Scotland
You're welcome! xThis looks great, lots of nice stuff for Maisy to try on here, I will definitely try them - although far too much tripe in my opinion!
Thank you Helen.
You're welcome! xThis looks great, lots of nice stuff for Maisy to try on here, I will definitely try them - although far too much tripe in my opinion!
Thank you Helen.
Sounds like you’re getting to try out quite a variety—well, Maisy is!! Sorry about about the tripe vomit!!!! Eew!Update ......
I asked our local butcher for some pet grade meat and he has bags of chicken breasts he keeps that are not to be sold to humans, I get a 5 kilo bag, defrost it (unfortunately it is all frozen in one lump), keep 24hrs worth of feeds raw, cook the rest and freeze it. That's going ok.
Unfortunately they do not do much else like that.
Also I got an Ox heart - your dog will be back for more, he said. Ha, ha, Maisy won't touch it. I put it down several times and she sniffs it and won't go near it (our old dog used to love it). The same with chicken liver from Natures Menu so I cooked them both and tried that, same thing, not interested. I don't think she's a real dog.
She will also not touch the tracheas frozen from Natures Menu, but she will still eat the dried one.
My neighbours love me now, their dogs are dining out on Maisy's cast offs.
Tripe - my god what an awful smell! Maisy of course loves that.
I have a bag of Natures Menu tripe pieces, defrost a serving at a time - out in the garage - and I make her eat it outside.
Yesterday, she sicked up half her tripe meal on my mother-in-laws carpet (my fault, I think she had too much) and it smells just as bad second time round I can tell you.
She does like a marrow bone as a treat but I watch her like a hawk as I am nervous of her trying to bite too hard and breaking a tooth.
She is happy tearing off the outside bits and licking out the marrow and when she starts to bite down I stop her, she then goes back to licking so she is doing well. I would not leave her alone with it though.
I am gradually working through the types of offal, my butcher does not seem to have much of anything like that, Tescos is probably my next call. And I am still giving kibble as one meal in the morning at work, I don't really want animal body parts laying around in my shop.
So some success so far.
I frequently defrost and refreeze. Not killed me yet. Very scientific, I’m sure you’ll agree![]()
Sounds like you’re getting to try out quite a variety—well, Maisy is!! Sorry about about the tripe vomit!!!! Eew!
Curious to know why the chicken breasts are not for human consumption?
Snowie’s food comes in 1kg frozen bags. I defrost and then repackage into meal sized portions and freeze again. I know many people defrost and freeze again. I am only using human-grade meat tho.
I would avoid that cheap chicken for two reasons:The chicken for pets is from packaging that wasn't sealed properly with enough gas, or something like that, the shrinkwrapping has not been done properly so the butcher gets a refund from the supplier and sells the meat for pets.
I would avoid that cheap chicken for two reasons:
The butcher has already received a refund from the supplier for the poorly-packed chicken. The refund agreement probably includes some small print that the faulty product must be disposed of and not sold.
That's a pretty good approach, works 99,9% of the timeI get what you are saying @Snowy
I do however take the approach of "If it looks okay, smells okay, (and tastes okay), then its okay to eat" when it comes to food generally.
Fully agree, and in addition you have to suffer that insurance company-driven, health and safety, risk assessment paranoia that we just don't see here. I remember visiting a trade show in the UK a couple of years ago, and one of the guys was serving cups of instant coffee granules with hot water from a boiler. Suddenly a guy with a clipboard arrived, threatening to close the stand down because the "server" didn't have a food hygiene certificate.There are lots of rules in this world which are there for Health and Safety purposes which stretch real life a bit.
Additional info: Cook boneless chicken to 80°C and bone-in to 85°C. Measure in the thickest part of the meat. If you don't own a digital thermometer, get one from Aliexpress or ebay for about 7€ delivered. Every kitchen should have one.If you’re worried about the chicken breasts then cooking them will eliminate any problem. With boneless meat there’s no advantage to feeding it raw anyway (as no bones you need to keep raw) and cooking it properly will kill off any bacteria.
I'm pretty envious that you have a "real butcher"I can see your reasoning @Snowy but don't worry he is not a shifty butcher
Me too. We've made a big effort over the last 5 years, and have only needed to throw away a couple of carrots that went black.I hate seeing meat go to waste -
I add a bit of kefir, which has a lot of bacteria for fermenting the milk. But apparently local bacteria gets into the milk and adds to the fermentation process. Yup, yoghurt is exactly the same. Well, proper yoghurt. What is often sold in the supermarket is thickened milk, almost like a pudding, not really fermented properly. Properly fermented yoghurt has very low lactose, which makes it very low carb, unlike supermarket yoghurt.Wow, so you just stick a bottle of milk in the pantry? I guess that’s what yoghurt is, kinda...