Use a cup of low fat cheese, grated (such as mozzarella) and miix with 1 1/2 cup of quick cooking oats..Put in mircrowave until cheese is soft..mix in your supplement and make into balls or shapes..while it is still warm..You can kneed this, to make certain that supplement is well mixed..It will harden when cool....
2006-10-31 06:36:32
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answer #1
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answered by Chetco 7
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I use different varieties of food. Peanut butter, bread, make small cooked meatballs or patties, cool and save in containers or plastic baggies for later. Most dogs/puppies will eat just about anything if they think it's human food especially. You can also try soft dog food, not canned, but stuff like the pouches that you can roll into balls with vitamins inside. They also have a very good supplement, Nuetral Cal, that comes in a paste that dogs love. It also has a generic brand which is cheaper. It's very good and I use it for all my puppies.
2006-10-31 06:37:03
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answer #2
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answered by Betty Boop 5
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Doggie Liver Dip
1 lb. beef liver
2 cups beef bouillon
1 Tbsp. minced onion
1 16-oz. container plain yogurt
Cut liver into chunks. Cover with bouillon and simmer until completely cooked; drain. Put liver and remaining ingredients in food processor. Blend until smooth. If necessary, add reserved bouillon or water to achieve desired consistency. Refrigerate immediately. Use within 3-4 days.
Serve with raw carrots, celery, or pieces of dog biscuits. Alternately, use to stuff cooked marrow bones.
Cupcakes (this one you have to cook but its good)
2 lb. meat (chicken, turkey or beef) 3 c. oatmeal
2 c. brown rice 4 eggs
1 c. sunflower oil 1 c. lentils
2 c. cornmeal 2 c. veggies (kale, carrots, parsley)
3 garlic cloves 1/2 c. water, or sufficient to mix
Cook rice and lentils together. In a food processor, mulch up vegetables, garlic, eggs, meat. Mix all ingredients together. Spoon into lightly oiled oversized cupcake pans. Bake at 350 degrees for about 40 minutes. Freeze what you are not going to use in 5 days. This makes about 4 dozen larger-size cupcakes.
Highly digestible, leaving very little stool volume and no loose stools. Originally from Peter and Holly Colcord, adapted and posted by Donna Stekli. (Bonnie Ott uses a large glass baking dish; mixes rest except liver and oatmeal while rice is cooking; then purees liver, cooks oatmeal in microwave, dumps in rice, bakes, cools, cut into squares, freeze a weeks worth per freezer bag. Joanie Fraser uses meatloaf pans: double the recipe to make about 6-7 pans full, 5"w x 9"l x 3" h; keep two out (for 4 Kees) and freeze the rest; sometimes add tuna instead of all meat; spinach instead of kale; topped with spaghetti sauce; add small amount of liver; use 7grain cereal instead of just oatmeal; cornmeal doesn't seem to cause problems but prefers to use white corn meal and "new process" since lower in fat and less spoilage; bread crumbs, cracker crumbs, ground cereals instead of or with cornmeal; liquids: soup, veggie juice, apple juice; add chopped apple; NO ONION; mixture should have the basics and feel like meatloaf, baked at 350 degrees for 40 minutes, checking every 5-10 minutes after first 30; oil or spray pans prior to filling.)
2006-10-31 06:34:07
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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We give the dogs pup-cicles: chicken or beef broth with a little boiled chicken or boiled hamburger mixed in and frozen in an ice cube tray.
We also give the dogs raw meatballs (freeze them to kill the bacteria, and then serve at room temperature.) with rice mixed in.
2006-10-31 06:30:09
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answer #4
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answered by Fetch 11 Humane Society 5
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Peanut butter. They love it and its funny to watch them eat it. Loaded with protein too. I fix oatmeal and put peanut butter in it for them.
2006-10-31 06:26:18
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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put it in some peanut butter, my dog loves it and its good protein.
2006-10-31 06:54:19
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answer #6
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answered by EllisFan 5
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roll them in egg mixture, dredge them in flour, then fry
2006-10-31 06:26:07
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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