Fresh Food Cooking for Pets Recipes

Fresh Food Cooking for Pets Recipes

Fresh food is healthiest for us and our pets. Why not start today?

In the videos below Amy Feinman shows us how to cook healthy recipes for ourselves and our pets. Make sure to read through nutritional section of Holistic Pet Care 101 Course to better understand how much meat/bone to add to the recipes below. 

Download our recipes so you can start incorporating fresh food into your pets’ diet today. You may use instapot, crockpot or just a regular pot. Good luck and let us know how your furry friends like them!

Close up portrait of dog and cat

VIDEOS

Fresh Food Cooking For Pets

Amy’s vitamin-rich slow cook recipe

It takes 4-6 hours (on high) in a slow cooker or 25 minutes in an “Instant Pot” (a pressure cooker).

Organic ingredients are optimal but not necessary.

  • 2 cups of sweet potatoes
  • 2 cups frozen spinach
  • 2 cups celery
  • 1 cup millet
  • 4 cups salt-free organic vegetable broth

This recipe is vegan for you but is designed to have *raw meat added for your dog or cat. 

Amy’s scrap stew

  1. Collect the scraps you have in your fridge: apple peels, celery, beet peels, kale
  2. add some grain (like millet)
  3. set on manual for 6 minute, grind it when it’s cooked and add it to your favorite meats.

live group cooking & discussion

And here is another live presentation of cooking for our furry friends (lots of great discussions!)

How to Help Balance Your Pet’s Hormones

How to Help Balance Your Pet’s Hormones

Diabetes, Cushing’s, Addison’s, hypo and hyper-thyroidism sound scary.

It helps to know that these names and diagnoses are merely descriptions of the symptoms. They are not problems to be overcome. A diagnosis does not dictate what you do.

You probably do not treat your friend “Susan” based solely on her name.

Like relationships, maintaining and optimizing hormones is a balancing act. They’re both delicate interactions that require constant feedback.

The glands of the endocrine system are sensitive in this way. Hormones produced by them fluctuate throughout the day.

Specific external and internal chemical factors provide constant feedback to glands. These can predispose to dis-eases.

You have 100% control over these factors.

For example, you can help improve hormone dis-eases by:

  • avoiding highly processed carbohydrate-laden foods
  • minimizing environmental exposure to toxins and hormone disruptors like glyphosate
  • working with your pet’s symptoms and not quickly stopping them

What you do every day has a profound impact on the delicate balance of hormones.

Click here to learn more to help your pets!