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Raw Food Recipes for Cats?

Dr. Jean Hofve

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Yeah I think you still have to add some calcium, but coming up with real numbers is impossible. I am not a nutritionist, I don't have the $5000 computer program so can't really analyze recipes with any accuracy (assuming the standards are valid, which is debatable), but I trust the folks at feline-nutrition.org, and of course Dr. Pierson at cat-info.org has a great recipe.
 

Dr. Christina

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Great details Dr. Jean.
A bit of perspective. People rarely (unless ill) go to such detail to balance their diet. In the wild - they get what they can.

Take a deep breath and relax. Even for the hyperthyroid cat, feeding a variety (fish, turkey, beef, dairy, eggs, etc) and using some supplements that make sense to you (and changing them up every few batches) will be so much more nutritious than canned food that you really do not need to worry.

I would love you to occasionally feed them some pieces they can "sink their teeth into" to keep their teeth pearly white. Chicken necks or backs, or pieces of beef heart just big enough that they have to wrestle with it.

Dr. Christina
 

BashaC

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Jan 10, 2023
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39
Great details Dr. Jean.
A bit of perspective. People rarely (unless ill) go to such detail to balance their diet. In the wild - they get what they can.

Take a deep breath and relax. Even for the hyperthyroid cat, feeding a variety (fish, turkey, beef, dairy, eggs, etc) and using some supplements that make sense to you (and changing them up every few batches) will be so much more nutritious than canned food that you really do not need to worry.

I would love you to occasionally feed them some pieces they can "sink their teeth into" to keep their teeth pearly white. Chicken necks or backs, or pieces of beef heart just big enough that they have to wrestle with it.

Dr. Christina
Thank you @Dr. Christina, for the encouragement that what I'm doing is at least better than canned food. I have been very worried. I'm so afraid I'm going to do something 'wrong'.

I do also want to understand what and why I'm putting specific ingredients in a recipe. There's so much conflicting information in my search for the best recipe, especially with the hyperthyroid diagnosis, I've felt very unsure of what to do.

I cut up the breast meat into chunks and mix it in their food. They each get at least a couple of chunks of meat to chew per meal. I can look into sourcing beef heart. Thank you for that suggestion.

but I trust the folks at feline-nutrition.org, and of course Dr. Pierson at cat-info.org has a great recipe.
Thank you, @Dr. Jean Hofve, for the endorsement of these two recipes. With the Dr. Pierson recipe, it calls for kelp, but if I'm remembering correctly, it was mentioned earlier in this thread to not feed seaweed to a cat with a hyperthyroidism diagnosis (I had been making Dr. Pierson's recipe using SeaMeal when I first started making food).

Even though the recipe is good, would it be okay to feed it to Charlie with the seaweed in it?
 
Last edited:

Dr. Jean Hofve

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If memory serves (which is never a sure thing!), there is a kind of seaweed with a lot less iodine. I'll try to find the reference over the weekend, the last time I looked into this was ages ago. Meantime it would be okay to discontinue the seaweed for a week or so without causing any deficiencies. I'll also see if I can get hold of Dr. Pierson and ask her directly. Since you're not adding it to commercial pet food (which is already too high in iodine) it's probably safe, but let me check it out.
 

Dr. Christina

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And just to reiterate - nobody knows what cats need to eat!
Relax.
Keeping learning but only from interest not from fear.
do get the healthy cat journal so you can see changes with different foods.

And of course, be sure you are working with a homeopath or TCVM vet for the thyroid.

Dr. Christina
 

BashaC

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If memory serves (which is never a sure thing!), there is a kind of seaweed with a lot less iodine. I'll try to find the reference over the weekend, the last time I looked into this was ages ago. Meantime it would be okay to discontinue the seaweed for a week or so without causing any deficiencies. I'll also see if I can get hold of Dr. Pierson and ask her directly. Since you're not adding it to commercial pet food (which is already too high in iodine) it's probably safe, but let me check it out.
Thank you for looking into the seaweed thing further 💛
 

BashaC

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Jan 10, 2023
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39
And just to reiterate - nobody knows what cats need to eat!
Relax.
Keeping learning but only from interest not from fear.
do get the healthy cat journal so you can see changes with different foods.

And of course, be sure you are working with a homeopath or TCVM vet for the thyroid.

Dr. Christina

Thank you for the continued encouragement to let go of leading my research from the place of fear.
I'm working with a homeopath for the thyroid, as well as had a consult with Dr. Jeff.

I am very grateful for this forum, the doctors sharing their experience and knowledge, and other members sharing their experience. I'm learning a lot.
 

Dr. Jean Hofve

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Aug 19, 2020
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Nori and dulse have the least iodine. I've used dulse and none of my cats ever had a problem with thyroid. Nori has a little bit better nutrient profile than dulse, but either would be a decent source of trace minerals..
 

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