Dog Food - Choosing the Best for Your French Bulldog
admin April 16th, 2008
Dog Food - Choosing the Best for Your French Bulldog
I am in the process of researching food for a new Frenchie puppy we are working on getting. MY HEAD IS SWIMMING!! The breeder feeds a raw diet to her dogs. I really dont think that is for us. I do however want a premium food with no fillers and no wheat, corn or soy. I know Frenchies as a breed can have some allergies. I have looked up Orijen, Natures Variety (instinct and praire), EVO (our breeder said her dogs seemed to drink why to much on EVO) and The Honest Kitchen. I am really leaning towards the Orijen. Could you please give me you opinion?
Carol writes -
Yup, dog food can be confusing. Personally, I feed raw, but I don’t think that it is the be all and end all of feeding. I happen to believe there are some really good commercial foods on the market.
The key things I personally look for are –
- Meat comes first. I do NOT want to see sugar beet pulp, or any kind of grain, coming before the meat protein ingredients. In fact, I ideally want to see no grains (corn, wheat, barley, rice, etc) at all. See below for more details.
- I want to see meat solids, and not grains or meals or by products. This means chicken should be chicken and not ‘chicken meal’.
- I want to see a food that’s grain free (grains are cheap filler, and of no particular benefit to the dog. Also, more dogs are allergic to grains than they are to meat proteins.). An acceptable carb source substitute for grain is potato, sweet potato or squash.
- I also want to see human grade, and preferably organic, ingredients.
- I want to try to make sure that the meats and other ingredients are sourced domestically, and not from China
- Finally, I think baking rather than extruding is a better process for the manufacture of kibble. There are numerous reasons why baking is preferable, most importantly the preservation of valuable nutrients. As well, most extruded foods are sprayed with additional fat after extrusion - hence the greasy look inside most bags of dog food, and the slightly rancid smell. This is done to increase ‘palatability’, since extruded food otherwise has the smell and mouth ‘feel’ of small hunks of straw.
Of the foods you mentioned, I personally like Orijen, and Honest Kitchen. Honest Kitchen is a nice ‘raw’ food for people who prefer not to go through the mess and fuss of home prepared raw. I’ve also heard really good things about Nature’s Variety. At this stage, with the research you’ve already done, I think its mostly a case of choosing the food that suits your lifestyle, and your dog’s taste buds, the best.
Good luck,
Carol










