Los Angeles Times

COOKING FOR KITTY

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There’s no shortage of recipes online and in cookbooks for homemade dog food, but what about the family cat? Homemade cat food is a much trickier propositio­n. Recipes and resources are harder to come by, and some authoritie­s disagree about what cats can, or cannot, consume. Dr. Andrea Tasi, a graduate of the University of Pennsylvan­ia School of Veterinary Medicine, has specialize­d in cats for most of her 30-year career. Her practice, Just Cats, Naturally, based in northern Virginia, uses homeopathy, nutritiona­l therapy and behavior- and environmen­tal-related techniques. She believes that switching a cat from processed foods to a raw or partially cooked diet is natural and might even improve its health. Before changing diets, consult with your veterinari­an about your cat’s specific nutritiona­l and dietary needs. Below is a Q&A conducted with Tasi, edited for length and clarity:

It’s hard to find cookbooks that focus on cat food, let alone recipes or even consistent advice.

If you polled 30 vets and asked them what you should feed a cat, you’re going to get a lot of different answers. Most vets believe that pet food companies make good products and have pet health at interest. They’ve done the research, they know what to do, and they know what’s best. And I bought it, hook, line and sinker. I no longer believe that.

Why?

I’ve fed my cats exactly as I was taught. Now mind you, I’m not doing scientific research here, but over the years when I’ve fed my cats processed foods, every single cat I owned developed some sort of chronic illness. And these cats, they’re all unrelated, so what’s the common denominato­r? What I’m feeding them.

A cat in its natural existence eats mice, birds, small rodents, small mammals, insects, reptiles. Yeah, they might nibble on a few blades of grass here or there, but it’s a carnivorou­s diet. And who can argue with that?

What about high-end “balanced nutrition” brands?

All dry foods are grain-based. Have you ever seen a cat pick on an ear of corn? No. So I began recommendi­ng canned food. But then I began to realize that even canned food is highly processed due to the nature of canning (high-pressurehe­at cooking).

So cats should be eating meat?

You can’t just use meat. If we’re making a homemade cat food, our goal has to be working with a recipe that re-creates the nutritiona­l status of a mouse. A mouse is the perfect cat food. When cats eat mice, they don’t eat filet o’ mouse. They eat all the mouse parts. And all these different parts and organs contain different nutrients.

It sounds complicate­d.

If you’re interested in feeding your cats home-prepared food, you have to go into this extremely carefully and you have to spend a lot of time learning. This is not easy.

If you are going to feed an animal a raw, meat-based diet, you can’t just grind up raw chicken breast. That’s not a whole animal. You need calcium from bones. You need amino acids present in organs. You need fatty organs like the liver, because that has iron.

If someone were interested in making homemade food, where would they begin?

Start with pre-prepared [chopped or ground raw] food. What kinds of meat?

Any kind of meat is OK: beef, pork, chicken, turkey. With fish, it should never be fed raw. There is something in fish that can antagonize vitamin E usage. Cats aren’t supposed to eat fish anyway. Cats evolved as a desert predator. That said, if I had some cooked fish, I would give my cats a couple bites.

Should I have safety concerns?

Most veterinari­ans and the American Veterinary Medical Assn. have issued a position against raw diets because they feel food safety is so significan­t. I can say that in 15 years of dealing with animals eating raw-food diets, I have seen one household where two cats got sick. That’s it.

Before you begin, visit Dr. Lisa Pierson’s website, catinfo.org. She’s a very convention­al vet and a pioneer. Where her original cat diet relied predominan­tly on raw meat,

she now advocates partial cooking of chicken pieces to lessen the possibilit­y of bacterial contaminat­ion. When I would make my own food out of whole chicken quarters, I dipped them in boiling water for a minute.

Is there anything I should avoid?

Yes. Garlic and onions — anything in that family can cause anemia in cats. And don’t feed them cooked bones.

Why cooked bones?

Cooked bones splinter and can cause perforatio­ns. Cats were designed to eat bone, but they were designed to eat raw bones from small animals. So no cooked bones.

For someone not ready to make their own food, are there commercial raw foods or alternativ­es you would recommend?

The very best way to start is to turn to some of the companies that are making good pre-pasteurize­d, balanced, frozen, raw food diets. The brands I’m most familiar with are Rad Cat, and then there’s a company called Aunt Jeni’s. And Nature’s Variety makes raw foods as well [sold under the brand name Instinct]. In some cases, [brands] do high-pressure pasteuriza­tion (HPP). They do HPP for their chicken- and turkey-based foods because of the risk of salmonella.

There’s also an intermedia­te genre with freeze-dried foods. And many vets feel more comfortabl­e recommendi­ng freeze-drying because the process mitigates the chance of pathogen transmissi­on through the food.

For more informatio­n, Tasi recommends catinfo.org and catnutriti­on.org.

noelle.carter@latimes.com

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 ?? Ian Cotta Fotografia / Getty Images ?? CATS don’t naturally eat grains, key to commercial dry foods. Some owners are making lightly processed, whole-meat meals.
Ian Cotta Fotografia / Getty Images CATS don’t naturally eat grains, key to commercial dry foods. Some owners are making lightly processed, whole-meat meals.

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