Tag: dog biscuit recipe

  • Oven Baked Sweet Potato Dog Treats Recipe – GF Video

    Oven Baked Sweet Potato Dog Treats Recipe – GF Video

    This Oven Baked Sweet Potato Dog Treats Recipe is wicked simple. And probably the easiest dog biscuit recipe you are going to find. Here’s my video on how to make them:

    How to make this sweet potato dog treats recipe:

    Making these treats is the polar opposite of complicated rocket science. But it took a while to figure out how to do this right.

    The sweet potato dog treats you buy in the store are, besides being expensive, not falling apart and crumbling in your hands. I tried to make these several times and mine never would stay intact.

    But I persevered as I didn’t want to pay the high prices these dog treats get in the stores. I don’t blame the makers of these treats for making money, its how we all pay the bills. I imagine the packaging also makes these treats expensive, I have seen them in stores in hard plastic containers or those foil-plastic bags. Not cheap.

    Easy enough to start out here. Hopefully you have or can borrow a mandolin. You can pick on up here: http://amzn.to/2hDGt85 (affiliate link)  If not, cut the sweet potatoes into 1/4″ slices, as uniform as possible with a sharp knife.

    Sweet potato dog treats recipe

    BE VERY CAREFUL when using a mandolin. They can cut your fingers. Most have a vegetable holder-guard,  or you can get one of those chain-mail gloves. And put a towel under the mandolin when cutting the sweet potatoes.

    The secret I found in a another version of this recipe that uses a food dehydrator is this.

    Spray the sweet potato slices with a very light coating of vegetable oil.

    Sweet potato dog treats recipe

    This allow the dog treats to stay slightly pliable, and they wont crack when being stored.

    In our previous sweet potato dog treat recipe video, we used an electric dehydrator to dry the snacks, but this time I wanted to see how the oven would work. The lowest oven temp on my oven is 170F, so I set it to that and turned it on. The dog treats dried in about 3  hours.

    Sweet potato dog treats recipe

    And how cool is that?

    Sweet potato dog treats recipe

    Sweet Potato Dog Treats Recipe : GF Video

  • Whole Wheat Tuna Dog Treats Recipe – Adorrable Dor

    Whole Wheat Tuna Dog Treats Recipe – Adorrable Dor

    Wholewheat Tuna Dog Treats -Adorrable Dor

    Hey Allemaal! -which means everyone in Dutch-
    Finally we are getting some decent spring weather, and boy do we need it. I think we are about 3 to 4 weeks behind normal spring growth and my garden is poised to explode with greens and all kinds of flowers. Now comes the really difficult part of teaching Roshi to stay on the paths and grass and out of the vegetable and flower beds. As she is a darling Labrador in full puberty this is a hit and miss experience at the moment. But I already decided to keep the veggies limited to lettuces and legumes this year so if she damages anything in youthful folly it can be replaced easily.
    A note about the Sweet Potato dogtreats I made early March, because there is a high moisture content they must be either used within 10 days or so or be kept in the refrigerator. The last couple of treats I made spoiled I’m sorry to say.
    Wholewheat-Tuna-Dog-Treats-Recipe-2

    These Tuna Treats are also quite high in moisture but should keep 2 weeks without problems, that is if you can keep your dogs from stealing them. That’s what happed to Ellie -Roshi’s breeder- when I made her these treats for her 5 grown Labs. Within half an hour Roshi’s mom Esmer stole the container full of treats from the kitchen counter and all Labs pounced and devoured the lot, destroying the plastic tub in the process. The garlic in this recipe is optional but most dogs seem to have no problems with it and garlic helps with flea and tick control.
    The picture shows Rosh enjoying her new bowl rack –is that what you call this contraption in English- so she does not stretch her neck and spine too much when eating. Credit goes to my husband, he cleverly fashioned it from an Ikea IVAR bookcase sidepanel.

    Wholewheat-Tuna-Dog-Treats-Recipe-3

    Wholewheat Tuna Dog Treats
    If you have tuna in water no problem, substitute the 2 tablespoons of water for olive or vegetable oil.
    1 small can of tuna in oil
    2 tablespoons of water
    300 grams or 10.5 ounces of whole wheat flour
    2 eggs
    4 cloves of chopped garlic

    This recipe uses a kitchen blender but you can easily mix and knead this dough by hand, just chop the garlic very finely.
    Preheat your oven at 200 C or 395 F.

    Blend the tuna, water and garlic in the machine, add flour and eggs. Whizz again until it forms a firm but slightly sticky dough.
    Remove from the blender and add a little flour if it is too sticky to roll out comfortably.
    Using a rolling pin, glass or just your hands, roll or push the dough to a thickness of about 1 cm or 1/3 inch. It will puff a bit in the oven, so will make a substantial treat.
    Distribute the treats evenly on a baking sheet lined with greaseproof paper. Bake for about 30 minutes until nicely golden brown. You can leave them in the cooling oven for an hour or so, they will crisp up even more.
    I use Roshi’s Labrador cookie cutter but you can use any shape that takes your fancy, this is a very well behaved dough.
    Of course using a glass or the empty tuna can, even cutting into strips will work just as well.
    This recipe is adapted from the Hondenkoekjes met Tonijn recipe from the www.hondenkoekjes.nl site.