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Thread: RAW Sausage - Time Saver?

  1. #1

    RAW Sausage - Time Saver?

    Tell me your thoughts here guys. I'm looking to save a little time in my feeding. In the fall, my job dictates, I'm gone to work b/f light and return home at dark. I'm looking to save time in my feeding during that time.

    Right now, I feed:
    1 egg
    yogurt
    gizzards
    liver (either chicken or beef)
    oils 4-5 times a week
    1/4 Chicken

    Why couldn't I put the egg, yogurt, organs and oil all together, mix well, and actually make a sausage with this stuff. Then on days I'm in a hurry, I can throw each dog a 1/4 chicken and a sausage link!

    Shoot me the pros and cons if anyone sees any or if anyone's tried this b/f.

    Thanks - I appreciate the FEEDback!

    NQK

  2. #2
    In the book jack talks about grinding everything bones in all if u have a grinder capable so I really don't see why not.

  3. #3
    That is basically the way I buy Primal and Nature's Variety Instinct.

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by No Quarter Kennel View Post
    Tell me your thoughts here guys. I'm looking to save a little time in my feeding. In the fall, my job dictates, I'm gone to work b/f light and return home at dark. I'm looking to save time in my feeding during that time.
    Right now, I feed:
    1 egg
    yogurt
    gizzards
    liver (either chicken or beef)
    oils 4-5 times a week
    1/4 Chicken
    Why couldn't I put the egg, yogurt, organs and oil all together, mix well, and actually make a sausage with this stuff. Then on days I'm in a hurry, I can throw each dog a 1/4 chicken and a sausage link!
    Shoot me the pros and cons if anyone sees any or if anyone's tried this b/f.
    Thanks - I appreciate the FEEDback!
    NQK
    Ideally, the benefits of raw are optimized if the food is actually raw. This means, strictly-speaking, even food that is frozen-then-thawed loses a certain amount of biological value.

    Realistically, however, you can't keep a refrigerator-full of totally-raw meat for a yard of 20 dogs, and be slinging blood everywhere, because it would spoil and get nasty pretty quick. Therefore, we need to freeze at least the meat aspect of our dogs' diet.

    However, if you're mixing the vegetables, yogurts, etc. together with the meats (and especially if you're freezing it afterward), then (from a strictly pro-raw perspective) you are no longer feeding raw vegetables and yogurt, you're in fact feeding frozen vegetables and yogurt, and frozen yogurt and vegetables are never as nutritious as raw yogurt and vegetables. It is a fact that vegetables are at their most nutritious when fresh, and the vitamin value of them rapidly diminishes once juiced, crushed, or food-processed.

    Therefore, ideally-speaking, I would say grinding and making a sausage of the meats is a great idea, but the eggs/veggies/yogurt/oils are best left raw (actually, eggs are at their most nutritious soft-boiled).

    Still, frozen/thawed veggies/yogurt/oils are a thousand times better than over-processed kibble, and even the Nature's Variety Rew-Frozen Diets are (you guessed it) raw-frozen. It may not be as optimal as 100% raw, but it sure is the next best thing.

    Jack

  5. #5
    Thanks guys, for all the replies. I'll probably give this a go as my wife will have to feed a couple days per week once the fall gets here. I can do this to save time and make things easier for others needing to fill in for me when I can't feed.

    I tell you what, and anyone who is already feeding RAW knows this, the actual process of putting their feed together and getting it to them is a very "in-tuning" process for you and your dogs. It's a really small investment of time that dictates you pay more attention to detail, the dogs themselves and puts you in a position to know much more about your dogs. It sounds funny, but those doing it understand what I'm talking about. I'm only feeding 9 dogs right now and it takes me a total of 8-9 minutes to put all of their food together and get it to them and me back in the house. That's not trying to rush at all.

  6. #6
    Good post, NQK, I think it does exactly that: puts you "in tune" with your dogs.

  7. #7
    R2L
    Guest
    i dont see a problem in making sausages, in fact i feed them myself. meat/bones/organs/vegetables/oils chopped up. just not sure about freezing the eggs and yoghurt. i don't feed yogugurt but i give them 2/3 egs a week.

  8. #8
    Interesting concept…. I don’t think I would want to freeze the yogurt and the egg. The meat being a chicken quarter is fine on its own.

    But I know a raw feeder who makes up a pureed veggie mix and puts it into an ice cube tray. They just pop out a frozen cube of this veggie mix and add it to the raw meat with the egg and yogurt.
    Common sense isn't so common these days.

  9. #9
    It is not that there is a "problem" with freezing, per se, it is just that it kills-off some of the good enzymes/flora/micronutrients.

    This is why, even for human consumption, frozen vegetables are never as good for you as raw vegetables.

    It is also why, in the fish market for example, buying raw fish right at the beach is always considered primo ... while buying frozen/thawed fish at the market is always considered second-rate.

  10. #10
    R2L
    Guest
    first hit of on google of many articles
    http://www.eatingwell.com/nutrition_...p_nutrition_fo

    i often catch myself wanting to feed my dogs healthier them myself, but i dont think freezing makes big difference. if you want to feed perfect raw you need to start your own animal farm and feed those prey animals only what you grow on your other farm

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