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Let's Talk Dog Food - 'Dog
Food 101' - Part 3
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In Part 2 of my 'Dog Food 101,' I discussed some meat/protein
sources, now I'd like to go over some information on
carbohydrates.
The first thing I would like to say is that dogs, being
carnivores, do not require grains and cereals in their diets.
Secondly, they are not well processed by their bodies which
means nutritionally, they are of little value. If you recall,
in Part 1, I said that dogs "have short digestive tracts and
their bodies lack certain enzymes which make it difficult, if
not impossible for their bodies to process grains and
vegetables unless they are ‘predigested’ by processing;
cooking, mincing, grinding, breakdown by enzymes, or
fermentation through bacteria."
Keeping this in mind, let's take a look at some of the
carbs; cereals and grains, that are in our pet's food.
One of the most prevalent is corn in a variety of forms.
Most are 'by-products' left over after processing what can be
used for human consumption and are usually to add bulk or fiber
and are seldom of much if any nutritional value. They are
basically just cheap fillers. Another thing to keep in mind is
that corn is one of the highest reported food allergens in
dogs.
Corn/Ground Corn – AAFCO -- Ground
Corn is the entire corn kernel, ground or chopped.
Corn Bran – AAFCO – The outer coating of the corn
kernel, with little or none of the starchy part of the
germ.
Corn Cellulose – AAFCO -- A product obtained from
the cell walls of corn.
Corn Germ Meal – AAFCO -- Ground corn germ which
consists of corn germ with other parts of the corn kernel from
which part of the oil has been removed and is obtained from
either a wet or dry milling manufacturing process of corn meal,
corn grits, hominy feed, or other corn products.
Corn Gluten/Meal – AAFCO -- The dried residue from
corn after the removal of the larger part of the starch and
germ, and the separation of the bran by the process employed in
the wet milling manufacture of corn starch or syrup, or by
enzymatic treatment of the endosperm.
The corn germ meal and corn gluten meal both do actually
contain protein but are mainly used as binders and cheap
protein boosters in low quality food.
Next, you see a lot of 'rice' products in ingredients lists.
Until I did some research I thought this was 'good stuff,' just
like the manufacturers want you to think.
Brewers Rice – AAFCO -- The dried extracted
residue of rice resulting from the manufacture of wort (liquid
portion of malted grain) or beer and may contain pulverized
dried spent hops in an amount not to exceed 3 percent. The
small milled fragments of rice kernels that have been separated
from the larger kernels of milled rice.
This is just another left over. It's the bits and pieces
that are left over after whole grain and brown rice is
processed for human consumption and actually is nutritionally
depleted.
Rice Hulls – AAFCO – The outer covering of
rice.
Another by-product used as a cheap fiber and filler.
Rice Flour – AAFCO -- Rice Flour consists
principally of the soft, finely ground and bolted meal obtained
from milling rice (containing essentially the starch and gluten
of the endosperm) together with fine particles of rice bran and
the offal from the 'tail of the mill.'
A highly pre-processed rice product that through processing
has most if not all nutritional properties leeched from it.
Are you getting the idea? Left-overs, by-products, cheap
fibers, fillers and protein boosters, of little to no
nutritional value.
When you look at the above, would you expect anything of
higher quality in the wheat, oat, soy and other miscellaneous
cereals and grains? You can also be sure that even when you
find 'whole' products listed such as brown rice, whole grain
rice or potato, they are what is leftover after the products
are processed and what can be used for human consumption is
removed.
And here's a side note on soy products, soybeans have been
reported to be the number one food allergen for dogs. Soy is
virtually unusable by an animal's body because they lack the
essential amino acid to digest soy products. Soy has also been
linked to bloat and gas in many dogs.
So there's a bit on the carbs; cereals and grains, that
manufacturers put in your pet's food. Not only does your dog
not really need them, most are highly indigestible and of such
poor quality that there is little, if any nutritional value to
even be derived from them. They can mostly be classified as
cheap fibers, fillers and protein boosters.
Next time we'll go into some of the chemicals that dog food
is just chock full of. It will be yet another eye-opening
exposure to the world of 'commercial' dog food.
© Deanna Raeke
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