Saturday, April 2, 2016

Vegetarian Recipes, Part 2

In my last blog, I shared several vegetarian recipes I've enjoyed.

There are also a lot on my "to try" list. Here are those links!

I continually add to this list on Pinterest, so check out my recipe board there for more great recipes.

Thursday, March 31, 2016

Vegetarian Recipes

Last September, I became a vegetarian. Since then, I've tried a lot of new recipes and found a lot of ways to make delicious meat-free dishes. There are so many more I want to try, but I wanted to post my favorites so far:

I'll start with just links:

And here are some of my favorite dishes:

Zoodles
These are so fun and easy to make! You need a vegetable spiralizer - many are expensive, but this one is only 8 bucks and it's dishwasher safe for easy clean-up! 
  1. I find it easier to leave the stem end on so you have kind of a handle when you're spiralizing. I do about 2 zucchinis for one serving.
  2. Then saute the spiralized pieces in olive oil and a little water. Most instructions I saw online say 3-5 minutes, but I do 10-12 on medium heat so the zoodles are more a cooked spaghetti texture. I like to season with a little garlic powder and onion powder, and maybe a little pepper. 
  3. Then I serve with tomato sauce - especially with sauteed bell peppers in it! Yum! You can even just saute the bell peppers right in there with the zoodles. 
  4. These go great with the eggplant meatballs above! A meat-free, veggie-rich way to have spaghetti and meatballs!
Calzones
  1. Mix together: 1 container ricotta cheese, roughly a half cup of mozzarella, 1 egg, a little bit of parmesan, 7-8 cups of spinach (chopped finely), diced tomatoes, chopped zucchini, garlic powder.
  2. Then I wrap it in pizza dough (I just buy the pillsbury can but you could make some if you want it less processed - for the can I cut the dough into quarters) to make a calzone. Fill it with the above mixture, then fold it closed.
  3. Sprinkle parmesan and basil on top.
  4. Bake at 325 for about 18-20 min. 
  5. The mixture makes about 8 calzones but it freezes well if you don't use it all. I like to dip it in tomato sauce also.
Very Veggie Lasagna
  1. Layer lasagna using Barilla no-boil noodles, and following the directions on the box.
  2. Replace the meat layer with finely chopped combo of veggies: spinach, bell peppers, carrots, summer squash, zucchini.
Roasted Vegetables

  1. Cut up carrots, potatoes, and sweet potatoes into small cubes, mix with a generous amount of olive oil and onion powder. 
  2. Season with pepper, salt, garlic, basil. 
  3. Bake at 425 for 30 min. 
  4. After 30 min add cut up zucchini and yellow squash, seasoned the same way as the other veggies. Mix in with the other stuff.
  5. Cook for 10 min. 
  6. After 10 min add in tomatoes, bell peppers, and beans - I use Great Northern Beans, also all seasoned with the oil/onion/etc. Mix that into the other stuff and cook for another 20 min. 
  7. Also good served with a little brown rice mixed in (cooked separately and seasoned to your liking) for some whole grains.

Zucchini Casserole 
My sister gave me this one. She uses chopped onions rather than onion powder, but I prefer powder. She also had a cheese layer in the middle.
  1. Put 3 cups prepared brown rice in casserole dish.
  2. Mix 28 oz canned diced or crushed tomatoes with basil, oregano (fresh if poss), pepper, 3 T olive oil, 1 T sugar, 2 cloves garlic
  3. Spoon 1/3 of this onto the grain.
  4. Layer slice 3 medium zucchini, place half on there.
  5. Add onion powder.
  6. Add another layer of tomato stuff.
  7. Add another layer of zucchini and onion powder.
  8. Slice up 1 red bell pepper and put those on
  9. Add remaining tomato stuff.
  10. Bake at 375 for 1 - 1.5 hrs.
In my next blog I'll post links to recipes that I haven't yet tried...but want to!

Sunday, March 20, 2016

Healthy Eating

If you'd told me a year ago that I'd be writing a blog about what I'd learned about eating healthy, I wouldn't have believed you.

But now it's been almost a year, and I consistently get at least 2 fruits and 3 vegetables a day, more often 3 fruits and 4 vegetables. (Plus 3 servings of whole grains!) I've tried a ton of new things, and I wanted to blog about what I've discovered in the past year.

1) I Needed the Right Motivation
I was never opposed to healthy eating. I just didn't think I could do it. Most of the healthy things I had tried, I didn't like.

But as those who know me already know, I'm very driven by competition. So when my work did the Feel Like a Million challenge, in which you got points for various healthy things each day, I had to win it. And you could get points for up to 4 vegetables and 3 fruits a day. I wasn't going to leave any points on the table. So I had to find a way to eat healthy, without eating things I didn't like.

I ended up being first place in my company of 240 people. Me. The healthiest person in the company. Unbelievable!

2) I Needed to Address Misconceptions
When I started this challenge, I actually thought whole grains would be the hardest part. I hate whole wheat. I think whole wheat bread and pasta tastes like vomit. And it didn't occur to me that whole grain was more than just wheat. Until my sister said, "Don't you like Cheerios?"

Well of course I like Cheerios. They're delicious! I wasn't eating them regularly, but it was an easy thing to add to my diet. Just start the day with a bowl of cereal instead of a bowl of Goldfish crackers.

And then I realized granola is a whole grain, so I started eating granola bars instead of pudding for dessert after lunch. And hey, there is a form of whole wheat I like...Wheat Thins! Morning snack was now Wheat Thins instead of...well another bowl of Goldfish crackers.

And as the year progressed, I found more. Like when I decided I wanted to try bell peppers for the first time, and asked my sister which color was the least spicy. "What do you mean?" she asked. "Bell peppers aren't spicy."

That was shocking to me. I always thought all peppers were spicy. Like jalapenos and chili peppers. And I can't handle even a little bit of spice. Now bell peppers are my favorite thing to add to a dish! I was missing out all these years only because I assumed they were spicy.

3) I Needed to Try New Things
This was a big one for me. I have food anxiety. I like to stick with what I like, and what I liked was macaroni and cheese, spaghetti, and ice cream. My vegetable servings were maybe 3-4 servings of carrots a month, plus the tomato sauce on my spaghetti.

Growing up, we had vegetables on the side for dinner, rotating between broccoli, peas, beans, and corns. Of the green veggies, the only one I could tolerate was green beans. So it was the only one my mom made me eat. Which meant by adulthood, I hoped I never had to touch another green bean. But I still had no love for peas and broccoli.

But as it turns out, there are a lot of kinds of vegetables! I already mentioned my newfound love of bell peppers, but I also tried spinach, zucchini, summer squash, and others. I found recipes and experimented with new dishes. At one point in November, I remember sitting there and audibly saying, "mmmmmm" as I ate some of my roasted vegetables. And then I thought, "I can't believe I'm sitting here enjoying a bowl of vegetables this much."

Here's a more complete list of the new things I tried - things I had never eaten before: goat cheese, kale, cantaloupe, great northern beans, spinach, black olives, sweet potatoes, eggplant parmesan, eggplant meatballs, zucchini, bell peppers, summer squash, strawberry/banana smoothie with real fruit, veggie burger, tomatoes (which I'd had but not liked except in sauce form), brown rice, protein-enriched pasta, Greek yogurt, cauliflower, and spaghetti squash.

4) I Didn't Feel Better
Everyone kept saying how much better I would feel if I ate healthy. And once I started eating healthy, I kept getting asked, "Don't you feel so much better?"

No. I didn't. I felt AWFUL. My stomach hurt constantly. If I had a cheat day where I ate more junk, I felt better. But as long as I kept up my healthy new diet, I felt like crap.

I thought it would just take some time. My stomach had years of unhealthy training to get over. But 5 months in, I was still having constant stomach cramps.

And then I decided to become a vegetarian. Not because of my new healthy diet, not as an effort to deal with cramps, but because of my love for animals and because of the evils of factory farming.

Within a week, my stomach didn't hurt anymore. I can't explain this. I ate meat with my junk diet before, and I didn't feel stomach pain when I did. All I know is that's how it happened for me. And now that I've been a vegetarian for over 6 months, I consistently feel better than the 5 months before it.

But I still don't notice a difference between now and when I ate junk. I don't feel like I have more energy. I feel the same. And that's okay. Healthy eating has its long-term rewards for my health, and I didn't feel bad on my old diet. So I don't need to feel better. I feel more proud of my choices.

But hey, I've lost 14 pounds!

5) I Didn't Have to Cut Junk Foods
I didn't have to, because I just started to eat a lot less junk. Not intentionally. I just wasn't as hungry for junk because I was filling up on fruits and veggies. So I still eat some, but not a lot anymore.

And let me tell you, my breakfast (along with Cheerios) of a strawberry-banana smoothie is so yummy. It's a great way to satisfy my sweet tooth.

6) I Didn't Have to Compromise
Right from the beginning, I said I wasn't going to make eating miserable. I already had anxiety related to food, and I wasn't going to make food a chore or an unpleasant part of life. If I'm going to eat three meals every day, I want to enjoy them.

And I do! It was all about finding the right things—the things I really find yummy—and eating those.

I still don't like salad. And that's okay. I can be a vegetarian who doesn't eat salad.

I think this is the biggest key. Had I compromised to fit foods I didn't like into my diet for that competition, I might've stuck with it for those 6 weeks. But I wouldn't have kept it up once the points went away. This is the problem with dieting. People make eating this unpleasant thing, and they can only keep that up for so long.

Instead, if you find healthy foods you enjoy just as much as junk, it's not hard to keep up. You want to.

7) If I Can Do It, Anyone Can!

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Change

If you know me at all, you know I'm a very opinionated person. If I like something, I LOVE something, and if I don't like it, I hate it.

Call it genetics. The running gag from my dad was that in the car, he'd either blast the A/C full blast or the heat full blast. And if the A/C got too cold and you asked him to turn it down he'd say, "You want heat?!?" and blast the heat.

I've taken a similar approach with my interests and opinions. And while sometimes that can be a good thing, sometimes it makes it really hard to grow and change. Sometimes it even makes it embarrassing.

You see, I've put myself in these boxes and announced to the world that this is who I am. I make these things a part of my identity. So when I try to change...I'm ashamed and worried I'll hear the "I told you so's." It can be easier just to not change than to try to redefine myself when I've been so outspoken about who I am.

Last year something happened that got me thinking about the reason I didn't want kids. I was dead set against having them. But when I really boiled down my desires, it came down to three factors. One of them wasn't a factor anymore, one of them I'd realized didn't have to be the case, and the third was just selfish. Bottom line, I realized I'm open to having kids. I didn't go into baby fever mode or start fretting over my biological clock. If I don't end up having kids, I'm okay with that, too. But I still had to change this identity I'd built as "someone who doesn't want kids." And that was really hard.

This year, I've begun eating a lot healthier. That's a bigger switch than the kids thing, because it goes back way farther. My college classmates would remember me as the girl who brought Swiss Cake Rolls to class for breakfast. My high school classmates would remember me as the girl who hoarded Cadbury Mini Eggs. (A day-after-Easter sale was the only time I ever cut class.) My middle school church friends might remember how I could never stop at just one Dunkin Donut in Sunday School. And my co-workers now know me for my love of Dunkin Donuts still.

And yes, I still love Dunkin Donuts. (Although the Colorado ones are sub-par.) But I'd built my identity up so much around being a donut person and never eating vegetables that I was pretty embarrassed about this shift.

I didn't set out to become healthier. There was a competition at work and you got points for eating veggies, fruits, and whole grains. I've been told I'm a bit competitive...and this contest really drove me. (Yes, my team won. And I checked to see if I got the most points individually of anyone in the company, and I did.)

I have really strong taste buds and a really strong gag reflex. Because of this, my food options are pretty limited. So I always ate junk food not because I didn't care about my health, but because I just didn't think there was enough I liked to be healthy. But as I strove to win this competition, I realized I could do it. I didn't have to force myself to gag down stuff that could hardly stay down. There was enough I liked that I could get the fruits and veggies I needed. And there were a few new things I tried that I liked.

The competition ended a while ago, but the change has lasted. All I needed was the push to see it was possible for me. And I've continued to find new things I like that are better choices for me. But it's hard for me when people make shocked comments about my food choices. I get it - I built up my own junk food reputation. I'm the girl who put Dunkin Donuts in her room safe at a work conference to make sure they didn't get stolen, and made sure everyone knew it.

Bottom line - I'm learning not to let my choices define me so much. Because I want to be flexible enough that God can stretch me and grow me.

One of my ah-ha's when I was confronted with the first shift, the kids issue, was reading Luke 5. Jesus calls his first disciples, who'd had a long night of fishing and caught nothing. He tells them to cast down their nets again, and they do, and catch a whole bunch of fish. I'd read it before, knew it well.

But verse 2 caught my attention this time. The fishermen were washing their nets. They'd packed it up, cleaned up, were about to head home. This wasn't like, they were just about to shore and they dropped the nets right where they were. (Which is kind of what I'd always pictured.) They'd ALREADY CLEANED THEIR NETS. And they didn't even know this Jesus guy. They had to go to a considerable amount of effort to change their plans, but they just did it. Can't say I'd be that flexible.

Now, maybe it stood out to me because I like things clean. Whatever the case, I was pretty impressed by these disciples taking their freshly cleaned nets and dropping back into the yucky water. And it made me realize that no matter how neat and tidy I've packaged up my identity, I need to be ready to shake things up when Jesus comes calling.

Saturday, August 15, 2015

Dog Treats

A few months ago I blogged about my recommendation for what to feed your dog. My dogs have been eating Dr. Harvey's Canine Health now since March - and not one of them has thrown up. I'd heard that dogs just throw up more than humans - that that's normal and acceptable. But now I realize it's not - it's a sign they're not eating food that's good for them.

Since March, I've also taken a harder look at what treats I give my dogs. I was already starting from a good place - my dogs get "Jackie treats" every day, which are homemade by a co-worker. But sometimes I would supplement with other treats, and some of them were sourced from China. I also gave my dogs rawhide bones.

Treats

These are the treats I've introduced in the past several months (all made in the USA):

  • Max & Ruffy's. Max & Ruffy's come in a variety of flavors. They're small round treats great for training. Some (but not all) of the flavors are available at amazon. Peanut loves them, but Biscuit doesn't seem to be a big fan. He only eats his when he sees that Peanut has finished hers and might take his away. He may not like them, but he doesn't want HER to get extra treats. 
  • Merrick Power Bites. Now THESE are a big hit. Also small and great for training or games, but these are chewier and meat-based instead of fruit/veggie flavors. And my pups LOVE them. 
  • Fruits & Veggies: There are a number of fruits & veggies that are good for dogs. Mostly I've begun incorporating them more in MY diet, and giving my dogs scraps as treats. Just make sure they have no added sugar or sulfites.
    • Apples
    • Bananas
    • Carrots
    • Strawberries
    • Watermelon
    • Spinach
    • Cucumbers
    • Coconut flakes
    • Others I don't use much but are good for dogs: Zucchini, blueberries, bell peppers.
    • NEVER FEED YOUR DOG GRAPES.
  • Healthy Dogma Banana Chips. The pups love these, but I don't buy them a lot since they already get pieces of my banana every day.
  • Yogurt. The probiotics in yogurt make it a great treat. I give my dogs each a spoonful a day. And, so that I can use most of a carton before it goes bad, I got two mini-ice cube trays and I freeze some in there. So sometimes they get it in frozen chunks instead of soft yogurt.
  • Homemade Blueberry Banana treats. These are Biscuit's absolute favorites. If they don't get them immediately after dinner I'm in big trouble. Here's the recipe:
    • Preheat oven to 375.
    • Blend 1 1/3 cups washed blueberries and 1 peeled banana with 1 cup water in a blender.
    • In large bowl, mix blueberry mixture with 3 2/3 cups whole-wheat flour to form a dough.
    • Spoon the dough onto a cookie sheet in about 1-inch spheres, or make fun pawprint ones by putting the dough in a pawprint tray!
    • Cook for 8 minutes, flip or take out of tray and put upside down on cookie sheet, cook for 8 more minutes
    • Makes about 70-75 treats. Freeze half and store the other half in the fridge.
  • Also check out your area for local mom & pop dog bakeries. Here in Loveland Doggy Dips & Chips is a great place to get fresh homemade dog treats, if you don't have a Jackie. :)

Rawhide Bones

I started seeing a lot of articles about the disgusting bleaching process of rawhide bones, and it was moving me toward cutting them from my dogs' diet. But when I saw that China was serving 40-year old meat for HUMAN consumption, I decided no more ANYTHING edible unless it was made in the USA. And that meant (very covertly) throwing out their rawhide bones.

I wanted to find a USA-made substitute that would be a good chew for the dogs. Their Dingo rawhide sticks usually lasted 5-10 minutes, so that's what I was hoping to find. But so many of the sticks I found were over $1 per stick! So this is what I've tried at a more affordable cost:
  • Merrick Jerky Strips. These only lasted about 30 seconds. They are so soft that they're more of a big treat than a chew. The dogs loved them, but it's not the durability I was hoping for.
  • Get Naked Chew Sticks. These last about 90 seconds to 2 minutes. Not the durability I was hoping for, but far longer than the jerky strips. Long enough that I felt I could get away with calling them "bones" and the pups wouldn't feel ripped off. And, they have varieties for different healthy functions, like joint health and antioxidants. One bag has 18 sticks and is $4-5, so it's pretty comparable in price to the rawhides I was getting, but they are so much better and made in the USA. 

Saturday, August 1, 2015

That One Time When I MET LIL BUB!!!!!!!!!!!

Today I experienced the most magical thing any human can experience. I MET LIL BUB!!!!

I went to the Denver County Fair and arrived in time to get a good seat at the Gazebo Stage for the 1:00 Q&A with Mike & Bub. I saw Mike walk up first, without Bub, and it seemed like a lot of people didn't seem to know who he was until he got up on the stage to set up his computer. He played a video of Bub on a beach while we waited for the show to start.



Mike started by explaining Bub's story (with pictures), and he showed the video of her miraculous recovery. He also showed some pictures of her with celebs and such.



After that he took Bub out of her carrier and she interacted with the audience. Mike typed what Bub was saying on screen, and recordings played of her squonks.





Then after Bub said some things, we saw a video of Lil Bub's Special Special from Animal Planet.



Then there was Q&A. I asked what Bub thinks of Rosco, her new baby brother. She said that dude is amazing. Best face. Best smile!

Bub also got her checks for the charities she is fundraising for this weekend.



Mike seems like a really humble, genuine guy. You can tell just from the way he carries himself. Plus when asked about his and Bub's fame, he said he doesn't consider himself a celebrity, just Bub's assistant. And he is glad for that. He said he had a band at one point he'd hoped would become famous, but now he is glad it didn't. He likes Bub getting the attention more than for himself. Also, he is even cuter in real life.

After the Q&A, Dude fed Bub at the end of the stage so people could take pictures. Then he held her a bit for more pics. Squeeeee!!!!!!!!!!! She is adorbs.







I was having issues taking as many pics/videos as I wanted because my iPad doesn't have much space. So after Bub had been whisked away, I got online and uploaded all the pics and videos from Q&A to Facebook so I could delete them from my iPad.

Then I went to the Bub booth. I was planning to just get a Bublanket for my sister, since she'll be here in a couple days and could avoid shipping costs that way. But they were also discounted, so I ended up getting one for myself, too. I had also brought my stuffed Bub and was wearing one of my Bub shirts. People kept asking where I got the stuffed Bub as I walked around the fair holding her, so I got to direct a lot of people there.

There were a couple hours to kill between the Q&A and the Meet & Greet, so I wandered the fair a bit. At one point I saw Mike and his son coming out of the bathroom, so I said hi to Rosco.

In the art gallery, I saw that someone had painted BUB ART!



I went to the animal pavilion and saw a zebra, a baby camel, some cute baby goats and snuggling bunny buddies. That first little goat was OUT COLD. (He has black fur around his eyes so they look open in the pic...but trust me he was snoozing hard.) A fair can really wear you out! But he had a friend to help him. The fire alarm kept going off, but no one was evacuating so I just stayed there.







Then around 3:30 I went to get in line for the 4:00 Meet & Greet!!! I was 12th in line. At 4:00 they let the first ten people in line into the room with Bub. Then as each person came out, they let one more in.

So I was 2nd in line when the first lady came out, and she had the biggest smile on her face and was squealing, "SHE'S SO SOFT!!!!!!!!!!" She looked like she'd been transformed by magic.

There were a bunch of rules for meeting Bub. Each person got TWO PETS and that was it. They said to try to avoid her ears as she is sensitive to being pet there. (SHE IS SO SOFT!!!!!!!!) After your two pets, you pose for a picture which they take for you on your camera/phone/iPad. And then Mike finds out your name so he can personalize your pawtograph.





There was a reporter from the Denver Post there, and he took pictures of me with Bub. ONLY ME. Then he got my name and asked me about me coming to meet Bub. He said if I email him, he'll send me the pictures. So I am the ONLY ONE who got real professional pics taken!!!!!!!!!!!!!

After I talked with him, I snapped a couple more pics before I left the room. It really felt magical. I could not stop smiling walking to my car.

I had thought there would be more time to talk to Mike and Bub. I was going to tell them about Biscuit using the Assisi Loop, which we know of thanks to Bub. I was going to see how Bub really sizes up to the stuffed Bub. And I was going to see if she could rub her paw on the bublankets. But there wasn't time for any of that. Still, I understand they have to limit it so she doesn't get overwhelmed. She is a cat, after all! So, I was not disappointed. Just being in her presence was magical!!!

On the way out, I snapped one more selfie with a big poster of Bub.


Monday, June 29, 2015

Cheese Bridge

Today I kept thinking about the Cheese Bridge.

The Cheese Bridge is this bridge near where I grew up that was a railroad bridge back in the day. By the time I came around, it was just a rusted piece of metal. It wasn't a functional bridge, even for walking, as it was just a frame suspended over a shallow river.

And yet somehow, someone graffitied the word "CHEESE" on it. Through the years, other graffiti would come and go - the more typical initials or profanities - or the paint would fade - but someone would always come back and spray paint CHEESE again. And so it became known as the Cheese Bridge. In fact, you can google map "Cheese Bridge" and it comes up!

And then a couple years ago, the town was expanding a bike path over the old railroad tracks, and the got to the Cheese Bridge. They added railings and a bottom so you could walk on it, and they painted it a nice shade of green. My dad says they must've put at least four coats of paint on that bridge, trying to cover up the word CHEESE.

But you can still see it. It'd been spray painted so many times in the same place that it had taken on a somewhat 3-D effect. The layers of paint that had built up to spell CHEESE just pop out no matter how many coats of paint they put on. It's all green, but you can see CHEESE protruding.

I was thinking about this because when I think about leaving a legacy, I want to be like that word CHEESE. I never wanted to be famous. I'm okay if no one remembers my name after I die. Some people struggle with the idea that they'll be forgotten, but that doesn't bother me. No one knows who painted the word CHEESE, or even if it was the same person every time. More likely, various people just kept the tradition going.

And that's how I want my life to be. Even if no one knows that I was the one who left the legacy, I want to help shape the future for the better. I want to leave a legacy that continues, to live a life worth of other people following in my footsteps so that one day, no amount of paint can cover over that legacy.

Saturday, March 7, 2015

Finding the Best Dog Food

I recently embarked on a journey to find a better dog food for my dogs, Peanut and Biscuit. I've spent a lot of time researching, and because I am a nerd, I felt I had to write a paper about my research...or at least a blog. I hope it can be a helpful summary to anyone interested in exploring canine dietary options.

**Disclaimer: I'm just a dog owner with a computer, not a dog nutritionist.**

I've tried to make this blog really thorough with all the information I'd been seeking when I began my research project. The downside is, that made it really long. Feel free to navigate to just sections that interest you. For the short version, skip down to "In Summary."

MY HISTORY

My journey began when the news broke about the class-action lawsuit against Beneful dog food. I was feeding Peanut and Biscuit Beneful at the time, it was what they'd eaten their whole lives, and they were doing just fine.

Or were they?

Because they were vomiting at least once a week, last July I started mixing a spoonful of chicken or turkey Beechnut baby food in with their food. This had reduced their vomiting down to practically nothing. Chicken and turkey baby food can help aid digestion, and while not good for the whole diet, mixing it in seemed to do the trick. But the Beneful alone wasn't all that digestible.

And then I thought back to March 2011. Peanut started throwing up a LOT. Within the span of a couple hours, she threw up four times. I took her to the ER vet around 10 pm, and they did an x-ray of her stomach. There wasn't really any food left in there, so she shouldn't be throwing up anymore. They inserted this fluid pack under her skin to keep her hydrated, and we went back home. But by the middle of the night she'd thrown up 17 times. And it was starting to come out both ends. I took her back to the vet. And there she stayed, on an IV to prevent de-hydration and to try to calm her stomach, continually throwing up even though there was nothing left to throw up.


I spent as much time as I could with her there on the couch in a room at the vet's. Piddle pad under her because sometimes even in her sleep stuff would start coming out. At one point stuff leaked out on my pants but I just stayed there comforting her. They thought there must be a blockage in her stomach, and if she didn't have surgery it could kill her. So $2500 later, they'd cut her stomach open to determine no blockage. It must be a reaction to food.

Despite the surgery not really accomplishing anything, she did start to get better and was able to come home. I started her off with rice and baby food, gradually mixing Beneful back in. And she was fine, until I started giving her treats again (I was using Petsmart brand treats, I'm not sure of the name). So I stopped giving her those treats. Compared the ingredients list between that and Beneful, and narrowed it down to likely an allergy or intolerance to garlic. I've avoided garlic since, and she's been fine.

And then there was Buttercup. 



Buttercup was my dog who died about three weeks after Peanut got really sick. She was 12 years old, but a miniature poodle's average lifespan is 15-17 years, so she wasn't that old. Still, she'd had ongoing health problems that were being treated effectively with medication. And then one day, I woke up at 5 am to find her straining to breathe...really bad. The vet said her heart was pumping blood into her lungs. She couldn't eat, couldn't drink. We had to put her down that day.

But as I reviewed the symptoms on that list of Beneful concerns, I realized Buttercup had had a lot of them. One of the medications she was on was to help her breathe, because even before that day she would pant really hard. She had always thrown up a lot, which I attributed to her just having a "sensitive stomach." But was it her food? If I'd fed her something higher quality, would she have lived longer? Not been so sick? After all, Beneful only has a 1-star rating on dogfoodadvisor.com.

And one time I mixed it with some water and put it in the microwave to soften it, and it was shooting off sparks in the microwave. Does it have metal pieces in it?

Beneful denies their food has any problems. Maybe they're right. But I decided I wasn't going to take a chance with my dogs' health anymore.

EXPLORING THE OPTIONS

When I found out about Beneful's issues, I decided to switch the dogs. But I didn't want to spend an exorbitant amount of money on dog food. A 15 lb bag of Beneful ($16 with tax) was lasting me about 60 days, plus .50 a day for the baby food. That broke down to about $23 a month to feed both dogs. I said I'd be willing to double that, but not much more.

When I first googled "natural dog foods" I found The Honest Kitchen website. The costs were astronomical. If that's what it took to feed my dog fancy not-off-the-shelf stuff, it was out. So I gave up looking at those and just tried to find the best quality off-the-shelf kibble.

A friend recommended Blue Buffalo. Blue gets 4 stars on dogfoodadvisor.com. It boasts that its first ingredient is always meat, never grains. It's human-grade. And I found a deal on the Healthy Weight Small Breed kibble for $31 for a 15 lb bag with Amazon Prime. I figured if they could actually digest it I wouldn't need the baby food, and my monthly cost would actually go DOWN to $15.50. Additionally, I found a site indicating that the FDA received half as many complaints for Blue Buffalo in a YEAR as Beneful got in a MONTH.

Between the high-rating, the quality, and the cost, I was sold. I started the switch.

But then Biscuit had a vet appointment. And the vet asked what I was feeding him. I told her I was in the process of switching from Beneful to Blue Buffalo. She wasn't a fan of Blue Buffalo. She said it's too expensive for the level of quality it offers, and it hasn't been tested as much as a brand like Purina or Science Diet (2.5 on dogfoodadvisor).

I was frustrated. I'd just switched them FROM Purina. She said Purina has better kinds than Beneful, like Pro Plan (2.5 on dogfoodadvisor). She also recommended Royal Canin (2.5) or Iams (3). Blue Buffalo also offers grain-free food (though I wasn't getting that kind), and she said the whole grain-free movement is unnecessary. So I started to question Blue Buffalo, but I still wasn't sold on typical-brand kibble, so I didn't evaluate those. Though I did see many comments online speculating that vets are paid to promote Science Diet.

My vet also noted that Blue Buffalo's proud claim that it has no animal by-product is a bit inflated. Animal by-product doesn't necessarily mean beaks and claws, it generally means hearts and livers - good protein sources for dogs. Plus, I found this article about a lawsuit against Blue Buffalo for false advertising on that. And this one, too.

So I headed out to Doggy Dips & Chips, a local mom-and-pop that sells more holistic kibbles, none of the mainstream brands. I asked for recommendations, and they gave me a few samples: Fromm, and three flavors of Pulsar (fish, chicken, turkey). However, Pulsar is grain-free...which my vet had railed against not 15 minutes earlier.

I took home the samples and got out some paper plates. Divided them into six sections and labeled each one: Beneful, Blue Buffalo, Fromm, Pulsar Fish, Pulsar Chicken, Pulsar Turkey. And I decided to do a massive taste test.

THE GRAND EXPERIMENT


Peanut was my first test subject. She has this idea that I am slowly starving her to death. She's always hungry. So her test lasted about one minute, and I'm not totally sure there was any method to the order in which she ate the kibbles or if she was just gobbling up whatever she saw first. But her preference order was: Pulsar fish, Pulsar turkey, Pulsar chicken, Fromm/Beneful (she ate those at the same time before finishing one or the other), Blue Buffalo. Interesting to me that Blue was her last choice.



Then came Biscuit's turn. Biscuit is my picky eater. He has a history of picking out the "reject" kibbles that don't meet his standards, as you can see above. His test took almost 30 minutes. He carefully sniffed each option and was very intentional about his choices. First, he chose the Pulsar fish, just as Peanut had chosen. But he spit out every piece. Then he chose a piece of Fromm, spit that out, and returned to the Pulsar fish, which he ate all four pieces of (with a lot of spitting out and picking back up along the way). Next he finished up the Fromm, with minimal spitting out. Then he went for the Pulsar turkey, spit all those out, Pulsar chicken, spit all those out, and went back to the Pulsar turkey and ate it. After he finished up the Pulsar chicken, he wouldn't even touch Beneful or Blue Buffalo.

Pulsar doesn't come in small breed/small bite, and I think that's why he kept spitting them out. He liked the flavor but the kibble size was hard for him to handle. 


GRAIN-FREE PROS AND CONS

Now knowing the dogs both had a preference for Pulsar Fish (which has a 4.5 star rating on dogfoodadvisor), I decided to do more digging into this whole grain-free movement my vet wasn't so fond of. And let me tell you, it is controversial. There are a lot of opinions about it. But this is the article that really struck me. (Also of note: dogfoodadvisor.com is pro-grain-free, so take that into account in the way they rate grain-free foods.)

In all my reading, most of which was in support of grain-free, several cons stood out with grain-free food.
  • Grain-free does NOT mean carb-free. Often the replacement carbs are not very good for dogs and can cause health issues (however, Pulsar did not have this problem).
  • Dogs lose weight too rapidly, you end up having to feed them much more than the bag recommends. (I'd priced out Pulsar at $18 per 8.8 lb bag at Doggy Dips & Chips, which ends up being $15/month, but it seemed like that could double based on some of the reviews.)
  • It can cause an unhealthy increase in bowel movements.
  • It is not as good for joints & muscles...and Biscuit is already a rather floppy dog prone to back injury.
Grain-free is trendy right now (in human food too!), but many people think it's good because of potential dog allergies. In fact, my vet said dog allergies are more often to certain types of meats than they are to grains. This article says the same thing.

I should mention that also in this research, I found out there had been a recall on Blue Buffalo food in 2010 and another in 2013. Plus, I saw that consumer affairs listed 979 complaints for Blue Buffalo, and fewer (838) for Beneful. This definitely concerned me and took that one off the table. But Pulsar didn't seem to be a valid option either due to my concerns about grain-free. I kept digging.

HOMEMADE DOG FOOD

What I'd really wanted all along was to find something like the food guide pyramid, but for dogs. In my head there'd be a pyramid for each size range of dogs. I'd pick the 10-20 lb. pyramid and it would say, feed your dog 1-2 servings of grains, 3-4 servings of meat, 2-3 servings of veggies, or whatever the ratio should be. Then, it would have a list of things that fit into each category and what a serving was for that size dog. So it would tell me 1 serving of brown rice is 1/4 cup (if it is). I thought I'd like to make my own dog food, but I didn't know how to balance it, and a tool like that would help me do it and offer variety to my dogs.


After all, at one point Buttercup or Peanut had done this:


My dogs wanted real meat!

The blog I referred to above in my grain-free research was on drharveys.com, which sells dog food mixes. This sounded interesting. 

Dr. Harvey's Oracle was too expensive, right off the bat. (It includes meat.) So I didn't look into that too much. But the Canine Health sounded a lot like what I was looking for with that food guide pyramid.

Basically, it's everything a dog needs in a balanced diet except meat. You add your own meat, either raw or cooked depending on your preference. (I'm in camp "Cooked" because of the bacteria risks. But note that if you are using meat with bones, cooked bone can be dangerous.) It tells you exactly how much meat to add (along with water and oil) to balance out the mix. It was make-your-own but even easier!

So, to evaluate costs, I headed out to price out meat. (As you explore meat, it may be a good idea to be mindful of humanely-raised meat issues.) This is what I found for prices in my area:

- Steaks (pretty expensive, a rare treat): $6.50-$7 per pound
- Ground beef: $5.98/pound
- Chicken thighs: $2.83/pound/Chicken hearts, gizzards, and livers: $1.27/pound. These are good protein sources and much cheaper. My plan is for chicken week to have a combination of thighs, hearts, gizzards, and livers, bringing the cost per pound to $1.79.
- Ground turkey: $3.18/pound
- Frozen salmon: $3.97/pound
              (Side note on fish: I read some things about tuna having too high a mercury content to be a main meat source in a dog's diet. I give them the occasional tuna treat, but do not recommend it for these purposes. For salmon, it should never be fed raw.)
- Eggs: $1.45/pound
- Tofu: $1.98/pound
- Kidney beans, pinto beans, and lentils: averages out to $1.38/pound

(Other protein options include duck, lamb, venison, rabbit, but I didn't include those because of cost and/or lack of availability at my regular grocery store.  Some people feed their dogs vegan diets, avoiding the meat altogether, but I am a firm believer that meat is important for dogs. That's why I plan to rotate in some of the non-meat proteins but not use them exclusively or rely on them too heavily.)

Dr. Harvey's requires 6 oz of meat per 1 lb serving. My dogs would each need 1/4 lb serving per day, so that 1 lb serving would last me two days. Based on that I calculated I'd need 1.3 lbs of meat per week. Taking an average of all those meat costs besides steak (since I'm planning to rotate the other seven), I calculated .52 per day for meat costs for both dogs. Additionally, there'd be a .15 cost per day for flax seed oil, which has its own share of awesome health benefits including blood pressure and metabolism regulation, kidney and arterial health, better skin and coat, and improved immune system - with speculation it helps prevent cancer. It's also a good anti-inflammatory if you have older dogs prone to arthritis (or floppy Biscuits prone to back injury). The mix itself would be .58 per day. All this adds up to $1.26 per day or $37.69 per month. Now remember, I'd originally been willing to spend up to double of my $23/month on Beneful and baby food. So I was under that mark, AND it was an opportunity to feed my dogs a truly natural and varied diet.

I should also note, Dr. Harvey's Canine Health isn't rated on dogfoodadvisor, but his Oracle is and receives a 5 star rating. And while I was on his website, Biscuit stepped on my computer and added it to cart 9 times. So it seems he thinks highly of it. :)

Also of note, Dr. Harvey is reportedly a chiropractor, not a veterinarian, but his website boasts 30 years of research in dog nutrition. He did get in trouble in 1998 for illegal practice of veterinary medicine. So take that as you wish. To me it doesn't trump the 30 years of research, nor the rave reviews.

Now knowing dog food mixes existed, I found some other ones. U-Stew came out to $85.77 a month, and Furoshnikov's was $58.11. Both well over the anticipated cost for Dr. Harvey's. Plus, Furoshnikov's doesn't contain as many of the ingredients other than meat - you have to add your own rice and vegetables, which I had factored into the cost but that's also more work.

IN SUMMARY

Because of my inner-nerdiness and love of spreadsheets, all of this math, along with the pros and cons, is reflected in a spreadsheet.

Remember, my cost estimates are based on feeding two 12-15 pound dogs. If you're using this to gauge your approximate costs, please bear in mind that they would be accurate for two of that size dog or one 25-30 lb dog. Otherwise, multiply or divide as needed.


BENEFUL
Beneful pros: My dogs were already on it
Beneful cons: Under scrutiny as possibly killing dogs and making others very sick. May have contributed to Buttercup's sickness and death. Not digestible on its own, needed to be combined with baby food. 1 star on dogfoodadvisor.
Monthly cost with baby food: $23
Tested to meet AAFCO guidelinesYes, per dogfoodadvisor and packaging.
Verdict: Not worth considering

BLUE BUFFALO
Blue Buffalo pros: Among highest rated of standard-brand dry kibble. Mostly good reviews. 4 stars on dogfoodadvisor. Easy to get and scoop.
Blue Buffalo cons: Vet did not approve, not well-tested, had recalls in 2010 and 2013. Contains garlic which is controversial, especially in light of Peanut's issues.
Tested to meet AAFCO guidelines? Yes, per dogfoodadvisor and packaging.
Monthly cost: $15.50
Verdict: A better choice than Beneful for sure, but not as good as other choices

FROMM
Fromm pros: I didn't talk about Fromm a lot here, but let me say that it was Biscuit's second choice. Although it doesn't come in small bite, the kibbles are reasonably-sized for small dogs. Rating of 4 on dogfoodadvisor. Holistic, natural food. Not grain-free.
Fromm cons: Not as highly rated as Pulsar, more expensive per bag, and bigger portions needed. 
Tested to meet AAFCO guidelines? Yes, per dogfoodadvisor.
Monthly cost: Did not calculate
Verdict: Seems to be a reasonable choice, but it didn't satisfy me for the price per bag.

PULSAR
Pulsar pros: Dogs' top choice in my kibble taste test, all-natural, uses healthy carb sources even though it is grain-free. 4.5 on dogfoodadvisor.
Pulsar cons: I still have other concerns with grain-free, doesn't come in small bite, hard for Biscuit to manage. Single-source protein is not as good for the overall diet.
Tested to meet AAFCO guidelines? Yes, per dogfoodadvisor.
Monthly cost: $15 (if the recommended serving size is actually enough)
Verdict: If I didn't have the concerns about the grain-free, I'd be more inclined to get this one. Although it's probably the best among the four options discussed so far, it ends up being the cheapest cost. But the grain-free left me unsatisfied.

DR. HARVEY'S
Dr. Harvey's pros: Truly natural diet, allows for variety, well-balanced. 5 stars on dogfoodadvisor. Most affordable of all dog-food mixes.
Dr. Harvey's cons: It's the most work (though still pretty easy for make-your-own). I can freeze portions ahead if I'm out of town, but it's still more work for sitters to remember to thaw it as opposed to scooping kibbles. It's far more expensive than any kibble options pursued.
Tested to meet AAFCO guidelines? Yes, per dogfoodadvisor.
Monthly cost: $43.63
Verdict: It's the direction I've tentatively decided to go, got my first pack on order to confirm the dogs like it and it digests well. I can't imagine they won't like it since it's basically people food!
Note: Dr. Harvey's is available on amazon.com as well as directly from drharveys.com. On Amazon it is about the same cost (only .71 cheaper for the 5 lb bag), but you get free shipping with Prime.

OTHER
Other mixes explored: U-Stew, Furoshnikov's, The Honest Kitchen
Reason didn't pursue: Too expensive

For more reviews, check out this link.

ALSO CHECK OUT

Also, if you're interested in purely homemade with no mixes, I did end up finding something kind of like what I wanted for the doggy food guide pyramid, here. Though now that I know about Dr. Harvey's, my hunch is that the cost wouldn't be that much less to totally make your own - and a lot more work.

Pet MD has an article on things to consider when choosing dog food. This article also notes some things I've mentioned about grains and by-products.

One last article, ranking the different types of dog diets from 1-13. Please note that an unbalanced homemade diet is the WORST, so don't do it unless you're committed to balancing it right.

DR. HARVEY'S RECEPTION

I've read all the reviews on Amazon (for all sizes of bag), and not one of the less-than-five-star reviews expresses health concerns. (And there are very few non-five-star reviews anyway.) Mostly it's dogs who won't eat it (which is quickly determined) or difficulty of prep (which I'm committed to). A lot of reviewers had dogs that had major health problems before switching to Dr. Harvey's, and were totally fine on Dr. Harvey's.

For my dogs, their immediate reaction was great! They couldn't believe this food I cooked up was for THEM! The only problem I encountered was that I mixed in half kibbles and did a half portion, to try to transition them. Biscuit was picking out his kibbles and making a mess everywhere. He didn't want anything but the good stuff! (I was afraid of that...) Biscuit's fur around his mouth did not turn pink like one reviewer had said happened to her dog.

Here are some pictures of them enjoying their first Dr. Harvey's meal (chicken is the protein I used). You can see Biscuit's rejected kibbles on the floor, and Peanut trying to snarfle them up.





Since my dogs weren't deathly ill even before Dr. Harvey's, I knew I wouldn't have some of the dramatic testimonies other people did about the difference Dr. Harvey's made. But here are some things I've noticed:

1) LESS SMELLY. HUGE decrease in Peanut's stink bombs - and let me tell you she had a way of letting them rip before! On Day 4 I realized I hadn't smelled a single one since I started the switch! Also, Biscuit's fur continues to remain white. 
2) MORE ENERGY. They've had an increase in energy (healthy eating will do that for you). They've always had their "crazy time" in the evening but the night I switched them it lasted extra long and they were still kind of restless afterwards. So I've started taking them on 1-2 15-minute walks a day. Which isn't THAT much time to invest and, let's face it, will help all three of our health. 
3) COUGH IMPROVEMENT. Peanut had had this hacking cough for several months, and 6 days into the food I realized while she still coughed occasionally, it was decreasing in frequency. My hope is that it will go away all together.
4) LESS SNORING. Peanut had also been a bit stuffy for several months, but not so much the vet was concerned. However, it did lead to some snoring that at times actually woke me up in the middle of the night! Now she hardly snores at all.
5) THEY FEEL FULL. On their old food, Peanut was often trying to scavenge for more food. She was just so hungry, she felt like I was starving her to death (I was not underfeeding her). I think it was all the empty calories. Around 9 pm every night she'd start whining uncontrollably at her empty dish. Now, she is VERY excited about meal times but doesn't feel the need to look for food when it's not meal time.

My only complaint is that after the switch, Peanut started eating grass a lot. Since I live in a rental and can't control the kind of fertilizer they use, I was concerned about the possibility of this continuing into Spring. So now I add some canned pumpkin (1 oz per pound of mixed food) to get them more fiber.

MY SYSTEM

I love being organized, and I also want to make this as little work as possible. So I bought all 7 of the protein sources I plan to rotate through. When I use one up, I'll replace it, and that way I'll never run short or have to make a last-minute shopping trip. For those that need to be frozen, I packaged them in 1 lb. and .5 lb increments, since it will take 1.5 lbs to make an 8-day serving. (8 days is easier to mix up than 7.) Every weekend I'll mix up a new batch using my 1.5 lbs of protein. I also bought this meat scale for $13 to help measure meat.

I bought these containers to store the servings in, 1 container per day:



They're BPA-free and freezer-safe, so I can safely store the food in the freezer. I plan to keep one container in the fridge and when it's gone, move another down from the freezer so it's thawed out by the next meal. The containers were $1.84 per set of 4, and they're dishwasher safe so it's a cheap, one-time purchase.

Also, so that I don't have to rely on my memory too much to rotate through my protein sources, I created this menu. I can just move the arrow every week, and put it back at the top when I get down to the bottom. (The gourmet options, again, would be rare treats and are not part of the rotation.)



TREATS

I already buy homemade dog treats from a lady I work with, so I'm pretty happy with the natural, preservative-free treats I feed my dogs. But in all the dog food research I did, I stumbled across some great treat ideas to add into the mix. Blueberries and strawberries are both super good for dogs with all the anti-oxidants and such, but my dogs didn't like them. Some sites had said they can prevent cancer and slow down aging! Coconut or coconut oil was another really good one, which my dogs do like. Dr. Harvey's has Coconut Smiles dog treats, but you can also just buy coconut flakes. Just make sure you get it with no sulfites or added sugar. Just plain coconut as the only ingredient! 

Yogurt is another goodie because it is full of probiotics, which I'd already known but the problem I found is that you can only buy plain, non-fat yogurt in a giant tub, which went bad before I was through even a quarter of it! But I found out that you can freeze it without losing nutritional value, so I got some ice cube trays so I could easily freeze puppy portions.

As with any treat, these are best in moderation - too much of any of these things will NOT have healthy effects on your dogs! Before I knew my dogs didn't like blueberries, my plan was to give each dog one blueberry every other day, and on the off days they'd get their regular treat. Now my plan is to do the same thing but with the coconut. Yogurt is a nightly treat.


THOUGHTS?

Please comment with any questions or additional research you've found! I'm certainly no expert on this, but if you have questions that I did find in my research I'd be happy to answer.