Satin Ball
Recipe –for weight gain or supplementation
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Satin Balls - The Original Recipe
The following recipe was sent to Wellpet by Diana Carreon,
R.N.,C. It quickly became one of the most requested posts
on Wellpet.
Ingredients
10 pounds hamburger meat [the cheapest kind]
1 lg. box of Total cereal
1 lg. box oatmeal
1 jar of wheat germ
1 1/4 cup veg oil
1 1/4 cup of unsulfured molasses
10 raw eggs AND shells
10 envelopes of unflavored gelatin
pinch of salt
A Tablespoon of baby vitamin drops
Mix all ingredients together, much like you would a meatloaf.
Divide into 10 quart freezer bags and freeze.
Thaw as needed and feed raw!
Uses: "I take a frozen pack
on the road with me, kept on ice, and never have had any
trouble with it spoiling, even in the heat of Texas summers..."
"All my dogs go crazy over this stuff...but you have
to be careful, it will put weight on the dogs pretty fast
if you feed enough....I feed a pack a day...half in am ,
half in pm."
"The dogs stop all the itching and chewing at their
coats/skin, their eyes get this bright look and the energy
level goes out the roof (not that Belgians need any more
energy)."
Comments
Per the information received after having the Satin Balls
recipe checked by several vets/labs:
Satin Balls is a total canine diet. It can be feed by itself
or as a supplement, for however long you wish. My dogs have
been on Satin Balls for over a year; the only time that
I have fed it alone is when I had a sick dog needing to
be built up or an underweight dog that I plan on showing.
The only problem with feeding it
by itself is figuring out the amount. It will put weight
on a dog in a few days...that's why it is so great to feed
just before a show. If you have a dog that is in good weight,
but you just want to build coat/endurance, you would have
to figure out how much to feed (cal per kg), or you would
end up with a fat dog in a very short time. At one point,
I let Satin eat as much as she wanted, just to see how much
she would consume. I never got to that point! After a pound
pack, she was still looking for more, so I stopped. I have
been told a dog will stop eating when full on it, and that
you can then gauge the amount needed to maintain weight!
I just find that per the pocketbook and ease, my dogs do
very well on it as a supplement. I give about a 1/4 pound
each night to maintain beautiful coats, energy level, and
a full appetite...no picky eaters here.
Just don't try to hide it in the kibble...they will make
a mess throwing out the kibble, digging for the Satin Balls!
My dogs have never gotten sick on Satin balls...not even
when I am at a show and feed only that. I feed less kibble,
so I save money there. There is also less stool to pick
up as the dogs are able to digest all of the Satin Balls.
I now use the Knox Joint Gelatin instead of the plain Knox
unflavored gelatin. Since this is high in Vitamin C and
protein, and is good for the joints, it would be good for
the dogs. They don't seem to mind the added flavor.
I am also adding Flaxseed oil. They probably don't need
the added oil, but so far I have not seen it hurt anything.
Fix some up and let your dogs enjoy. They will love you
forever and forever!
Satin Balls Half Recipe -- recommended amount to
mix up
5 lbs cheap hamburger (for high fat %)
1/2 large box Total cereal (about 6 cups cereal)
1/2 large box uncooked oatmeal (about 7.5 cups oats)
5 raw eggs
1/2 of 15oz jar wheat germ (about 2 cups)
5 packages Knox unflavored gelatin
5/8 cup vegetable oil (this is pretty close to 2/3 cup)
5/8 cup unsulphered molasses
pinch of salt
The half recipe, using hamburger that is 20% fat calories,
has 12,400 calories. The last batch I made ended up making
22 patties, so each has about 560 calories. I have big dogs
(Danes) so if your dog is smaller you might want to make
your Satin Balls or patties smaller.
I find that making the half recipe is so much easier that
it is worth doing even though you have half-boxes of things
around for awhile and have to mix it up twice as often.
The disadvantage of the full recipe is the need of a really
BIG container and it is very hard work to mix it all up.
For more great information on Holistic
care for your dog:
http://www.holisticdog.org/index.shtm