How can “limited ingredient” apply to a food that has more than 40 ingredients?

Home > Blog > The Industry > How can “limited ingredient” apply to a food that has more than 40 ingredients?

Recently we’ve seen the term “limited ingredient diet” thrown all over the place. And we’ve been excited about it because that’s just what we’re after. But imagine our disappointment when we flip over the bags and cans to see yet another huge long paragraph of ingredients. Bummer!

To us, the phrase “limited ingredient” should mean that the food has far fewer ingredients than traditional dog food.  Unfortunately, this isn’t the way its being used.

Ignoring the Required Ingredients

When you get to pick and choose which ingredients you’re going to acknowledge, it becomes very easy to create a limited ingredient formula.

It’s become common practice to only count the ingredients the company wants to advertise. (This is, of course, before they had to add in all the other stuff to meet the AAFCO requirements of complete and balanced). So they count the lamb meal, the brown rice, the dried beet pulp, the natural chicken flavor, and the chicken fat, but ignore the 20 to 30 synthetic vitamins and minerals that follow.

Somehow, it checks out fine to claim “Only 6 Ingredients” on the front of the package, when there are really over 30 ingredients on the back label. How companies can get away with stuff like this is beyond us. 

Regardless of whether or not each ingredient was good for you, wouldn’t you want to at least know the contents of what was going into your body?

All those “other” ingredients they aren’t owning up to on the front of the label tell us a lot about the food itself. Each vitamin or mineral listed on the food is there because the food did not pass a test approving it as an adequate source of that essential nutrient. So, the longer the list of these added nutrients, the more likely it is that the “limited number” of “main” ingredients in that bag aren’t what’s actually providing your dog with his essential nutrients.

In other words, skimping on the big ingredients so that you can claim “limited ingredient” doesn’t do you much good if you have to add a bunch of synthetic vitamins and minerals after the fact. 

Every Ingredient Matters

Even if it’s just 0.1% of the entire bag of food, each ingredient matters. It doesn’t take much of a synthetic zinc powder to have in impact on the food’s nutrient make up.

…While we’re on the subject, it doesn’t take much fresh spinach to reach adequate zinc levels either. But hey, you guys can use whatever you want & we’ll use what we want (the spinach. the spinach is what we want). 

Each ingredient added into a recipe should be looked at as an opportunity to address one of the essential nutrients needed to meet the “complete and balanced diet” claim. Ingredients shouldn’t be just fillers. And they shouldn’t be marketing tactics either—adding two blueberries to your 3500-lb batch of food *technically* does give you the liberty to show blueberries on your packaging, but it should disturb your sound sleep, because you know those two blueberries were nothing in proportion to the rest of that batch of nonsense. 

We like to formulate our recipes in a way that gives every ingredient a purpose. We wouldn’t add something if it didn’t also contribute to the overall nutrition of the food. 

Spread knowledge:

Joslin Lee: Content Writer and Editor, Graphic Designer for The Simple Food Project

About the Author

Joslin Lee is the graphic designer and content writer/editor for The Simple Food Project. She's got two dogs (Dr. Astronaut and Bevers), a ferret (Space Weasel 5000) and a goldfish (Sea Bean). Lately, she's been staying busy cookin' up the cutest little baby (coming Feb 2018).


800-451-5267

info@simplefoodproject.com

1823 Executive Drive
Oconomowoc, WI 53066

We need more zinc? Let’s add spinach!

We Need More Zinc? Let's Add Some Spinach!

Home > Blog > The Project > We need more zinc? Let’s add spinach!

We Need More Zinc? Let's Add Some Spinach!

One of the things that makes The Simple Food Project Recipes unique is our commitment to using only whole food sources of essential nutrients. When developing a pet food, there are nutrient standards that must be met before claiming the food as complete and balanced.

Most pet food brands will develop their formula (with whatever materials are cheapest usually), send the food in for testing, find out what nutrients are lacking, and then add synthetic versions of all those vitamins and minerals. For a human diet, this would be the equivalent of eating cereal your whole life and loading up on supplement pills and powders to actually sustain your body.

Nobody would do that. It makes much more sense to get all the vitamins and minerals you can from the meals you already eat. (Yes, we could technically survive on only french fries—in fact, someone did once—but you already know over here, we’re about thriving, not just surviving.)

Want a real life example?

When doing our first round of formula testing, our results came back low in zinc. Instead of tossing in some straight synthetic zinc, we went back to the drawing board, and wrote a list of every food we could think of that had zinc.

Here’s our list:

Our list of foods high in zinc

We first wanted to try oysters, so we meandered over to the local grocery store and picked up a few fresh oysters from the meat counter. (Admittedly, our mistake was getting live oysters—we named them all and became attached).

We sent in a new batch with the freeze-dried oyster to be tested, and those little guys sure did the trick. Our zinc levels went through the roof!

However, we wanted to stick with a more balanced level of zinc, so we traded out oysters for some pumpkin seeds and spinach, which aren’t quite as potent as the oysters, but are still great sources of zinc (among other things).

We were really happy with the results of the batch containing the spinach and pumpkin seeds, so decided to move forward with those ingredients.

The same process goes for all our recipe formulations. They are a medley of whole foods that contain the nutrients that our sweet, sweet dogs need. Our mindset will always be, “what’s the best choice?” not “what’s the cheapest choice?”

Spread knowledge:

Joslin Lee: Content Writer and Editor, Graphic Designer for The Simple Food Project

About the Author

Joslin Lee is the graphic designer and content writer/editor for The Simple Food Project. She's got two dogs (Dr. Astronaut and Bevers), a ferret (Space Weasel 5000) and a goldfish (Sea Bean). Lately, she's been staying busy cookin' up the cutest little baby (coming Feb 2018).

800-451-5267

info@simplefoodproject.com

1823 Executive Drive
Oconomowoc, WI 53066

The Simple Food Project
1823 Executive Drive
Oconomowoc, WI 53066

800-451-5267