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Dog Food


4tomorrow

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4tomorrow Apprentice

I was wondering what the gluten free dog foods are. I went back about 17 pages and couldn't find the list that I saw once. I have a dingo that loves to kiss my hand as I walk by and she has a bit of a licking objects habit too. I would really appreciate a list, thanks.


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Rusla Enthusiast

You can give this one a try.

Open Original Shared Link

jerseyangel Proficient

There is a person here--Peter (psawyer) who is an expert on this subjsct. Hopefully he will see your question--I'll bet he wouldn't mind if you PM'd him ;)

4tomorrow Apprentice

Thanks for the info. I'll send him a pm and hopefully get some ideas.

ETA: I checked out the nutro. They all have oatmeal in them. Oh well, I'll keep looking.

frenchiemama Collaborator

There are several good quality foods that are gluten-free. The ones that I can think of off the top of my head are:

Natural Balance (potato & duck, sweet potato & fish, and venison & rice)

California Natural (lamb & rice, chicken & rice, herring & sweet potato)

Nature's Variety (venison)

Canidae

Innova EVO

Timberwolf Organics (ocean blue)

Felidae Enthusiast

I second the Natural Balance recommendation.

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      This is a really common area of confusion. Most natural cheeses (cheddar, Swiss, mozzarella, Parmesan, brie, camembert, and most blue cheeses) are inherently gluten-free, and you’re right that the molds used today are typically grown on gluten-free media. The bigger risks tend to come from processed cheeses: shredded cheese (anti-caking agents), cheese spreads, beer-washed rinds, smoke-flavored cheeses, and anything with added seasonings or “natural flavors,” where cross-contact can happen. As for yeast, you’re also correct — yeast itself is gluten-free. The issue is the source: brewer’s yeast and yeast extracts can be derived from barley unless labeled gluten-free, while baker’s yeast is generally safe. When in doubt, sticking with whole, unprocessed cheeses and products specifically labeled gluten-free is the safest approach, especially if you’re highly sensitive.
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      Thanks a lot for your response! Can you maybe specify which kind of cheeses I should be cautious about? Camembert/Brie and blue cheeses (the molds of which are nowadays mostly grown on gluten-free media, though, so I've read, right?) or other ones as well? Also, I was under the impression that yeast is generally gluten-free if not declared otherwise. Is that false?
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