Homemade puppy cookies

The recipe for the duck cookies mentioned in the previous posts.  You can likely use any meat of your choice, and the recipe I used is gluten free.

1lb meat (I used duck, obviously, I also used raw, but next time I’m going with precooked.  I did include organ meat) ground with 1/4cup water
1cup rice flour (gluten free!)
1cup quick oats
1/3cup cheese powder

preheat oven to 400F
mix all ingredients throughly
using a teaspoon and a fork, take small gobs of the mix, and flatten onto a cookie sheet so that they’re no more than 1/3 inch thick and not much over 1inch wide at the widest point (it took two cookie sheets full for me).
Cook for 20 min, flip cookies over and cook for another 15.  They should be turning golden colored on both sides, and crunchy (not soft, a little soft is ok, but only a little).  Allow to cool.  Freeze any you don’t expect to use up in a week’s time.


Duck #2

The duck breasts turned out pretty decent considering I’d never done them before, course, Apollo was peaved we didn’t give him any lol.  The puppy cookies turned out ok too, he likes them anyway, which was the important part.


Duck

I have a nutcase of a puppy.  Though chicken and turkey are yummy he LOVES duck meat.  And of course Duck meat based treats are hard to find.  Then I ran across Canyon Creek Ranch’s duck jerky treats.  Puppy heaven!!  Unfortunetly I missed a piece of fine print on the bottom of the bag, the one that says “Made in China.”  After reading the previously posted warnings on several sites it occured to me that I’d neglected to check where the puppy’s duck jerky came from.  Damn.  Now I gotta find new treats.

I did a bunch of searching, and ran across the Stella and Chewy’s brand of dog food and treats, they have duck! A quick email to them resulted in the following information:

You’ll be happy to hear that all of our ingredients are US sourced and everything is manufactured in the US….USDA inspected doesn’t typically mean hormone/antibiotic free…it simply means that the products are inspected by the USDA and meets their standards for food safety.  Not only do our meats meet that standard, none of our meats contain added hormones/antibiotics.  The farmers don’t use them, and neither do we.

Woohoo!  Cool, course, I can’t get them locally, so I’d have to order, and they’re not inexpensive.  Probly worth it, but not cheap.  
Hmmmm…..a local butcher shop sells whole duckling (frozen) from a farm on Long Island, WTH, I’ve never actually had duck myself, husband’s game, so I went down and bought a whole duck.  Let it thaw, and today I pulled it out and decided how to do this.  I’d originially thought to just roast the whole duck, but I’ve never even done a whole chicken or turkey myself, and besides, I’d already figured out the easyist way to do the puppy treats was to grind up the meat and make “cookies” out of them, and most of those dog cookie recipes tell you to start with raw meat.  Well, there’s lots of instructions online for how to debone a duck, and lots of recipes for deboned duck breast, so hubby and I can have duck breast for supper, and puppy can have his cookies.  Right?
Next time remind me to just roast the whole duck and go from there.  At least I didn’t cut my fingers OFF, just nicked them a little, but anyone looking at the end carcass could have told you I didn’t have a clue what I was doing.  But there are two duck breasts in the fridge waiting till tonight to cook, and puppy’s cookies are baking.  He thinks they smell YUMMY so I don’t expect to have a problem feeding them to him!
Once everything is done I’ll let you know how they turned out.

A food warning for dog owners.

I shoulda posted this a couple weeks ago, but I kept hoping we’d get more news.

Seems up in Canada there was a sudden rash of small dogs suffering from Falconi syndrome.  Though this CAN be a genetic disease thats rare, and its much more likely to be caused by a toxin in the animal’s food.  In these cases the only thing these dogs had in common was chicken jerky treats fed regularly.  The chicken jerky varied in brand, but in all cases was the meat was from China.  The specific toxin that is causing the problem this time (most folks will remember the massive recalls a few years ago cause of melemine) has not been identified. 

As of the last information I can find no larger dogs have fallen sick, but if it really is the chicken jerky then likely its only a matter of time before a larger dog ingests a large enough amount of the toxin, and since the US shares a large number of products with Canada the problem will likely cross borders shortly if it hasn’t already.  If you feed your dog jerky treats (of any kind of meat) and it does NOT say Made AND Sourced in the US it is more than likely that the meat comes from overseas, and though meat from some countries is ok, meat from China is, frankly, suspect.  I highly recommend finding a different treat for your dog. 


Coffee

A while back Tam posted about how she does her coffee, and apparently today a nother blogger commented there about how he was giving a Chemex a try. (I was decried as an infidel in the comments for my flavored coffee, poor folks have never had the good stuff :p.) I’ve thought about trying a Chemex several times, but first thing in the morning I’m just not that functional. As much as I’d prefer to grind my coffee on a daily basis I don’t even do that every morning. Instead I grind a weeks worth at a time, and I brew it in my Mr Coffee (though I’ve a stovetop perculator for when the power goes out) cause I can do that without requiring thought.

We’re currently ordering from Berres Brothers, and we usually get a selection, including Highlander Grog, and their Breakfast blend (look, a non-flavored coffee!!). They ship quick, and have wonderfull coffee. I used to exclusively buy Millstone’s Chocolate Velvet coffee (it smelled and tasted like a fresh baked chocolate mocha cake) but when Smuckers bought them out they stopped selling the whole bean in 5lb bags which I found annoying as heck, so I decided that if I was going to be reduced to ordering in small bags I was going to find someplace I was willing to buy a selection from.

So thats my coffee story!


Where’s Kapone?

So, you have two dogs, and they’re your babies.  The older of the two you’ve had since you were a teen, and is now 11 years old.  Oh yes, they happen to both be pitbulls.

They got through the fence on Friday.  It does happen, even to the best of pet owners, but a neighbor says all is not lost, they saw an Animal Control Officer picking up two dogs that match the description of your two.  So first thing Saturday you rush down to the Memphis Animal Shelter to pay the fine and look for your dogs. 

There’s Jersey, in the back row of cages.  There’s a mention on her kennel card of the 2nd dog picked up with her…..but he’s no where to be found.  MAS authorities review the camera take, they say that the 2nd dog picked up at the same time as Jersey isn’t Kapone, but they can’t ID which dog it was.  That dog’s apparently missing too. Oh, and you’re not allowed to watch the video footage.

Last year (2010) MAS “lost” 155 animalss.  Thats not a euphanism, they literally have no explanation for where those animals went after an ACO supposedly brought them in.  In January 2011, they “lost” 40 animals.  Then, for some reason, they stopped reporting how many animals went missing, for all the months after that.  The rest of the numbers are there, but not how many went missing.

This is a picture of Kapone.  The Shoup family is offering a $1000 reward for the return of their dog, no questions asked.  If you know someone in the area please ask them to keep an eye out for this dog.

News article 1
News article 2
News article 3

From YesBiscuit


And yet…..

…..despite things like this and this, I have to come up with a reason why the judge should issue me a pistol permit.  And not just a permit, but a permit to carry concealed where-ever allowed by law, not just at home, or while hunting, or while on the job…..

Seriously though, what do I put as my “reason for requesting a pistol permit”.  I doubt I could get away with “hunting” since I don’t have a hunting license (I’ve debated getting one, but as much as I’d like to say I hunt my own food I KNOW I’d not be able to gut and clean….).  And I don’t know the judge well enough to know if “because its my legal right” will fly (this being NY probably not).

And while I’m in gripe mode, WHY do I have to fill out the medical/legal/court records release forms in triplicate, especially when there’s nothing there for them to find anyway??  They all say “photocopies of this document are legal” (or some such similar language) on the bottom.


Something a bit more enjoyable: Iced Tea!

Homemade Iced Tea in-fact.  (cause I need cheering up)

This started out several years ago.  In an attempt to loose weight I cut all soda’s, and sugary drinks out of my day.  I lost less than 5lbs.  Sigh.  Anyway, I discovered that although I didn’t miss the soda’s (which I now only have if we’re eating out, and then only ONE and don’t let them refill my glass), I DID get sick of nothing but water, or lemon water, all the time.  I looked at the iced tea’s sold in the stores, and cringed at the list of ingredients.  Next thing I knew I was making my own.  It took some trial and error to find a method that was easy, and worked consistently to produce really good iced tea.

The first thing you need is a slow cooker (or crock pot, same difference) that will hold at least 3/4 the liquid contents of your chosen pitcher.  Yes, a slow cooker trust me.

Next you need tea.  Sure, you can use anything you like, but I grew up in a family of tea snobs.  I’ve been ordering loose leaf tea from Upton Tea since I was a teenager (well, ok, my dad was the one ordering tea when I was a teen, close enough).  I’ve looked around, and for the quantity, and quality, there’s no match for price.  Which isn’t to say that the other tea companies are no good (there are some really nice teas out there), but if I find one that has good tea, their price is higher than Upton’s, at least at the quantities I buy it in.  For the recipe below I use peppermint, spearmint, and honeybush vanilla.

I also buy teapot sized tea bags from Upton cause I hate trying to strain the tea after the fact, but you can do whatever you feel like.

Now, my tea pitcher holds a full gallon of water, my slow cooker is an itsy bitsy model that holds about 3/4 of that, which is actually perfect for what I do, if your slow cooker is bigger you may have to play around with the exact amount of water to use.  At any rate, I fill the slow cooker with water and turn it on high, don’t put the lid on yet though.

I “measure” out the tea as follows:

3 very heaping teaspoons (tableware teaspoons, not measuring spoon teaspoons) of the honeybush vanilla
6 very heaping teaspoons of the peppermint
9 very heaping teaspoons of the spearmint
(I know, awesome measurements huh?  I guess I ought to weigh it out or something one of these days)

since I use teabags everything is put into the teabags, closed with a clip (purchased from Upton as well, but they’re reusable), and then dump teabags into the slow cooker.  If you’re not using teabags just dump it all in.  I’ve tried infusers, but they don’t seem to make them big enough, that will actually stay closed and won’t leak tea leaves.

Put the lid on the slow cooker, and set a timer for 2 hours.  Yes, two hours.  Now walk away.  Come back when the timer goes off.  Turn off slow cooker.  If you use teabags, or infusers or whatever, remove them from the tea, if you’re going to filter it set your filter up.  Pour tea into pitcher (this can take practice so don’t panic when you miss the pitcher the first time, just make sure the pitcher is set in the sink so spills aren’t a problem).

Now, the mints do need sweetening to bring out the flavor, what you use is up to you though, I use plain old white sugar, but there’s no reason why you can’t use honey, or artificial sweeteners or what have you, but whatever you’re going to use, put it in now while the tea is still hot and stir it up well.  Once its all stirred add enough extra cold water to the pitcher to fill it the rest of the way, cover and set into the fridge.  It’ll take a few hours to cool down though you can have a glass earlier with the help of ice cubes.

Now, everyone who actually “does” tea is cringing right now, first off, a SLOW COOKER, and for 2 HOURS???  Yes, I’m serious.  The slow cooker heats slowly enough that by the end of two hours the temperature is barely 150 degrees (at least in mine), which means that no, the tea doesn’t get bitter, cause although its a long time, its no where near high heat.  And this method produces more consistent results than boiling water then timing the brewing for the right number of minutes.