lily s kitchen bedtime biscuits
Lily's Kitchen Organic Bedtime Biscuits for Dogs
Delicious, ovalshaped artisanal treats for your dog. Gluten-free, with probiotic yoghurt, honey, passion flowers and chamomile. Tasty organic-certified ingredients for the perfect bedtime snack.
Lily's Kitchen Organic Bedtime Biscuits for Dogs are hypoallergenic, hand-baked dog biscuits which are made using organic products. Give your dog a treat at bedtime with these delicious, holistic dog snacks. Lily's Kitchen Bedtime biscuits can help to soothe your dog at bedtime with the calming effect of chamomile and honey, to help promote restful sleep. Honey also helps to support your dog's immune system.The crispy biscuits are wheat and gluten-free and are traditionally baked. The delicious organic ingredients of Lily's Kitchen bedtime biscuits include organic oats and organic rye flour as well as therapeutic passionflowers. Both chamomile and passionflowers are well-known for their calming effect. The bedtime biscuits are also made with probiotic yoghurt to help to aid your dog's digestion.The Bedtime Biscuits recipe also contains organic sunflower oil, with lots of vitamin B and antioxidants. Sunflower oil is rich in omega-3 fatty acids and essential proteins which help to keep your pet's coat glossy and skin healthy.All Lily's Kitchen products are made without artificial colours, attractants, aromas or preservatives.
Lily's Kitchen Organic Bedtime Biscuits for Dogs at a glance:
- Oven-baked, low calorie snacks
- Suitable for adult dogs over 4 months
- Natural: made with yoghurt, honey, passion and chamomile flowers
- Raw ingredients from organic-certifiedfarms: only premium, unpolluted ingredients from organic farms are used in these tasty biscuits
- No artificial colours, attractants, preservatives or aromas
- Made in the UK
- Organic oats are packed with soluble crude fibre, ideal for dogs which suffer from food intolerances or allergies
- Organic probiotic yoghurt helps to maintain a healthy gut flora to support the digestive system
- Organic sunflower oil is rich in omega-3 fatty acids and essential proteins which help to keep your pet's coat glossy and skin healthy
- Organic honey is a natural sweetener and can support the immune system
- Chamomile and passion flower are recognised to have soothing properties and may help your dog to sleep well
Lily's Kitchen Bedtime Biscuits Review
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Suitable for all breeds of dogs
Private label(or
white label) pet foods are pre-formulated recipes that companies can order from certain factories, add their own label or packaging and retail to the public as their own brand. They are therefore available from numerous suppliers.
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Mixing bowl composition
This is the ingredients list as printed on the packaging or manufacturer's website.
Think of the 'mixing bowl' composition like a recipe - all the ingredients you would need to put in a 'mixing bowl' in order to make the food.
Ingredients have to be listed in descending order of their weight so the higher it appears, the more there is.
Highlighted ingredients
Ingredients that we believe to be controversial or inferior are highlighted in yellow with particularly low grade, highly contentious or excessively vague ingredients in red.
As fed composition
While the 'mixing bowl' composition is useful for knowing what went into the food, it doesn't always reflect what your dog is actually eating. This is because the processes that turn the ingredients into the finished pet food can significantly alter the relative weights of the ingredients.
For this reason we've calculated the approximate 'as fed' percentages for the main ingredient categories in the finished product.
Please note that these figures are very approximate. They are estimates based on the information provided by the manufacturer in the ingredients list so the clearer the terminology and the more percentages they provide, the more accurate our estimates will be. Wherever information is lacking, we always assume the worst.
Ingredient categories
Meat ingredients: includes all meat and fish ingredients except isolated fats/oils.
Added oils and fats: includes all isolated oil and fat ingredients.
Carb-rich ingredients: includes all ingredients derived from grains, pseudo-grains, potatoes and other starchy root vegetables, sweet potato and legumes (except whole peas which are categorised under fruit and veg) except for isolated protein and extracted oils. Also includes fibre supplements.
Fruit and veg: includes all whole vegetables and fruits.
Other: all other ingredients. Mostly made up by nutritional supplements and additives.
For more information on any ingredient, please take a look at our Dog Food Ingredient Glossary
The dry matter level of a nutrient is the percentage there would be in the food if all of the water was removed.
With water taken out of the equation, these figures allow the nutrient levels of foods of different types (like wet and dry) to be compared on an even playing field.
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The
price per dayof feeding this food based on feeding the manufacturer's recommended daily amount from 100g packs bought at their rrp to a dog of:
Note:All suggested feeding amounts and costs are only approximate and may vary considerably from dog to dog. Be sure to contact the manufacturer if in any doubt.
70 out of 100-Good
Our unique product ratings are calculated based on the stated ingredients and are designed to indicate how healthy a treat is likely to be for the majority of dogs when fed on a daily basis for an extended period. Click here for more information
Country of origin: Germany
A technological additive is any substance added to a pet food "for a technological purpose and which favourably affects the characteristics of feed".
The most common categories of technological additives include preservatives and antioxidants, gelling agents and thickeners and probiotics.
While the primary effects of technoloical additives are certainly 'favourable' (increased shelf life in the case of preservatives & antioxidants, better food texture and consistency in the case of gelling agents and thickeners etc.) some have been linked to health problems in pets and should be treated with caution.
Unfortunately, many technological additives do not have to be declared by the manufacturer so just because they do not appear on the label does not necessarily mean they are not in the food. If in doubt, ask the manufacturer directly exactly what technological additives their foods contain.