Mr Putdown
Well-known member
It’s really not.
All a bit too high brow for the Christchurch residents I'm guessing.It’s really not.
My friend's family business is Arden Grange Pet Food, he stated all their food was tested on humans and he said he had eaten all their products. He was barking mad though.Every weekend morning, my dog's kibble is given a soaking in the frying pan that was used to cook the bacon for my son's sandwich.
The kibble will have been processed in a hygienic factory, and goes straight from the bag to the pan. We wouldn't do this if we have any doubts about the cleanliness of the kibble.
It's the bit on the ingredients that says Salmon & 'meat meals' on my dog food that suggests it's probably not fit for human consumption, even though it claims 26g of Salmon per 100g of kibble, it revises it further down that it's 2.6g of dried Salmon & 'meat meal'. Loads of added vits listed though!It’s really not.
Yes but you'd definitely wash it before you used it again! The OP sounded like his landlady wasn't going to clean the Air Fryer before using it again!Every weekend morning, my dog's kibble is given a soaking in the frying pan that was used to cook the bacon for my son's sandwich.
The kibble will have been processed in a hygienic factory, and goes straight from the bag to the pan. We wouldn't do this if we have any doubts about the cleanliness of the kibble.
Meat meal is made from bits of the animal not considered safe for humans, it is though subjected to extreme temperatures and then ground to a powder. It is perfectly safe after this process for humans.It's the bit on the ingredients that says Salmon & 'meat meals' on my dog food that suggests it's probably not fit for human consumption, even though it claims 26g of Salmon per 100g of kibble, it revises it further down that it's 2.6g of dried Salmon & 'meat meal'. Loads of added vits listed though!
I'm still not going to eat it! Although when I was about 7 I tried a dog biscuit & it was a bit ruff.Meat meal is made from bits of the animal not considered safe for humans, it is though subjected to extreme temperatures and then ground to a powder. It is perfectly safe after this process for humans.
I suppose it no worse than taking a chance with whatever is in a doner kebab. How people eat that shit is beyond me.Who hasn't come home from the pub, can't be arsed to cook, and tucked into a delicious tin of dog food?