Wheat Flour
For a doggie treat that presents itself as a twist of beef and
cheese sticks, you wouldn't expect wheat to be the first
ingredient listed. Turns out these snacks are closer to soft
pretzels than Slim Jims: They're made mostly of wheat flour and
pregelatinized wheat flour — a processed starch that makes food
easier to digest.
Corn Syrup, Sugar, Crystalline
Fructose
Sugar, sugar, and sugar. Now that the health risks of
high-fructose corn syrup are well known, manufacturers have
begun to distill the sugar out of it, selling the result as
"crystalline fructose." The health risks are the same. But at
least the stuff isn't too poisonous: Archer Daniels Midland
claims that its crystalline fructose contains no more than 1
milligram of arsenic per kilogram. Sweet!
Glycerine
Beef and cheese tend to be naturally moist, but beef and cheese
SnawSomes (which look like shiny puppy biscotti) get their
appetizing sheen from glycerine.
Beef
Actually, the package merely promises "beef flavor." According
to the FDA, that means beef need only be present in an amount
"sufficient to be detected." And you can bet it's not going to
be filet mignon. The Association of Feed Control Officials
defines "meat" in pet foods as "striate muscle which is skeletal
or that which is found in the tongue, in the diaphragm, in the
heart, or in the esophagus; with or without the accompanying and
overlying fat and the portions of the skin, sinew, nerve and
blood vessels." Woof!
Dried Cheese Product
A goulash of milk derivatives containing less than 51 percent
actual cheese. Cheese product is generally rejected by
nutritionists for use in school lunch programs — something to
think about if you treat your pooch like a substitute child.
Soy Protein Concentrate
Because these Scooby snacks are mostly wheat, Del Monte pumps in
soy protein concentrate — essentially mashed soybeans with the
fats and carbs removed. This brings SnawSomes up to a whopping 4
percent protein — just a touch more than a Twinkie.
Natural Smoke Flavor
Produced by burning wood chips and condensing the smoke into a
liquid, this additive creates the illusion that food has been
cooked over a flame. A CDC report showed that 92 percent of
commercial liquid smoke flavorings contain benzoapyrene, a
substance known to cause stomach tumors in animals. Thankfully,
there's not enough here to be a real issue.
Onion Extract and Garlic Powder
A dash of flavor. But take note: Dogs can develop a blood
disorder from eating onions or garlic. The amount in a single
SnawSomes won't be harmful, but it's best to keep Fido from
scarfing down the whole package at once.
Source: Wired Magazine