Boat to Bowl Pet Food Wild Cod & Haddock Recipe

Wild Cod & Haddock Recipe

Boat to Bowl Pet Food

#251 of 558 $0.31/oz

$0.20–$0.40/oz

Wondering how Wild Cod & Haddock Recipe fits your pet? GoodNom gives you personalized feeding amounts, allergen checks, and health signals.

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At a Glance

3 named protein sources in the top ingredients

Named proteins like "chicken" or "salmon" tell you exactly what your pet is eating. Vague labels like "meat meal" leave you guessing.

Taurine levels above 69% of peers (vital for cats)

Taurine is an amino acid that cats absolutely need for healthy hearts and sharp eyesight. Their bodies can't make enough on their own, so it has to come from food.

Menadione (Vitamin K3)

Menadione sodium bisulfite (synthetic vitamin K3) is banned in human food supple... See full analysis in the app.

Sources
  • EU Directive 2002/46/EC (human supplement ban)

Nutrition

Compared to 606 similar cat dry foods

Protein (dry-matter) 34.8%

Protein (dry-matter)

Protein content after removing water, so wet and dry foods can be compared fairly.

Top 74%
Fat (dry-matter) 15.2%

Fat (dry-matter)

Fat content after removing water. Important for energy and nutrient absorption.

Top 70%
Fiber (dry-matter) 2.7%

Fiber (dry-matter)

Fiber content after removing water. Supports healthy digestion.

Top 94%
Moisture 8

Moisture

Water content. Higher moisture helps with hydration, especially for cats.

Top 88%
Taurine (dry-matter) 0.2%

Taurine (dry-matter)

An amino acid vital for heart and eye health, especially in cats.

Top 32%
Omega-3 (dry-matter) 0.9%

Omega-3 (dry-matter)

Omega-3 fatty acids after removing water. Supports skin, coat, and joint health.

Top 39%
Omega-6 (dry-matter) 2.7%

Omega-6 (dry-matter)

Omega-6 fatty acids after removing water. Important for skin and coat health.

Top 69%
Nutrient Transparency 3.0%

Nutrient Transparency

How many nutrients the brand reports beyond the basic required minimums.

Top 48%

Ingredients

Compared to 606 similar cat dry foods

Named Protein Sources 3

Named Protein Sources

How many of the top 5 ingredients are identifiable, single-species proteins like chicken or salmon.

Top 20%
Primary Protein Quality 4

Primary Protein Quality

Quality of the first protein listed. Whole meat ranks higher than meals or by-products.

Top 33%
Low Filler Content 0

Low Filler Content

Corn, wheat, and soy in the top ingredients. Fewer fillers is better.

Bottom 32%
Ingredient Simplicity 21

Ingredient Simplicity

Total number of ingredients. Simpler recipes can be easier to digest.

Bottom 9%
Omega-3 Source 2

Omega-3 Source

Whether the omega-3 comes from fish oil (delivers EPA/DHA directly) or just flaxseed (plant ALA, which pets convert very poorly).

Top 27%
Label Transparency 0

Label Transparency

Whether the same ingredient is listed in multiple forms (like pea protein + pea fiber) to make meat appear higher on the label.

Bottom 37%

Full Ingredient List

Cod, Haddock, Salmon Meal, Whitefish Meal, Tapioca Starch, Sweet Potatoes, Sunflower Oil (Preserved With Mixed Tocopherols), Peas, Chick Peas, Flaxseed, Pollock Oil, Natural Flavor, Yeast Extract, Dried Bacillus Coagulant Fermentation Extract, Vitamins (Vitamin E Supplement, Niacin Supplement, D-Calcium Pantothenate, Vitamin A Supplement, Riboflavin Supplement, Vitamin B12 Supplement, Thiamine Mononitrate, Pyridoxine Hydrochloride, Folic Acid, Menadione Sodium Bisulfite Complex), Salt, Taurine, Choline Chloride, DL-Methionine, Minerals (Zinc Proteinate, Iron Proteinate, Copper Proteinate, Manganese Proteinate Sodium Selenite, Calcium Iodate), Rosemary Extract

Calories

3578 kcal/kg Energy density
462 kcal/cup Per serving

Where to Buy

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