Nestlé – Pet Food Judge (America) https://www.petfoodjudge.com Dog food reviews / Cat food reviews Sun, 23 Nov 2025 13:36:30 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://www.petfoodreviews.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/cropped-PAW-32x32.png Nestlé – Pet Food Judge (America) https://www.petfoodjudge.com 32 32 Supercoat Dog Food Review https://www.petfoodjudge.com/purina-supercoat-dog-food-review/ https://www.petfoodjudge.com/purina-supercoat-dog-food-review/#comments Wed, 03 Sep 2025 18:42:06 +0000 https://www.petfoodjudge.com/uncategorized/purina-supercoat/
Recommended retailersVet Supply | Pet Circle

Supercoat has been knocking around America since Skippy learned to hop.

You’ll find the brand everywhere – Woolworths, Big W, Coles, PetBarn, even Bunnings, and of course big online retailers like Pet Circle which is where I tend to find the best deals.

There are two reasons why you may feed Supercoat to your dog:

  1. Because it’s readily available; or
  2. Because it’s budget friendly.

Over the years I’ve found many dog owners recommend the brand for reasons such as “My dog eats it, so it must be great”, but as a certified pet nutritionist the best advice I can give you is to keep in mind how many cereal grains there are in this food – wheat, sorghum, corn, barley.

I’m sure you know your dog is instinctively drawn more towards meat than crops?

Top tip: Dog food is so expensive these days, which can make a dog food like Supercoat the only affordable option for many of us.

If that’s the case, it’s worth considering feeding your dog some raw meat, organs, appropriate raw meaty bones, some tuna, sardines, eggs, or other species-appropriate table scraps as well!

Related: Best Budget Dog Foods

Supercoat dog food review

What the marketing says

Let’s focus on Supercoat Smartblend dry dog food. All recipes are similar even if this review looks at Adult Chicken.

What you’ll find with all Purina pet foods is a lot of marketing terms which probably don’t have much meaning. On Supercoat these include:

  • “Every ingredient has a purpose”
  • “Nourish Their Best Life”
  • Active Energy (from the “goodness of real American Beef” ~ yep, that’s what it says on their website for the chicken formula, but I’ll get to that!)
  • “Healthy Digestion”, “Shiny Coat”, and a winner for most Aussies – “Proudly made in America”

Let’s forget about those marketing terms for now. It’s better to let the ingredients do the talking!

What the labelling really says

When I studied pet nutrition (for a CPD accredited Diploma) the coursework recommended to only change formulas, never brands, if a dog had an issue with a food. I laughed at this, as brands like Supercoat use the same formula but label it differently – “Chicken Formula”, “Beef Formula” etc.

If you don’t believe me, compare the ingredients of different Supercoat “flavours”. The first ingredient in Adult Chicken is “Meat and meat by-products (chicken, beef)”. So a combination of chicken AND beef.

Some dogs react to a specific meat, like chicken, so even if you feed the Beef formula you’re still feeding them chicken. Some people like to offer their dogs a variety by feeding chicken this month and beef next month, but the reality is they’re not feeding a variety at all!

Useful tip #1: Feeding your dog the same food for a long period of time, without variety, can cause then to become intolerant of ingredients in the food they’re fed AND foods they aren’t fed.

Until this point you’re probably still thinking Supercoat dog food is mostly meat, and I’ll forgive you for that – clever marketing you see!

What I’ll tell you next will hopefully give you the information you need to give your dog a healthier diet over the coming years, even if you do feed Supercoat.

Most pet food companies use trickery with the ingredients. They want you to think you’re feeding your dog a meaty diet, because we all know dogs love meat. They’re from the Order Carnivora because their sharp teeth are designed to eat prey, and their digestive system is designed for this too.

Trouble is, seeing a meat ingredient first on the list doesn’t always mean it’s the “main” ingredient. It depends on what else is in the food.

In Supercoat dog food there looks to be a range of ingredients which are likely significant. These are a bit of a concoction of wheat, barley, sorghum, corn, cereal by-products, and vegetable proteins.

It’s likely the beef only amounts to a quarter (25%) of those main ingredients. Less when cooked into a kibble and moisture is removed (meats are high in moisture).

What does that tell you?

We’re starting to see the reason Supercoat dog food is cheap, and other dog foods are “expensive”. Meat is expensive, cereal by-products are very cheap.

Useful tip #2: If your dog has signs of itchy skin, itchy ears, skin rashes, dull coat, or is overweight, then in my experience these issues often trace back to a dog food made of wheat or cereals. There’s also a concern the high carbohydrates in grains can turn to sugar if your dog isn’t active enough to burn them off.

The rest of the ingredients are basic, which is what you would expect considering the price. Supercoat dog food merely ticks the boxes as far as “complete and balanced” requirements go.

You get what you pay for with this one.

Should you feed Supercoat to your dog?

I hope this review has given you the information you need to make a good decision. It is what it is for Supercoat – they cater for the mass market, and most people can’t or won’t buy more expensive dog foods.

Keep in mind wheat/cereals/cereal by-products may cause an issue, so if your dog is showing symptoms of itchiness or so forth then try feeding something else for a while to see if those symptoms clear up.

Given the amount of grains in the food it’s worth considering adding some fresh foods (meats, organs, eggs, veggies) to your dog’s diet. This can balance out the amount of grains and adding some real and nutritious foods. Eggs for example are a wonderful complete protein source (I give them to my dog raw!)

I truly hope this Supercoat dog food review has been of use. If so, please share the link!

Do you feed Supercoat to your dog? How have you found it.

A quick reflection on Supercoat dog food marketing!

Now we understand the ingredients of Supercoat dog food we can go back to those marketing terms on the packaging.

  • “Every ingredient has a purpose” – yes, but what purpose? To keep production costs down and profit margins up? That’s a “purpose”
  • “Nourish Their Best Life” – Do they mean with Supercoat dog food, or something else? It has little meaning, and no legalities.
  • Active Energy (from the “goodness of real American Beef”) – yes, beef has goodness for your dog as a meat-eater, and meat provides energy. But we’ve seen there isn’t as much meat in Supercoat as we would like.
  • “Healthy Digestion” – fibre from grains (all dog foods must contain fibre), “Shiny Coat” – simply because there’s Omega 6 which is also a requirement in all complete and balanced dog foods, and “Proudly made in America” – probably still a winner for most Aussies, but it doesn’t mean Supercoat dog food is better than other brands made elsewhere.

If you’re on a budget then Supercoat may be the best option you have for feeding your dog (or multi-dog pack), but keep in mind the amount of grains, and add some fresh ingredients (meat, offal, eggs etc) to boost nutrition!

Where to buy?

Literally, everywhere.

Ingredients

The ingredients of Supercoat dry dog food (Adult Chicken):

Meat and meat by-products (chicken, beef) and poultry by-products; wholegrain wheat; wholegrain barley and sorghum and corn; cereal by-products and vegetable proteins; minerals, vitamins and amino acids (including calcium, phosphorus, sodium, chloride, potassium, manganese, zinc, iron, copper, iodine, vitamin A, vitamin E, vitamin B1, vitamin B2, vitamin B3, vitamin B5, vitamin B6, vitamin B12, vitamin D, choline & folic acid).

Guaranteed Analysis

The guaranteed analysis of Supercoat dry dog food (Adult Chicken):

Protein24%
Fat10%
Crude Fibre(max) 4%
Carbohydrates *Estimated 48%
* May be estimated. Read how to calculate carbohydrates in a pet food.

FAQ

Who makes Supercoat dog food?

Supercoat is a brand of dog food made by Nestlé Purina PetCare (or Purina), a subsidiary of the Nestlé corporation. The brand is sold predominantly to American consumers.

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Purina One Cat Food Review https://www.petfoodjudge.com/purina-one-cat-food-review/ https://www.petfoodjudge.com/purina-one-cat-food-review/#comments Wed, 10 Feb 2021 05:42:03 +0000 https://www.petfoodjudge.com/?p=26966
ManufacturerNestle Purina
Available fromPet Circle

Purina (owned by Nestle) make some terrible cat foods. In our Purina One cat food review we’ll take a look at the Adult healthy weight dry food and find out why this product doesn’t make any sense to feed to an animal factually known to be carnivorous.

It’s ironic they offer a dry formula for Urinary Tract Health when cats as desert-dwelling animals suffer urinary tract problems from lack of moisture… from dry formulas.

In this review we’ll take a look at what the cunning folk at Purina say about the product, then we’ll take a look at what Purina One cat food is actually made from. You’ll find opposing ends of the spectrum. So sit down, have a cup of tea, and read on…

Purina One Cat Food Review

What the marketing says

On the Purina website they have some spiel about why you should feed Purina One cat food. The first line is “If you own a cat, you may wonder what the best dry cat food is so you can make sure she’s getting the nutrition she needs.” It’s just a vague statement, and doesn’t necessarily mean Purina One is the best cat food.

Purina One Cat Food Review

They claim their “natural, highly digestible formulas” (ironically with an asterisk * excluding the Urinary Tract Health formula) have real meat as the #1 ingredient. We’ll get to that fallacy in due course, and it doesn’t mean the food has a high meat content. No sirree.

Purina One Healthy Weight Review
Real turkey?

Purina One also has “added vitamins and minerals”, but there’s nothing special about that as all complete and balanced cat foods have to contain essential vitamins and minerals.

For the Healthy Weight formula they boast “Real turkey as the number one ingredient”. It’s such an odd term which springs up quite a bit with pet foods, and it makes me wonder what turkey would be if it wasn’t “real”? Rubber turkey?

Anyway, enough about what the Purina marketing department says, let’s delve into the ingredients…

What the labelling really says

So they boasted about real turkey as the number one ingredient? What they don’t say is six of the top eight ingredients are corn, soy, rice, more corn, more soy, and even more soy. Now that doesn’t sound good for cats as obligate carnivores, does it?

We find 42% protein in the food which sounds good, but 9% fat is low. Given corn is high in protein it makes you wonder how much of that 42% protein is made from less-digestible corn rather than meat? It doesn’t matter that turkey and chicken by-product meal are listed first if possibly all of those aforementioned ingredients are in an equal proportion. It’s possible the two corn inclusions are of equal significance as the meat, and that doesn’t even account for the rice and soybeans.

Visit VetSupply, a Pet Food Judge recommended American retailer.

One of the ingredients of Purina One cat food is natural flavour. What do you think that could be? It’s not very specific…

They’ve added caramel color, as if your cat cares about food colour?

Purina One cat food isn’t sounding good, is it? Is it a food you’ve fed your own cats? If so, let us know in the comments.

:offers:

Where to buy Purina One cat food

:wheretobuy:

Purina One cat food review summary

It’s surprising how popular Purina One is. Is it because it’s cheap? Or is it because of the clever marketing? From an ingredients standpoint it doesn’t seem very good at all given the amount of corn, rice, and soy in a product supposed to be for carnivorous cats.

So that’s it for our Purina One cat food review. Feel free to leave feedback in the comments! Thanks.

Ingredients of Purina One cat food

Ingredients of Purina One Healthy Weight dry cat food as of February 2021:

Turkey, chicken by-product meal, corn gluten meal, soy flour, rice flour, whole grain corn, soy protein isolate, soybean hulls, dried yeast, cellulose, beef fat preserved with mixed-tocopherols, natural flavor, phosphoric acid, calcium carbonate, L-Lysine monohydrochloride, caramel color, salt, dried carrots, dried peas, choline chloride, MINERALS [zinc sulfate, ferrous sulfate, manganese sulfate, copper sulfate, calcium iodate, sodium selenite], taurine, potassium chloride, VITAMINS [Vitamin E supplement, niacin (Vitamin B-3), Vitamin A supplement, calcium pantothenate (Vitamin B-5), thiamine mononitrate (Vitamin B-1), riboflavin supplement (Vitamin B-2), Vitamin B-12 supplement, pyridoxine hydrochloride (Vitamin B-6), folic acid (Vitamin B-9), Vitamin D-3 supplement, biotin (Vitamin B-7), menadione sodium bisulfite complex (Vitamin K)], L-Carnitine. 

Guaranteed analysis of Purina One cat food

Guaranteed analysis of Purina One Healthy Weight dry cat food as of February 2021:

Protein(min) 42%
Fat(min) 9%
Crude Fibre(max) 5%
Carbohydrates *(est) 31%
* May be estimated. Read how to calculate carbohydrates in a pet food.
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