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This thread is to discuss whether feeding cold, or even frozen, foods are a problem.
The answer is yes and no depending on the specifics of the situation.
Regarding the direct question about whether you can "cause" your pet to bloat from feeding frozen food, the answer is that there is no direct evidence for this.
However, the full answer is that there are 2 excellent reasons not to do this.
The first is a universal problem with eating or drinking icy food. It always requires your pets' bodies to use more energy than eating room temp food.
This is especially important if you have an older pet or one who is trying to heal as this energy could fuel organ function and immunity.
The second reason is not related to physical energy, Rather, it is the non-physical energetic qualities of foods. These are best understood by vets and MDS who practice using ancient medical systems like Ayurveda and Traditional Chinese Medicine.
They advise against feeding icy food because it slows digestion and healing. This advice predated the discovery of energy and is based on individuality and the energetic nature of food.
This can be confusing since it is not a current conventional concept. World-renowned Ayurvedic MD Vasant Lad explains this thoroughly in the excerpt and article below:
This post is not as straightforward as I meant it to be, but the bottom line is that it's usually best to let your pet food come to room temp before feeding it.
I bet one of the other vets or another forum member can help clarify.
The answer is yes and no depending on the specifics of the situation.
Regarding the direct question about whether you can "cause" your pet to bloat from feeding frozen food, the answer is that there is no direct evidence for this.
However, the full answer is that there are 2 excellent reasons not to do this.
The first is a universal problem with eating or drinking icy food. It always requires your pets' bodies to use more energy than eating room temp food.
This is especially important if you have an older pet or one who is trying to heal as this energy could fuel organ function and immunity.
The second reason is not related to physical energy, Rather, it is the non-physical energetic qualities of foods. These are best understood by vets and MDS who practice using ancient medical systems like Ayurveda and Traditional Chinese Medicine.
They advise against feeding icy food because it slows digestion and healing. This advice predated the discovery of energy and is based on individuality and the energetic nature of food.
This can be confusing since it is not a current conventional concept. World-renowned Ayurvedic MD Vasant Lad explains this thoroughly in the excerpt and article below:
Ayurveda, an ancient holistic science of healing, offers a logical approach for determining correct diet based upon the elements comprising an individual’s constitution: vata, pitta and kapha. This approach is quite different from the contemporary view of a balanced diet, based on eating from various food groups. Ayurveda believes that understanding the individual is the key to finding a truly balanced diet. It teaches that the gastric fire or agni in the stomach and digestive tract is the main gate through which nutrients enter the tissues and then pass along to individual cells, to maintain the life functions.
Incompatible Food Combining
www.ayurveda.com
This post is not as straightforward as I meant it to be, but the bottom line is that it's usually best to let your pet food come to room temp before feeding it.
I bet one of the other vets or another forum member can help clarify.