Fresh meat is an unrendered animal ingredient with high moisture and strong palatability. On labels, ingredients like deboned chicken can appear especially impressive because listing order reflects weight before cooking. The key limitation is that much of that weight is water, so the real dry-matter protein contribution drops sharply after processing.
| Definition | Unrendered deboned animal tissue |
| Moisture | About 60-75% |
| Protein (as fed) | About 18-22% |
| Protein (dry matter) | About 55-70% |
| Digestibility | Very high |
| Debate Level | Moderate |
Fresh meat improves palatability and digestibility, but dry-food labels still need careful interpretation. A combination of fresh meat and concentrated animal ingredients is often better than relying on moisture-heavy label impact alone.
The Water Weight Illusion
Critical Label Point
Ingredient order reflects weight at mixing, not after cooking. Because fresh meat contains a lot of water, it can appear first on the label even when a lower-listed meat meal contributes more actual protein after extrusion.
Fresh Meat vs. Meat Meal
| Feature | Fresh Meat | Meat Meal |
|---|---|---|
| Water | High | Low |
| Protein density | Lower after cooking | Higher and concentrated |
| Digestibility | Usually excellent | Good to very good |
| Palatability | Very high | Moderate to high |
| Label impact | Can be dominated by water weight | Reflects dry contribution better |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a food with fresh meat first on the label always better?
Not always. Fresh meat can be positive, but total protein structure after moisture loss matters more than headline label order. Balanced formulas often combine fresh meat with concentrated animal ingredients.
What is dehydrated meat?
Dehydrated meat is meat that has been dried before inclusion. Because much of the water is already removed, its label position usually reflects real protein contribution more accurately.
Related VetKriter Tools
References
- AAFCO. (2024). Official Publication. Ingredient definitions and labeling rules.
- NRC. (2006). Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats. National Academies Press.