Friday, October 22, 2010

Cesar Canine Cuisine Variety Pack (New York Strip, Filet Mignon) for Small Dogs, 3.5-Ounce Trays (Pack of 24)


Cesar Canine Cuisine Variety Pack (New York Strip, Filet Mignon) for Small Dogs, 3.5-Ounce Trays (Pack of 24)
Product By Cesar      (2 customers reviews)
Lowest Price : $23.33 

Technical Details

  • Pack of twenty-four, 3.5-ounce each (total of 84 ounces)
  • Variety pack of five different flavors
  • Product of USA

Product Description

Cesar Canine Cuisine for Small Dogs, 3.5-Ounce Cans (Pack of 24) contains five different flavors gourmet filets for small dogs. These flavors include rib-eye steak, beef tenderloin, prime rib, new york strip, filet mignon.

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Customer Reviews


"Only food my little dog will eat!!" 2010-08-16
By M. Ender
Our little guy, who looks just like the one on the package!! loves this food. He particularly likes these in the 'sauce'. I have tried to switch him to less expensive canned foods over the past 3 years, and he just does not like them nearly as much and in many cases prefers to go hungry then eat Alpo or Purina cans. I put this down on his little plate and it's gone in 2 minutes.

I don't know what the other lady is talking about-- I think she has this food mixed up with the Dog Whisperer's line -- mistake. This is not his line at all. Just a similar name.

Get a subscription for this product and save some money.

  
"Very poor quality; little real meat;" 2010-05-20
By Sarah1989
There is very little meat in this food and there are toxic chemicals.
Various Meat By Products--lower quality than whole meat or meals and harder to digest than actual meat.

Caramel coloring is only necessary when there is not enough meat. Caramel color may be carcinogenic.
"Liquid Top Sirloin flavor" "Grilled chicken flavor"-- Flavoring is only necessary when the product has insufficient meat. Top Sirloin flavoring is made from manure of cattle.

Carageenan causes cancer, including breast cancer. Read an interview with Joanne Tobacman, MD, professor of internal medicine, University of Iowa at [..]

There are no vegetables in this food.

Cesar has repeatedly stated that his entire goal in coming to the United States was to go to Hollywood and be famous. I think that that focus on fame (and money) is apparent in his approach to dog food: Give crummy food nice packaging and an appealing name.

That one's dog will eat it is no advertisement. First, the only thing one really has to do to sell dog food is make it so the dogs will eat it. That the dog will eat it is no measure of the quality or benefit of the food. Dogs eat anything--including manure, which is part of this food as the meat flavoring.

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