
Dawg Food is a young company, and looking at the packaging of its signature, self-titled product, you may be thinking it’s actual dog food, then knowing it’s for people and reading the macros on the front, you’re probably thinking mass gainer. The product comes in resealable pouches and, as highlighted on the front of its bag, it comes with 45 to 50g of protein per serving, 10g of nutritious carbohydrates, and calories of 307 or 322.
The catch with Dawg Food is that inside it is neither dog food nor a mass gainer, although technically, in the marketing words of the brand itself, it is food for the “Dawg in you”. The product is a big bag of fully cooked real food for you to dish out with other foods or have standalone. There are two options: Beef, a mix of carrots, sweet potato, sweet corn, peas, and green beans, and Chicken, which is the same, but with chicken.

Dawg Food’s real food innovation is kind of a fine line between a protein powder or meal replacement and meal prep, where it is mostly prepared and ready to eat, but it comes in a bulk bag to serve and supplement other food when needed. You get plenty of food in every bag, too, as they weigh 7lbs, regardless of whether you go with the beef or chicken option, working out to 14 servings if you want the macros on the front.
You can grab the large 7lb bags of Dawg Food’s real food for dawgs, or humans, however you want to take it, straight from its online store. The price is pretty reasonable for the amount of clean, cooked food you get at $74.99 for the Chicken Dawg Food and $78.99 for the Beef Dawg Food. There are also two-pack bundles that get you a solid 10% discount, and you can get two of the same meat base or a variety with one of each.