Fish and sweet potato bowl for dogs: a simple recipe
A light, omega-rich bowl you can cook at home — white fish, sweet potato and green veg, with the balance and safety notes that matter.
Fish and sweet potato is a light, easy-to-digest bowl you can cook at home — a recipe to make, not a meal plan. White fish gives lean protein and omega-3 fats that are good for skin and coat, sweet potato adds gentle carbohydrate and fiber, and a little green veg rounds it out.
Like any home-cooked bowl, the appeal is control — you choose every ingredient, so there's nothing in there you can't pronounce. It's a nice change of protein for dogs who do well on fish, and a gentle option for a sensitive tummy.
Use boneless, skinless white fish (such as cod or pollock) and cook it thoroughly — never raw, and check carefully for bones. Cook everything plain: no onion, garlic, salt, oil or seasoning.
Why fish
White fish is lean and easy to digest, and a fish-oil finish adds omega-3s that support skin, coat and joints. Fish is also a useful alternative protein for dogs who don't do well with chicken or beef. Variety is fine, but keep it plain and fully cooked.
Lean, gentle and omega-rich — fish and sweet potato is an easy bowl for skin and coat.
How much your dog needs depends on their size, age and activity, so treat the yield below as a starting point and adjust to your dog (the NatBuddy app works the portion out per pet).
Vet-informed and informational only. This is a good occasional meal or a short gentle-diet option, but a single home-cooked recipe isn't automatically complete and balanced as the only diet long-term — for that, pair it with a diet formulated by your vet or a veterinary nutritionist. Check every piece of fish for bones, introduce new food gradually, and check with your vet first if your dog has a health condition.
Want this portioned to your dog?
Portioned to your dog's exact weight, scored for nutrition, and saved to their day — that part lives in the app. Tap Cook for your dog to scale it, then Save to their day to log it.
Sources
Guidance on this page is grounded in established veterinary-nutrition and animal-health authorities.
Keep reading
Informational only — not a substitute for veterinary advice. Recipes here are vet-informed and use no ingredients known to be toxic to dogs, but every dog is different. Consult your vet before changing your dog's diet.
