Tuna & Pumpkin Hydration Bowl for Dogs (No-Cook Topper)

Tuna & Pumpkin Hydration Bowl for Dogs (No-Cook Topper)

Can dogs actually have tuna, and is mixing it with pumpkin safe? Yes — in small amounts, and this tuna and pumpkin hydration bowl for dogs is how I use it: as an occasional topper that gets extra water into my terrier mix, Wally, on hot days or after a long hike.

I started making this after Wally went through a stretch of barely touching his water bowl in August. My vet suggested moisture-rich food. This is what I landed on after a few sloppy attempts.

Overhead shot of a dog hydration bowl with tuna and pumpkin

Key Info

Prep: 5–10 minutes

Cook: 0 minutes

Total: 5–10 minutes

Servings: 1 medium dog (1 to 1½ cups)

Calories (approx): 110 per serving

Fat: 2g | Protein: 12g | Carbs: 9g

Difficulty: Easy

Dietary: Pescatarian, grain-optional, gluten-free if rice/oats omitted

Equipment

– Medium mixing bowl
– Fork (for flaking)
– Measuring spoons and cup
– Dog’s serving bowl

If you don’t have a mixing bowl, just build it in the dog’s bowl — liquid first, then everything else.

Pumpkin puree, canned tuna, rice, and assorted chopped vegetables laid out as cooking ingredients.

Ingredients (1 medium dog)

In the order I use them:

– ½–1 cup warm water or unsalted, garlic-free bone broth
– 2–4 tablespoons (30–60g) 100% pure pumpkin puréenot pie filling
– 1–2 tablespoons canned light tuna in water, no salt added, drained well (sub: cooked salmon, cod, or shredded chicken)
– 1–3 tablespoons cooked plain white rice, cooled (optional; sub: cooked oats)
– 1–2 tablespoons finely chopped green beans, carrot, or peas (optional)
– 1–2 teaspoons plain Greek yogurt or kefir (optional)
– Tiny pinch ground ginger (optional)

No salt. No garlic, onion, or seasoned broth. No xylitol. These aren’t negotiable.

Method

1. Whisk the base.

In a bowl, stir 2–4 tablespoons pumpkin purée into ½ cup warm water or broth until smooth with no clumps. Pumpkin straight from the can is dense — it needs the liquid to loosen first, or you end up with orange paste at the bottom of the dog bowl. Ask me how I know.

Whisking pumpkin puree into warm broth in a mixing bowl

2. Flake the tuna small.

Drain the tuna hard, pressing with the fork. Flake it into tiny shreds — no chunks bigger than a pea. Stir into the pumpkin base until evenly dispersed.

Flaked tuna being stirred with a fork into an orange pumpkin base in a bowl.

3. Add bulk if using.

Fold in the cooled rice and finely chopped veggies. Everything goes in cool to lukewarm, never hot. Hot liquid kills the point of a hydration bowl and can burn their mouth.

4. Stir in extras.

Yogurt, a pinch of ginger, or a dog-formulated greens powder. Skip the kitchen-spice rack entirely.

5. Adjust consistency.

Add water a tablespoon at a time until it looks like a loose stew you’d want to lap up — pourable, not gloopy. Wally won’t touch it if it’s too thick.

6. Serve at room temperature.

In summer I chill it 10 minutes; he laps it faster cold.

How Much, How Often

Small dogs: 2–4 tablespoons total, ½–1 tablespoon tuna
Medium dogs: ½–1 cup total, 1–2 tablespoons tuna
Large dogs: 1–1½ cups total, 2–3 tablespoons tuna

Tuna once a week at most. Mercury builds up over time, and even a big dog shouldn’t get more than roughly one standard can per week — and not every week. I rotate with salmon and cod so Wally only sees tuna twice a month.

Crucial Tips

Buy the right cans. Light tuna (skipjack) in water, no salt. Tuna in oil or “flavored” pouches are out.
Pumpkin purée only. Pie filling has sugar and nutmeg. Nutmeg is toxic to dogs.
Introduce slowly. First time, give a tablespoon mixed into regular food. Too much pumpkin too fast causes loose stool.
Storage: airtight in the fridge for up to 2 days. Freeze in ice cube trays for 1–2 months — those cubes are great chew-and-lick treats in summer.
Don’t leave it out past 30–60 minutes. Fish goes off fast at room temp.
Reheating: stir in a splash of warm broth. If you microwave, do 8 seconds, stir, check for hot spots.
This is a topper, not a meal. It doesn’t replace balanced dog food. For daily homemade feeding, talk to a vet nutritionist.

Worthwhile Variations

Lower-mercury swap: cooked salmon or cod instead of tuna. My default now.
Upset-stomach version: pumpkin, broth, and white rice only. No fish until things settle.
Senior dogs: extra liquid, everything mashed soft.
Frozen pup-sicles: blend thinner, pour into silicone molds, freeze.

Frozen pumpkin and tuna pup-sicles in silicone molds for a summer dog treat

The first time I made this I used regular chicken broth from the pantry. Onion powder, third ingredient. I caught it before serving — read every label, every time.

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