My Homemade Venison & Pumpkin Grain-Free Recipe for Dogs

If you’ve been staring at a bag of expensive grain-free venison and pumpkin kibble wondering whether you could just make something similar at home for your dog, yes — you can, and this is the recipe I land on every time my freezer has ground venison in it.

I started making this after my older lab mix, Roo, kept getting loose stools on chicken-based kibble. My vet suggested a novel protein and added fiber. Venison and pumpkin checked both boxes, and the homemade version costs me less than the boutique cans.

Rustic wooden table with ground venison, pumpkin, sweet potato, carrots, eggs, and fish oil arranged as ingredients for homemade dog food

Key Info

Prep time: 15 minutes
Cook time: 25 minutes
Total time: 40 minutes
Servings: ~8 cups (4–5 days for a 50 lb dog)
Calories per cup: ~310 kcal
Fat: 14 g | Protein: 28 g | Carbs: 18 g
Difficulty: Easy
Dietary tags: Grain-free, gluten-free, no peas, no legumes

Equipment

– Large skillet or Dutch oven (any heavy-bottomed pot works)
– Wooden spoon
– Kitchen scale or measuring cups
– Airtight storage containers
– Can opener (if using canned pumpkin)

Large cast iron skillet of browned ground venison being stirred with a wooden spoon on the stovetop, steam rising

Ingredients

In order of use:

900 g (2 lb) ground venison — 85/15 lean if you can get it
1 tbsp (15 ml) fish oil — added off heat to protect the omega-3s
300 g (about 2 cups) sweet potato, peeled and small-diced
240 g (1 cup) plain canned pumpkin — not pie filling, just pumpkin
120 g (1 cup) shredded carrot
2 large eggs, shells included if you grind them (calcium boost)
1 tsp ground turmeric
1/2 tsp powdered eggshell or 1 tsp bone mealnon-negotiable for calcium
240 ml (1 cup) water or unsalted bone broth

Skip onions, garlic, grapes, xylitol, and added salt. Those are the lines you don’t cross.

Simmering Dutch oven with diced sweet potato, shredded carrot, and venison in golden turmeric broth with lid tilted open

Method

1. Heat the skillet over medium heat for two minutes. No oil — the venison renders enough on its own.

2. Add the venison and break it apart with the spoon. Cook 8–10 minutes, until no pink remains and the meat is uniformly brown with the fat just starting to pool.

3. Add the diced sweet potato, carrot, water, and turmeric. Stir, cover, and simmer 12–15 minutes, until the sweet potato pieces crush easily against the side of the pot with light pressure.

4. Stir in the pumpkin and the eggshell/bone meal. Crack in the eggs and stir constantly for 2 minutes — you want the eggs cooked through but folded into the mixture, not scrambled in chunks.

5. Pull the pot off the heat. Wait until it stops steaming hard (about 5 minutes), then stir in the fish oil. Adding it hot destroys the good fats — I learned that the hard way after spending money on a fancy bottle for nothing.

6. Cool to room temperature before portioning. The mix should look glossy, hold its shape on a spoon, and smell faintly sweet from the pumpkin and carrot.

Glossy venison and pumpkin dog food mixture in a ceramic bowl beside silicone muffin tray portions ready for freezing

Feeding Amounts

Rough starting point, adjust based on your dog’s weight and activity:

10 lb dog: ~3/4 cup per day
30 lb dog: ~1 3/4 cups per day
50 lb dog: ~2 1/2 cups per day
75 lb dog: ~3 1/2 cups per day

Split across two meals. Watch your dog’s waist and ribs after two weeks and adjust.

Crucial Tips

Transition slowly. Mix 25% homemade with 75% current food for three days, then 50/50 for three, then 75/25. Rushing this is the fastest way to undo any digestive benefit.

Calcium matters. Ground meat alone is phosphorus-heavy. The eggshell or bone meal balances it. Don’t skip it if you’re feeding this as a main meal long-term.

Storage: 4 days in the fridge, 2 months in the freezer. I portion into silicone muffin trays, freeze, then bag the pucks.

Talk to your vet before this becomes your dog’s only food. Mine had me add a canine multivitamin once we went past occasional feeding into daily rotation.

Variations I’ve tried: Swapping half the sweet potato for diced apple works well (skin on, no core, no seeds). Ground turkey subs in fine if venison is out of season or too pricey.

Common mistake: Using pumpkin pie filling. Read the can. The spiced stuff has sugar and nutmeg, and nutmeg is toxic to dogs in any real quantity.

Happy Labrador mix eating a homemade venison and pumpkin meal from a stainless steel bowl on a warm-lit kitchen floor

Roo’s stools firmed up inside a week on this. That’s the only review that matters to me.

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