TUNA
BROWNIES (A great, healthy training treat)
2 cans of tuna, packed in water (6 oz.), drained
2 eggs
1 tsp garlic powder
1-1/2 cups of flour (preferably unbleached, extra points for organic)
more if needed to make a stiff dough
Mix together
well. Press or roll on a cookie sheet to about 1/4" thick.
Bake at 250 degrees for 30 minutes. Cut into 1/4" cubes and refrigerate
or freeze.
SALMON
BROWNIES
Cook up 1 C
rice & 1 C barley (or 2 C rice if you don't have barley)
Once the grain is cooked, mix together with:
1 (12-16 oz) can of salmon (water drained off)
3 carrots (grated finely)
1 apple (grated finely)
1-4 cloves raw garlic (pressed or grated)
2 pounds zucchini (grated finely)
1 pound pumpkin or yams (canned type or raw grated)
1/2 Cup raw fresh or frozen chopped spinach, kale, or swiss chard
2 eggs
1 tsp molasses (optional)
1 T. dried parsley (or a handful of chopped fresh)
1/4 tsp. celery seeds
1/2 tsp. dried oregano and/or basil
(Mixture will be sloppy at this point)
Blend in enough whole wheat flour (about 2 C) that dough is soft but
not wet.
Spread dough
about a quarter-inch thick on baking sheets, using your hands or the
back of a large spoon. (Use non-stick pans or spray pans with non-stick
cooking oil.)
Bake at 325
degrees for 25 minutes, then remove from oven and score into 2-inch
squares with pizza cutter.
Return to oven
and bake for 40 to 50 minutes more, or until edges and underside are
light brown.)
Remove from oven, lift away from pans with spatula, then let cool to
room temperature and separate the brownies. These treats will be moist
and chewy.
(If you want crunchy treats, return brownies to oven at 200 degrees
for about an hour after they've initially cooled. Check often to get
desired texture.)
Once
cooked, keep brownies refrigerated. They'll keep fresh about a week
this way. Brownies also can be frozen for later use.
The
raw dough freezes well too. Portion it into plastic zip bags in convenient
amounts and freeze flat. Thaw overnite in fridge and bake as above.