Public ReviewGrade AKibble (Extruded)Manufacturing: Kibble (Extruded)

Farmina

Farmina N&D Pumpkin Wild Boar & Apple Adult Mini

4.5Public ScoreManufacturer-independentPublic-data basedIngredients · nutrition · safety

Key points

Protein source

Premium pick

Fresh-meat led with no plant protein support

Top 3: Wild boar (24%), dehydrated wild boar (22%), pea starch

It clears the protein floor without plant-protein boosting.

This is the kind of structure a premium food should have.

Ingredient guide

Included support ingredients

Nutrient guide
Herring oilSkin and joint support ingredientInulinGut support ingredientFOSGut support ingredientYeast cultureGut support ingredientPsyllium huskGut support ingredientTurmeric/curcuminAntioxidant and joint support ingredientGlucosamineJoint support ingredientChondroitinJoint support ingredientTaurineHeart support ingredientL-carnitineHeart and weight support ingredientOmega-3Skin and joint support ingredientOmega-6Skin and coat support ingredientEPA+DHASkin, joint, and heart support ingredient
Premium

Ingredient grade

A

Grade A

Top ingredient profile

Wild boar (24%)
dehydrated wild boar (22%)
pea starch
Fresh-meat leadNo plant booster
Crude protein30%
Crude protein30%
Crude fat18%
Other 52%

Protein position, fat position, and calorie density position are relative to foods in the same processing type cohort.

biotechProtein position
Higher
query_statsFat position
Higher
local_fire_departmentCalorie density
Higher

This food suits active adult dogs that need stronger muscle-support nutrition.

Protein sits in a higher band, the animal-protein source is comparatively clear, and calorie density is not low. That makes this a stronger fit for active adult dogs than for weight-control priorities.

Nutritional strengths

  • Wild boar protein can be worth reviewing when you are trying to avoid a specific meat protein.
  • The first ingredient is a species-named fresh meat.
  • Crude protein is on the higher side.
  • Top ingredients do not show a prominent FDA-investigated non-hereditary DCM ingredient profile.

What still needs work

  • Refined carbohydrates lose fiber, vitamins, and minerals during processing, and mainly act as starch and energy sources. Because of that, our engine reads ingredient quality more conservatively than it would with whole grains.
  • Calorie density is high, so this is not the best fit when weight reduction matters most.
  • The first ingredient is a species-named fresh meat, but the top profile turns to pea starch by the third slot instead of staying fully animal-led.

Brand context

Brand background availableNo public recall history found

Founded in 1965 in Italy. No recall history was found in the searched public sources for this brand.

Ingredient analysis

The top ingredients give this recipe a strong first protein read, so the ingredient section starts from a favorable position.

restaurantIngredient Quality Analysis

A5.5/6
Ingredient Grade
Premium
1Wild boar (24%)
Fresh Meat · Top
2dehydrated wild boar (22%)
Named Dehydrated Protein · Upper
3pea starch
Refined Carb · Mid

Ingredient Analysis Comments

  • Wild boar (24%) is a named fresh meat ingredient. The animal source is clearly identified. It reads as an top-tier protein source.
  • dehydrated wild boar (22%) is a species-named dehydrated animal protein ingredient. It is distinct from rendered meal and usually supports a denser animal-protein structure. It reads as an upper-tier protein source.
  • pea starch is a refined carbohydrate source. It usually reads as a starch and energy source rather than a protein driver. It reads as an mid-tier carb source.
restaurantIngredient Grade APremium

Full collected ingredient list

50 ingredients
Wild boar (24%)dehydrated wild boar (22%)pea starchchicken fatdried pumpkin (5%)dried whole eggsherring oilpea fiberdried carrotsuncured alfalfa mealinulinfructooligosaccharideyeast extractdried apple (0.5%)dried spinachpsyllium seed husk (0.3%)dried pomegranatedried sweet orangedried blueberrysaltbrewers dried yeastturmeric (0.2%)glucosamine hydrochloridechondroitin sulfatevitamin A supplementvitamin D3 supplementvitamin E supplementascorbic acidniacincalcium pantothenateriboflavinpyridoxine hydrochloridethiamine hydrochloridebiotinfolic acidvitamin B12 supplementcholine chloridebeta-carotenezinc methionine hydroxy analogue chelatemanganese methionine hydroxy analogue chelateferrous glycinecopper methionine hydroxy analogue chelateselenium yeastDL-MethioninetaurineL-Carnitinealoe vera gel concentrategreen tea extractrosemary extractmixed tocopherols (a preservative).
Primary positive ingredients
Support positive ingredients
Neutral ingredients
Caution ingredients
High-caution ingredients

Why did the base review land here?

Ingredient qualityNutrient disclosure levelManufacturing & trust

This review score combines ingredient composition, nutrient disclosure, manufacturing trust, and core nutrient caution signals.

Nutrient disclosure

Partial disclosure

Core guaranteed analysis is usable, but deeper rows still need a more cautious read.

Safety verification

No fails

No major red flag jumps out first, though undisclosed rows still define the limits of this safety read.

Public data trust (ETF)

C1 tier

Detailed nutrition is visible, but not at a product-level traceability standard.

Where it sits in the same processing cohort

Kibble (Extruded) cohortTop tier

Within the Kibble (Extruded) cohort, this recipe sits in the top tier band.

Final word

As a public review, this is a strong candidate to carry forward. The next question is whether it stays this strong for your own dog.

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