Label analysisGrade CKibble (Extruded)

Go! Solutions

Go! Solutions Digestion + Gut Health Salmon Recipe with Ancient Grains

Editor ingredient insight

Go! Solutions Digestion + Gut Health Salmon leads with salmon meal, then uses oatmeal, rye, oats, millet, psyllium, chicory, yeast ingredients, and probiotics. At 24% protein, 12% fat, 3,947 kcal/kg, 0.1% taurine, and 1.2% omega-3, I would use it for digestion-focused feeding with grains, not for grain/yeast avoidance or strict salmon-only elimination diets.

Logic-based verdict

This food is worth considering when budget per kilogram matters alongside baseline nutrition.

Manufacturer-independentPublic-data basedIngredients · nutrition · safety

Protein source

Ingredient guide

Named meal/dehydrated animal protein led

Animal protein

salmon meal (#1), de-boned salmon (#7)

Named dry animal protein gives a relatively clear protein source.

It can be clearer for actual protein contribution than a flashy fresh-meat label.

Included support ingredients

Nutrient guide

Psyllium husk

Gut support ingredient

Cranberry

Urinary support ingredient

Yeast culture

Gut support ingredient

Chicory

Gut support ingredient

Probiotics

Gut support ingredient

Taurine

Heart support ingredient

Yucca extract

Stool odor support ingredient

Omega-3

Skin and joint support ingredient

Omega-6

Skin and coat support ingredient

Needs context

Ingredient grade

C

Grade C

Top ingredient profile

salmon meal
oatmeal
rye
Meal-basedNo plant booster
Crude protein24%
Crude protein24%
Crude fat12%
Other 64%

Calcium

1.2%

Phosphorus

1%

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

biotechProtein position
Typical
query_statsFat position
Typical
local_fire_departmentCalorie density
Higher

This is not a premium ingredient story first, but the baseline nutrition is still comparable and the price per kilogram stays easier on budget.

Nutritional strengths

  • A fish-protein lead can be worth reviewing when you are trying to avoid a specific land-meat protein.
  • A species-named meal keeps protein levels stable through a practical rendered-protein approach.
  • Top ingredients do not show a prominent FDA-investigated non-hereditary DCM ingredient profile.

What still needs work

  • Phosphorus is 1% on the label, at or above 1%. Senior dogs or dogs with kidney concerns should have phosphorus restriction reviewed with a veterinarian before using it as a staple food.
  • Calorie density is high, so this is not the best fit when weight reduction matters most.
  • The recipe leans on named rendered meal ingredients, so palatability and digestibility can feel weaker than a fresh-meat-led recipe.

Alternative foods

Smart salmon alternatives

Exact protein-type matches come first, then close protein-family matches fill the comparison.

65 alternativesKibble (Extruded) · protein type/family cohort

Brand context

Brand background availableRecall mention not confirmed

Founded in 1999 in Canada. There are recall or withdrawal mentions, but they are not confirmed enough to treat as established history.

Ingredient analysis

The top ingredients are still usable, but this is the part to inspect more carefully before calling the recipe a clear strength.

restaurantIngredient Quality Analysis

C3/6
Ingredient Grade
Mixed
1salmon meal
Named Meal · Upper
2oatmeal
Whole Grain · Upper
3rye
Whole Grain · Upper

Ingredient Analysis Comments

  • salmon meal is a species-named animal meal ingredient. It is rendered rather than fresh, but the species source is still clearly identified. It reads as an upper-tier protein source.
  • oatmeal is a whole or coarse grain ingredient. It usually plays more of a carbohydrate and fiber role than a core protein role. It reads as an upper-tier carb and fiber source.
  • rye is a whole or coarse grain ingredient. It usually plays more of a carbohydrate and fiber role than a core protein role. It reads as an upper-tier carb and fiber source.
restaurantIngredient Grade CMixed

Full collected ingredient list

33 ingredients
salmon mealoatmealryewhole oatsmilletcanola oil (preserved with mixed tocopherols)de-boned salmonflaxseednatural flavortomatomonocalcium phosphatepsyllium huskquinoaapplescarrotscranberriessaltpotassium chloridecalcium carbonateyeast extracthydrolyzed yeastbrewer's dried yeastdried chicory rootground grain sorghumcholine chloridevitamins (vitamin E supplement, L-ascorbyl-2-polyphosphate (a source of vitamin C), niacin, d-calcium pantothenate, vitamin A supplement, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, beta-carotene, vitamin B12 supplement, biotin, pyridoxine hydrochloride, vitamin D3 supplement, folic acid)minerals (ferrous sulfate, zinc proteinate, iron proteinate, selenium yeast, zinc oxide, copper sulfate, manganese proteinate, copper proteinate, manganous oxide, calcium iodate)dried Bacillus coagulans fermentation producttaurineL-lysineDL-methionineyucca schidigera extractdried rosemary
Primary positive ingredients
Support positive ingredients
Alternative protein
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.

Final word

There is enough here to keep the food in comparison, but not enough to stop comparing yet.

Back to all foods