Preheat the oven to 160C/325F/Gas Mark 3.Any biscuit cutter will do though – I don’t imagine the dogs will be too fussed about the shapes! Print I use a small biscuit cutter to stamp out these treats – either a little west highland terrier or some bone shaped cutters I got from Amazon. The one thing guaranteed to silence the hounds and command their attention is when I shout out the question “Who would like a treat?!” With a clatter of claws on the kitchen floor, they marshal themselves and obediently sit expectantly waiting for the dog biscuit to be conveyed to mouth. Spaniels are very biddable with training and biscuit rewards, yet prone to flights of fancy and ‘peculiarities’. With such energetic and full-on hounds, we get through a lot of dog treats in our house. If you struggle to wrap your head around that, do not worry… it took me a gin and tonic and a diagram on a piece of paper to wrap my head around it! In a tale straight out of Jeremy Kyle, Obi and Winston are both half-brothers and uncle/nephew… They share the same father, yet Winston’s mother is Obi’s grandmother. Winston trotted along 14 months later as a Good Friday follow-up – and with that, the House Spaniel Pack was complete! Obi followed 18 months later from a small village in Northumberland – bought by me as a complete surprise for my family a few days before Christmas. I have three spaniels – Basil, Obi and Winston.īasil arrived first – collected from a house near the big Sainsbury’s in Sunderland. All of the ingredients come from the kitchen so human and hound can happily share a biscuit – if you are so inclined to do so! Good quality dog treats can prove to be quite expensive – especially when you have multiple animals – so I developed this cheap and simple recipe to make my own.
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