This is a specific conversation about Cat food for sensitive stomachs — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Good news that your vet has already ruled out infection — that actually puts you in a really clear position. When a cat has ongoing digestive symptoms with no underlying illness, the most likely culprit is a reaction to a protein they've been eating for a while, and insect protein is an excellent shout because almost no cats have ever been exposed to it before, meaning their immune system has no reason to react to it. Digestive sensitivity in cats is usually food intolerance rather than a true allergy, and limited-ingredient diets built around a novel protein like insect are consistently the most effective fix. What symptoms has your Turkish Angora been showing — vomiting, loose stools, or something else — how long has it been going on, and what are they currently eating?
She's been having loose stools most days for about three months. Sometimes a bit of mucus in them too. She's on a chicken-based wet food right now, been on it for about two years. The vet said she's otherwise healthy, good weight, no parasites, no infection, and specifically mentioned trying an insect-protein limited-ingredient food.
inparticular.ai
That pattern makes complete sense — chronic loose stools with occasional mucus after two years on the same protein is a textbook picture of food intolerance building up over time. Chicken is one of the most common triggers precisely because it's in so many cat foods and cats get sensitised through repeated exposure. Your vet is spot on. What I'd recommend is Yora Cat Wet Food — it's a limited-ingredient wet food built around insect protein (black soldier fly larvae), with a very short ingredient list and no chicken, beef, or fish. It comes in pouches, which makes transitioning easy, and it's widely available on Amazon UK. The novel protein means her immune system is getting a clean slate, and the limited ingredients mean there's almost nothing else in there to react to. Have you already started transitioning her off the chicken food, or are you still on it?
Still on the chicken food. I wasn't sure if I should switch cold turkey or do it gradually.
inparticular.ai
Gradual is definitely the right call, especially with a sensitive stomach — a sudden switch can cause its own bout of loose stools that makes it hard to tell what's working. The standard approach is to mix in about 25% of the new food for a few days, then 50%, then 75%, then fully switch over roughly two weeks. One important thing: for the elimination trial to actually tell you anything useful, she needs to eat nothing but the new food during that period — no treats, no toppers, no sneaking bites of anything else. If the insect protein is going to work, you'd typically expect to see firmer stools within three to four weeks of being fully on it.
That's really helpful. Is Yora easy to find, or is Amazon the best bet?
inparticular.ai
Amazon UK is your most reliable option — they carry it consistently and you can set up a Subscribe & Save order once you know she tolerates it, which keeps the cost down. Some independent pet shops stock Yora but it's patchy, so Amazon is the easiest starting point. I'd suggest buying a small starter quantity first so you're not committed to a large supply before you've confirmed she's getting on with it.