This is a specific conversation about Cat food — getting it right — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Good news that your vet flagged taurine early — Maine Coons are genetically predisposed to dilated cardiomyopathy, and taurine deficiency is a known contributing factor, so this is exactly the right thing to address. The key is finding foods where the taurine comes from whole animal protein sources, particularly heart meat, rather than synthetic supplementation alone. Before I point you toward something specific, a couple of quick questions: is your Maine Coon currently on wet food, dry, or a mix? And are there any other health considerations — kidney function, weight, digestive sensitivity — that your vet mentioned alongside the taurine advice?
He's on a mix at the moment, mostly dry with some wet as a treat. No other health issues flagged, just the taurine thing. He's a big boy, about 7kg, and pretty active still.
inparticular.ai
Right, so the first thing I'd shift is the ratio — dry food is almost always lower in bioavailable taurine and, more importantly, it's not great for hydration in a six-year-old Maine Coon. At his age and size, kidney health should be on your radar alongside the cardiac stuff. Moving to predominantly wet food addresses both. Now, for taurine specifically: you want foods with named heart or organ meat high in the ingredient list, because heart muscle is the single richest natural source of taurine. Does he have any texture preferences — pâté, chunks in gravy, shredded? That'll help me narrow it down.
He seems to prefer chunks or pieces rather than smooth pâté. Not fussy about gravy versus jelly.
inparticular.ai
Perfect — that makes this straightforward. I'd go with Animonda Carny Adult, specifically the varieties that include beef heart or chicken heart. It's a German brand, widely available on Amazon UK, and it consistently lists heart meat as a primary ingredient rather than a trace addition. The protein content is high, the carbohydrate load is minimal, and it's produced without cereals or sugar — which matters for a large, muscular cat like a Maine Coon who doesn't need empty calories. You'd want to look at the multipack that includes the heart-based varieties rather than the fish-only selection. Feed it as his main meal and keep the dry food as a small supplement if he needs the crunch, but flip the ratio so wet is 80% or more of his diet. That change alone will make a meaningful difference to both his taurine intake and his hydration.
That sounds sensible. Should I be checking taurine levels are actually listed on the packaging, or is it enough to just look for heart meat in the ingredients?
inparticular.ai
Honest answer: most wet food manufacturers don't declare taurine content on the label unless they've added it synthetically, so you won't usually see a number. What you're looking for is heart meat — beef heart, chicken heart, turkey heart — in the first three or four ingredients. That's your reliable signal. Taurine is found in all animal muscle meat, but heart contains roughly three to five times more than standard skeletal muscle. If a food lists heart prominently and has a high overall meat percentage (Animonda Carny typically runs above 70%), you're in good territory. Your vet can recheck taurine levels via bloodwork after a few months on the new diet, which is the cleanest way to confirm it's working.
Great, really helpful. I'll order the Animonda Carny with the heart varieties and book a follow-up with the vet. Thanks.
inparticular.ai
That's exactly the right plan. When you order, the Animonda Carny multipack on Amazon UK usually includes beef heart and poultry heart options — just double-check the variety listing before you add to cart. Give it four to six weeks before the vet recheck so his body has time to respond. Maine Coons are robust cats when they're fed well, and catching this at six rather than eight or nine is a real advantage. Good luck with him.