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
A Burmese show cat with coat condition as the priority — that's a great starting point, because diet genuinely does most of the heavy lifting here. Cats are obligate carnivores, and their skin and coat are highly sensitive to protein quality and fat profile. Many commercial foods fall short on both, and dry food compounds the problem by leaving cats in a low-grade state of dehydration, which dulls the coat over time. Wet food is almost always the right foundation. To point you in the right direction: is your Burmese male or female, and are they neutered? Any health issues or sensitivities I should know about? And what are you feeding them at the moment?
She's a three-year-old female, spayed, no health issues at all. Currently on a mix of dry kibble in the morning and a mid-range wet food in the evening — something like Whiskas pouches. I show her regularly and I want that coat to really shine. No budget constraints, I just want what actually works.
inparticular.ai
Good — no health complications makes this straightforward. The Whiskas pouches are the weak link. They're heavily cereal-padded, low on quality animal protein, and the fat profile won't give you the omega-3 to omega-6 ratio you need for a truly lustrous coat. The dry kibble in the morning isn't helping either; Burmese are prone to kidney issues later in life and keeping hydration high now is worth doing. What you want is a high-meat-content wet food with named animal fats, ideally with added fish oil or a naturally oily fish ingredient. Can I ask — is she a fussy eater, or will she take most things?
She's not fussy at all, eats pretty much anything. I'd be happy to go fully wet if that's better.
inparticular.ai
Then go fully wet — it's the right call. My recommendation is Animonda Carny Adult. It's a German brand, widely available on Amazon UK, and it's one of the few mainstream wet foods with genuinely high named-meat content — typically 70% or more animal ingredients, no cereals, and real animal fats that directly support skin and coat health. The texture is chunky rather than pâté, which most cats find more appealing long-term. For coat condition specifically, I'd pair it with a pure salmon or sardine variety two or three times a week — Animonda do these within the same range — because the natural fish oils make a visible difference to coat sheen within six to eight weeks. Drop the morning kibble entirely and split the daily wet portion into two meals instead. You'll notice the difference before your next show.
That sounds really promising. Should I be adding any supplements on top, or is the food enough?
inparticular.ai
If you're feeding the fish varieties regularly within the Carny range, the food alone should be sufficient — you're getting natural EPA and DHA from the fish, which is better absorbed than most supplement forms. The only thing I'd consider adding is a small amount of cold-pressed salmon oil drizzled over her food a few times a week if you want to be thorough about it — just a half teaspoon. But honestly, the biggest gains will come from removing the cereal-heavy food and the kibble. Get the foundation right first and give it eight weeks before you decide whether anything extra is needed.
Brilliant, really helpful. I'll order the Animonda Carny and switch her over gradually. Thank you.
inparticular.ai
Good plan — transition over about ten days to avoid any digestive upset, increasing the new food proportion gradually. Once she's fully switched, you're looking at six to eight weeks for the coat to reflect the dietary change, so time it before a show if you can. Good luck with her — a well-fed Burmese in show condition is a genuinely beautiful thing.