This is a specific conversation about Cat treats — what cats actually like — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A flat-faced Persian kitten is a joy, but brachycephalic cats genuinely need more care around treats than most people realise — their compressed airways mean anything large, hard, or crumbly can cause them to gulp air or struggle to chew safely, especially at three months old when they're still tiny. Cats in general do best with high-protein, strongly-scented treats and tend to reject anything sweet or grain-heavy, so you're already on the right track thinking about this early. Before I point you somewhere specific — is this for the occasional reward, or are you planning to use treats regularly for training or handling practice? And does your kitten have any known dietary sensitivities?
Mainly just for bonding and the occasional reward. No known allergies yet, she's only been with us three weeks. I just want something she can eat without making those horrible snorting sounds or choking.
inparticular.ai
That makes total sense — the snorting and gulping you're describing is really common in Persians when treats are too big or too dry and they have to work hard to break them down. What you want is something very small, soft enough to dissolve quickly, and single-ingredient so there's no junk slowing things down. Can I ask — how big is she roughly? Persian kittens at three months vary quite a bit, and if she's on the smaller side I'd want to make sure the pieces are genuinely tiny rather than just marketed as small.
She's pretty small, maybe 700 grams? The vet said she's healthy but petite.
inparticular.ai
At 700 grams she's very small, so you want treats that are almost more of a soft flake than a chunk — something she can lick off your finger or pick up without having to bite down hard. My recommendation is Thrive Premium Freeze-Dried Chicken Cat Treats. They're 100% chicken breast, no additives, and the freeze-drying process gives them a texture that softens almost instantly when it touches saliva — so there's no prolonged chewing, no hard edges, and very little risk of her gulping air to get them down. The pieces are naturally small and light, which is ideal for a flat-faced kitten. They're also highly palatable because chicken scent is very strong, so even fussy Persians tend to respond well. You can crumble them even smaller between your fingers if you want to be extra cautious while she's this young.
That sounds perfect actually. Are they safe to give every day?
inparticular.ai
Yes, in small amounts they're fine daily — the single-ingredient formula means you're not loading her up with salt, sugar, or fillers. At her age and size I'd keep it to two or three pieces per session, maybe once a day, just so treats stay a meaningful reward and don't displace her kitten food calories. Thrive are quite calorie-dense for their size because they're pure protein, so a little genuinely goes a long way. As she grows and her airways develop more fully you'll have more flexibility, but this approach is exactly right for now.
Brilliant, I'll order those. Thank you — I wasn't sure anyone would understand why I was so worried about something as simple as a treat.
inparticular.ai
It's not simple at all with a brachycephalic kitten — you're asking exactly the right question. The fact that you're thinking about this at three weeks in means she's in very good hands. Thrive Freeze-Dried Chicken is the one to go for, and crumbling them down a little for now is a good habit until she's a bit bigger. Enjoy the bonding time with her.