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 13-year-old Siamese who's vocal and food-obsessed — that's a very specific kind of challenge, because Siamese cats are famously persistent and they will absolutely guilt-trip you into overfeeding if you let them. The good news is that cats respond strongly to scent and texture, not volume, so the right treat can feel very satisfying to them even in tiny amounts. The best options for a senior cat watching their weight are high-protein, strongly flavoured, and low in calories per piece — ideally under 2 kcal each. Does your cat have any health conditions beyond the weight concern, like kidney issues or dental problems? And are you using treats mainly to manage her pestering, or is there a training or enrichment angle too?
It's mostly just to keep her happy and stop the yowling honestly. She had a vet check recently and everything came back fine apart from being told to watch her weight. No kidney issues or anything like that.
inparticular.ai
That's a good position to be in — healthy apart from the weight, which means you have real flexibility. For a food-obsessed cat like this, the trick is finding something so flavourful that a very small amount genuinely satisfies the urge. What does she currently get as treats, and roughly how many times a day is she demanding them?
She gets Dreamies at the moment, probably more than she should — maybe ten or fifteen pieces across the day because it's hard to say no. She goes absolutely mad for them.
inparticular.ai
Dreamies are genuinely tasty to cats, but the standard ones are quite calorie-dense and it's very easy to overshoot — fifteen pieces a day adds up faster than it looks. The format I'd switch her to is Dreamies Creamy Snacks, which are the squeezable lickable tubes. Each tube is around 7–8 calories total, but because she's licking rather than crunching through solid pieces, it takes longer and feels more interactive. You can squeeze out a small amount, let her work at it, and she's getting the sensory hit and the interaction without the calorie load of a handful of crunchy treats. For a Siamese who's driven by attention and food equally, the engagement factor is actually part of the appeal — it turns treat time into a small event. One tube split across a couple of sessions in the day keeps her well within a sensible calorie budget. You'll still get the yowling, but you'll have a satisfying answer for it that isn't slowly adding to her waistline.
That actually makes a lot of sense. I hadn't thought about the licking being slower and more engaging. Does the flavour hold up compared to the crunchy ones she's addicted to?
inparticular.ai
Yes — the flavour intensity in the creamy tubes is high, often more so than the crunchy version because the moisture carries scent better, and cats are almost entirely driven by smell when it comes to food appeal. Most cats who love standard Dreamies take to the creamy ones very readily. The chicken flavour tends to get the strongest response, though the salmon is close. Given she's already a Dreamies convert, the transition should be smooth — you're not asking her to accept something unfamiliar, just a different delivery. Look for Dreamies Creamy Snacks on Amazon UK; they come in multipacks which work out cheaper per tube and mean you always have them to hand when she starts campaigning.
Perfect, I'll order those. Thanks — this is really helpful.