This is a specific conversation about Wet vs dry cat food — the honest answer — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Raw feeding a Savannah is ambitious — it's genuinely one of the more demanding routes, and the complexity catches a lot of people out even when they go in with the best intentions. Honestly, a quality wet food can get you most of the way there without the prep, the sourcing stress, or the cost spiral. Wet food wins over dry for cats full stop — better hydration, more satiating, closer to what they'd actually eat. Before I point you somewhere specific: how old is your Savannah, any health issues I should know about, and are you currently feeding anything in the meantime?
She's 4, completely healthy, very active — she's a Savannah so she's big and energetic. I've just been giving her some dry food while I figure this out but I know it's not ideal. I want something high-protein and as close to raw as possible without the hassle.
inparticular.ai
Good — 4 years old, healthy, active, and a Savannah means she needs high protein and decent calories. The dry food is fine as a stopgap but you're right to move on from it as the main diet. What I'd steer you toward is Bozita Cat Chunks in Jelly — specifically the beef or chicken varieties. It's a Swedish brand, genuinely high meat content, no grain, no added sugar, and the ingredient list is clean in a way most supermarket wet foods aren't. It comes in tetrapak cartons which stay fresh well and work out reasonable per serving. It won't replicate a whole prey raw diet exactly, but for a healthy adult cat it covers the hydration, protein density, and digestibility you were chasing with raw. Can I ask — are you happy to do two meals a day, or are you looking for something she can graze on?
Two meals a day is fine, I'm home a lot. Would I need to add anything to it, or is it complete?
inparticular.ai
Bozita is a complementary food, not a complete — which is worth knowing upfront. That means it's not formulated to cover every micronutrient on its own. In practice, most people either rotate it with a complete wet food, or pair it with a small amount of a quality complete dry as a top-up. Given you want to move away from dry as the main event, I'd suggest rotating Bozita with something like Almo Nature HFC — that one is complete, single protein, very clean, and Savannah cats tend to do well on it. You'd use Bozita as the bulk of her diet and Almo Nature a few times a week to keep the nutritional bases covered. Simple, no supplements, no prep. Does that kind of rotation feel manageable?
Yes, that sounds really doable actually. Where do I get Bozita — I've never seen it in shops?
inparticular.ai
It's not in most high street shops, but it's on Amazon UK with reliable stock — search Bozita Cat Chunks in Jelly and you'll find multipack options that bring the per-tin cost down. Almo Nature HFC is also on Amazon UK and worth buying in bulk when you see it on offer. Both are significantly cheaper per meal than raw once you factor in the sourcing and prep time you were putting into that. For a cat her size I'd expect her to get through roughly one 370g Bozita carton per day across two meals — maybe slightly more given her build. Start there and adjust based on her weight over a few weeks.
That's really helpful. I feel like I was overcomplicating it massively. Thank you.
inparticular.ai
You were — but you were overcomplicating it for the right reasons, which matters. Raw feeding works brilliantly for some people and is a genuine headache for others, and there's no shame in landing on a cleaner, simpler system that you'll actually stick to. Bozita plus Almo Nature on rotation is a genuinely good diet for a healthy Savannah. She'll likely do very well on it.