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Frequently asked questions
General
Dogs That Cook is a character-driven food blog hosted by two Jack Russell Terriers: Leeloo and Bobby.
It’s funny.
It’s functional.
And the recipes actually work.
This is not a pet account pretending to be a food blog. It’s also not a traditional food blog pretending to be funny. It lives somewhere delightfully in between—a culinary experience with personality, opinions, and occasional chaos.
If you landed here via Pinterest, Google, or a shared recipe, you’ll find exactly what you came for:
A clean, legit recipe
No drawn-out origin stories
No condescending walls of text
No scrolling through a novel to get to the ingredients
We respect your time.
But if you linger a little longer, you’ll discover the site is hosted by two dogs. One is a competent chef. One is chaos. And somehow, the recipes still turn out great.
Yes. Very much so.
If you met us through a reel, meme, or short video, you probably met the dogs first. They’ll make you laugh. You might stay for the antics.
Then—surprise—you’ll realize they run an actual food blog with real recipes that real humans cook successfully.
If you love the dogs, you may follow them back to the blog… and possibly into a kitchen towel, apron, or coffee mug along the way.
No.
Dogs That Cook is not a pet page, though pets are involved. It’s also not just a comedy channel, and it’s not a typical food blog either.
It’s a character-led culinary project—funny, functional, and full of flavor—hosted by two very opinionated terriers who happen to be better cooks than most humans.
Great question—and an important one.
Dogs That Cook is a human food blog first. Most recipes on this site are intended for people and should not be shared with dogs.
Occasionally, we do share simple, human-grade recipes made specifically for dogs, usually based on food we prepare for our own dogs at home.
To keep things crystal clear, all recipes are clearly tagged as one of the following:
FOR HUMANS
Recipes intended for people. Not for dogs.
FOR DOGS
Human-grade recipes made specifically for canine consumption.
Even if a recipe could be shared or seems dog-friendly, we err on the side of caution and still label it for humans unless it was explicitly designed for dogs.
We take that seriously!
Dogs That Cook maintains an educational reference page linking to trusted sources—such as the American Kennel Club—that explain which foods are unsafe or harmful to dogs.
Safety, clarity, and transparency matter just as much as flavor.
Yes! Very real, very opinionated.
They do not actually cook unattended (liability matters), but they are very involved in the creative process, quality control, and general mayhem.
Possibly. Slowly. Thoughtfully.
If it exists, it will be useful, well-made, and aligned with the Dogs That Cook universe—not clutter for clutter’s sake.
You’re welcome to share links and talk about Dogs That Cook. We love that!
Reproducing recipes, images, videos, or characters for commercial use without permission is not allowed. If you’d like to collaborate, license, or feature content, reach out—we’re friendly.
If you came for food, start with a recipe.
If you came for laughs, start with the dogs.
If you’re not sure why you’re here… stay curious. That’s usually how this works.
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