Homemade Rat Treats: 6 Yummy Recipes Your Rats Will Love (2024)

We all love treating our rats, and our rats love the interest and variety a yummy treat brings. However, it’s important treats are healthy for our pets, and a good way to do that is to make them ourselves.

I mostly use bits and bobs of human foods as treats – a nut in a shell, half a fresh grape, a piece of cooked pasta – but sometimes I go to town and cook them something of their own. You’ll note most of these recipes are savoury – rats love sugar, but they really don’t need it, so I try and fit my treats to their other tastes.

Except for the omelette and porridge, these homemade rat treats can be stored in the freezer for a few months.

Table of Contents

Microwave Frozen Veg Omelette

Homemade Rat Treats: 6 Yummy Recipes Your Rats Will Love (1)

This is a brilliant and really quick way to make a nutritious fresh meal for the rats with minimal effort.

Ingredients:

  • 1-2 eggs
  • frozen vegetables

Simply break one or two eggs into a microwave safe bowl, add in frozen vegetables from the supermarket (I’ve used peas, corn and carrot, or a range of oriental stir fry mixes), stir it all up and cook in the microwave, stirring every minute or so until the egg is done. Let it cool off to a safe temperature and serve to the rats. It’s easy to adjust the amounts to suit the number of rats in a group and it provides protein and fresh veg in one delicious hit.

Super-powered No-cook Porridge

I use this porridge as a treat for the healthy adult rats and a supplement for the elderly who may not be eating their main food as enthusiastically as normal.

Ingredients:

  • a selection of rolled grains (I use barley and rice as they are gentle on elderly kidneys)
  • plant-based milk (I use soy, but any other milk replacement works)
  • linseed (flaxseed) meal
  • hempseed powder

Pour the grains into a bowl until you have about 2/3rd of the total volume you want. Cover in soy milk and leave to soak in the fridge until the grains are swollen and mushy (can leave it overnight). Give the porridge a stir to check the consistency – you want it sloppy not sticky – and add more milk if needed. Stir in a tea spoon each of flaxseed meal and hempseed powder per 3 rats. Serve in a bowl for the group, or on individual spoons.

Suggestion: if your rats are not keen on savoury tastes or are very elderly and reluctant to eat, stir in a squeeze of chocolate baby custard. I’ve found rats are willing to eat almost anything if flavoured with chocolate custard!

This makes a great vehicle for delivering either supplements to the group, or medications on a spoon to individual rats.

Left-over Snaps

Homemade Rat Treats: 6 Yummy Recipes Your Rats Will Love (2)

This is a flexible savoury biscuit that you can add in all sorts of fresh left-overs too – scraps from a cooked chicken, or roast joint, fish, or chopped or grated veggies.

Cook up some rice / millet / quinoa / pearl barley (whichever you have or prefer). Puree the grain in a bowl with any meat, fish or veggie scraps you want to use – use about 150 g / 5 oz of scraps to ½ cup of rice. Add in enough stock (meat, fish or veggie is fine – just chose the one that suits your biscuits) to make a smooth but not watery paste. Beat in an egg, and then mix in enough flour to form a firm dough.

Roll the mixture out, shape as you prefer, and place on a greased baking tray. Bake at 180°C / 350°F for about 20 mins, or until hard and golden.

Veggie Biscuits

This is another savoury treat biscuit.

Ingredients:

  • pumpkin or butternut squash flesh
  • nut butter
  • 2 eggs
  • rolled grains
  • chopped vegetables
  • wholemeal flour

Chop up some pumpkin or butternut squash flesh until you have about a cup full. Puree this with ¼ cup of nut butter (a sugar free peanut butter is the obvious option, but any homemade or commercial nut butter is fine – you can also experiment with olive, seed or nut-based oil) and 2 eggs. Add in ½ cup of rolled grains (oats, barley, whatever you prefer) and some chopped vegetables such as grated carrot, creamed corn, crushed peas, grated zucchini, or shredded raw greens. Once that is all mixed together, add in enough wholemeal flour to make a firm dough.

Once you have it all combined together, roll out the dough to your desired thickness (thinner will cook quicker). If you want to make shaped biscuits then cut them out now. Otherwise, put pieces of the flat dough on a greased backing sheet. Bake in a preheated oven at 350°F / 180°C until golden brown. It will be about 20 mins in most ovens. If you haven’t cut the biscuits into shapes, allow to cool and then break up into fragments.

Mushroom Flat-bread

I often cook this to add to my dry mix, but it also works well as a rat treat.

Ingredients:

  • mushroom
  • olive oil
  • garlic paste
  • flour
  • egg (optional)

Place a roughly sliced large mushroom (or two or three small ones) on a backing tray and mix with olive oil and a small blob of garlic paste. Roast at 150°C / 300°F until the slices look cooked. Transfer the mushrooms and any cooking juices to a blender, add just enough water to moisten, and blend to a paste. Transfer to a bowl and mix in enough flour to make a stretchy, non-sticky, dough. You can add an egg during mixing if preferred.

Roll the dough out as thin as you can and transfer to a pizza sheet. Score on a grid of lines to allow the bread to be easily broken later. Bake in the oven at 140-160°C / 240 – 320°F until the outside is hard when tapped and the inside is as dry as you can get it – the thinner you can roll the dough the quicker this is. We use a lowish heat for a longer period, as hotter temperatures result in a crispy outside, and a moist inside.

Remove from oven and allow to cool, then break into pieces.

Banana Blobs

Homemade Rat Treats: 6 Yummy Recipes Your Rats Will Love (3)

Finally, a sweet treat. This is a great way to use up over-ripe bananas – and they are yummy for humans to share too.

Ingredients:

  • over-ripe banana
  • rolled oats or rolled barley
  • seeds, almond flakes, shredded coconut or dried fruit (optional)

Take an over-ripe banana (or two if you fancy making extra for the non-rodent members of the household), peel it and mash up the flesh in a bowl.

Tip in ½ a cup of rolled flaked grains like rolled oats or rolled barley (add an extra ½ cup for every extra banana used). For extra interest, you can also add in seeds, almond flakes, shredded coconut or dried fruit. Mix it all up until its thoroughly combined.

Drop blobs of the mixture onto a greased baking sheet (you can make balls, blobs or biscuits as you prefer), and cook in a preheated oven (around 350°F / 180°C) for 13-15 mins. When done they should be a nice biscuity colour and firm, not sticky in the centre.

Once cool, chop into rat sized portions and hand out.

Do you make homemade rat treats for your pets? Let us know in the comments!

Homemade Rat Treats: 6 Yummy Recipes Your Rats Will Love (2024)

FAQs

How do you make homemade rat treats? ›

Directions: Slice off a piece of banana, about an inch thick. Cover this with your yogurt, add a chocolate chip or few, then add some cheerio bits. All that's left is to serve it up to your rats on a tiny plate!

How do you make rat treats? ›

Homemade rat treats ~baby food (optional) or lactose yogurt and or peanut butter ~flour ~water Mix all ingredients into a dough consistency. Then make the into any shape you want. You have to make the shape small. Next you want to put the treats into the oven at 360 degrees until hard.

What is a rat's favorite snack? ›

Fruit and berries — Out of all the foods rodents consume, their top two loves are generally fruits and berries. In the wild, rats and mice consume these foods at every opportunity. Therefore, raspberry and blackberry bushes — as well as apple and pear trees — can serve as magnets for the animals.

What household food do rats like? ›

Rats prefer food with a high-fat content so you will often find them nibbling on nuts and seeds, peanut butter and cheese. They also enjoy fruits and vegetables but these should only be given as treats because they are high in sugar and carbs. Rats can also become obese if they overfeed with too much sugar or carbs.

What does baking soda and vinegar do to rats? ›

By mixing vinegar and baking soda you can actually create a poison that will kill rats. As with any poison however, you have to be careful when you handle it, and when you apply it.

What is rats favorite treat? ›

Seeds and Nuts: Rats in the wild often feed on a variety of seeds and nuts, including sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds, and sesame seeds. When it comes to nuts, they love walnuts, peanuts, and almonds. These foods provide them with essential fats, proteins, and other nutrients.

What is the best rat treat? ›

Some of a rat's favorite treats include:
  • Seeds.
  • Sweets.
  • Bread.
  • Cooked pasta.
  • Cooked rice.
  • Cereal.
  • Grains.
  • Mealworms.
Oct 25, 2022

Can I give my rat a cheese it? ›

Although rats can eat cheese in small amounts, it's not always the healthiest food to give to your rodent buddy. Feeding them too much cheese can lead to tummy problems.

What do rats find irresistible to eat? ›

Rats tend to prefer foods that are high in nutrients, like fat and protein. Some of the most common foods used to bait rat traps are peanut butter, bacon, dried fruit, or meat (like hot dogs) that won't make a mess of your trap but have enough protein and fat to attract them.

Can rats eat cheerios? ›

Dry cereal. Cheerios are great for feeding your rat.

Are rats attracted to honey? ›

Rodents are highly attracted to sugary foods, which is why you'll commonly see them nesting near your honey jar, bag of sugar, or other sweet treats.

What food do rats hate the most? ›

In addition to plants, rats also dislike certain spices like peppermint, cloves, cayenne pepper, and chili.

What food really attracts rats? ›

 Rats and mice feed on a variety of fruits including oranges, avocados, peaches, lemon, and figs. They are fond of walnuts, almonds, and peanut butter. All fallen fruit and nuts should be regularly removed and discarded in the trash.  Rodents also feed on bird seed, snails, garden vegetables and dog droppings.

What does baking soda do to rats? ›

So, how does Baking soda kill rats and mice? Knowing that rodents don't burp or vomit, the baking soda releases gasses that the pests cannot expel, which leads to blockage and bursting of the digestive system, which kills the rodents.

What does peanut butter and baking soda do to rats? ›

Mixing baking soda with peanut butter leads to mice control to make poison. When mice or rats eat the mixture, they lactate and die shortly after that. They can digest baking soda and it does not harm them in small amounts. But mice control is necessary when using poison alongside baking soda.

What does baking soda and flour do to rats? ›

The idea behind using baking soda to kill rats is that the bicarbonate in the powder will react with stomach acids of the rodent. This will create a gas that is carbon dioxide. Since rats cannot pass gas, it will just build up within their digestive system. Eventually, it will cause a rupture or blockage.

What are the best homemade toys for rats? ›

Fold up some old newspapers into tent like structures, roll some into tunnels, and hide some treats between the layers of paper. Add rats. Use a piece of fabric, shoelace, cardboard, whatever. But let your rat win... you can easily trade the item back off the rat afterwards with a yogurt drop.

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