Bistro Mini Bits Small Breed Beef, Vegetable & Apple Dry Dog Food, 3.5-lb bag
Graded by The Sniff System
Kibbles 'n Bits Bistro Mini Bits Small Breed Beef, Vegetable & Apple is a dry dog food, featuring beef, designed for small breed dogs.
There isn't much to highlight here. The product provides a guaranteed analysis, but it lacks an AAFCO statement, which is a basic requirement for nutritional completeness claims.
This food contains several flagged ingredients including BHA, corn syrup, animal digest, propylene glycol, and artificial colors. It also lacks an AAFCO statement.
Hard to recommend for any dog due to the numerous flagged ingredients and lack of an AAFCO statement.
Summary written by The Sniff System from the data above. Same rubric, same drivers, expressed in English.
Strong fit for lower-energy small companion breeds, including the French Bulldog, navigating skin allergies. Working in its favor: explicitly formulated for small-breed dogs. The protein deck is built around a single species (beef), but artificial colors (caramel color, red 40 lake, yellow 5, red 40, blue 1, blue 2 lake, yellow 6 lake, yellow 6) appear in the deck. What we'd flag: contains artificial colors (correlates with skin-reactive ingredients). For French Bulldogs with suspected food allergies, a strict elimination diet for a minimum of 8 weeks is the diagnostic gold standard, as serological tests have low reliability per a 2018 review. Zinc is essential for skin immunity and healing; the NRC (2006) established a recommended allowance of 20 mg of zinc per 1000 kcal ME for adult dogs at maintenance (NRC, 2006) .
Looking at this for adult French Bulldogs or French Bulldogs with skin allergies ? We are building dedicated pages for these combinations.
Auto-matched from this product's measurements (ingredients, life stage, calorie density) to a breed archetype. Not a substitute for vet input on your specific dog.
Concerning grade. 0/100 (F) reflects the structural fit of this formula against The Sniff System's eight scoring components. What capped it: the score can't exceed 39 because multiple FLAG-tier ingredients are stacked in the formula. Removing the cap alone wouldn't change the band. The component deck is the deeper issue.
- Lowest DMB fat in Kibbles 'n Bits's lineup (9.8%)
- Lowest crude fiber in Kibbles 'n Bits's lineup (4.9% DMB)
- Lowest protein quality in Kibbles 'n Bits's lineup (8.4/27)
Computed against the rest of our catalog. Percentiles refresh on each catalog update.
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Surfaced from a vector similarity search across 3,491 scored dog foods. How this works.
Controversial ingredients · 7
- bhaSynthetic preservative classified by the U.S. National Toxicology Program as 'reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen.' Many premium brands have removed it.
- corn syrupAdded sugar. No nutritional purpose in dog food; commonly added to semi-moist treats for palatability.
- animal digestChemically or enzymatically hydrolyzed animal tissue from unspecified species. Used as a flavor coating. Source quality cannot be verified.
- propylene glycolHumectant banned in cat food by the FDA due to Heinz body anemia. Still permitted in dog food but considered a low-quality ingredient.
- yellow 5Artificial color with no nutritional value. Some dogs show allergic-type reactions.
- red 40Artificial color with no nutritional value. Linked to behavioral effects in children; relevance to dogs is unclear but the ingredient serves only marketing purposes.
- yellow 6Artificial color with no nutritional value.
Every flagged ingredient has a published basis (confirmed harm / regulatory action / precautionary). See methodology →
Read why each ingredient is good or bad for dogs.
- 1graincorn
Whole corn is more nutritious than it gets credit for, with decent amino acids and steady carbs. The bigger concern is when corn dominates the top of the ingredient list at the expense of named meat.
Position 1 grain: primary carbohydrate base. This is a grain-inclusive formula with corn as the dominant carb.
- 2protein plantsoybean meal
Concentrated soy protein. Cheap plant protein that pads the label number, common in budget formulas.
Position 2: plant protein in the top 5. Stacked with animal protein, can inflate the crude protein number without matching the amino-acid quality of named animal sources.
- 3beef & bone meal
Position 3: significant protein contributor. Adds amino-acid diversity to the top of the deck.
- 4grainground wheat
Whole wheat. Fine for most dogs, though a portion are sensitive. Not a quality concern, just a fit-for-your-dog question.
Position 4: supporting grain. Smaller contribution to the carb deck.
- 5wheat middlings
Position 5: supporting grain. Smaller contribution to the carb deck.
- 6animal fat
Unnamed fat source. The species matters: 'chicken fat' or 'beef fat' is fine, but 'animal fat' tells you nothing about origin.
Position 6: secondary fat. Often where marine oils sit when present alongside a primary land-animal fat.
- 6preservative syntheticbha Flagged
Synthetic preservative. Listed as a possible human carcinogen by the IARC. Banned from human food in Japan and parts of the EU, still permitted in US pet food. See why →
Synthetic preservative at position 6. Sniff flags this regardless of where it sits in the deck.
- 7othercorn syrup Flagged
Added sugar, usually for palatability or moisture. Dogs don't need added sugar. Common in semi-moist treats. See why →
- 8water sufficient for processing
The regulatory phrase for cooking water in wet food. Has no nutritional implication, just labeling formality.
- 9protein animalanimal digest Flagged
A liquid flavoring made from hydrolyzed animal tissue, sprayed onto kibble for palatability. Common, not directly harmful, but vague about source.
Position 9: supporting protein. Modest contribution to total protein weight.
- 10otherpropylene glycol Flagged
Used as a humectant in soft-moist foods. The FDA prohibits it in cat food over toxicity concerns. Permitted in dog food but worth avoiding. See why →
- 11mineralsalt
Sodium chloride. Required at small doses for normal physiology. Not a quality concern in standard amounts.
- 12hydrochloric acid
- 13fruitapples
Real fruit, some fiber and antioxidants. The amount in kibble is too small to matter much.
Position 13: garnish-level inclusion. Marketing-prominent but minimal nutritional impact at this position.
- 14mineralpotassium chloride
Required mineral. Sometimes used as a salt substitute. Standard inclusion in complete diets.
- 15caramel color
Artificial coloring made by heating sugars. Cosmetic. Some forms contain trace 4-MEI, a compound the IARC lists as possibly carcinogenic.
- 16sorbic acid
- 17legumepeas
Cheap protein bulk. Fine in small amounts, but when peas stack with lentils and chickpeas in the top ingredients, it's the pattern the FDA flagged in its heart-disease investigation. See why →
- 18sodium carbonate
pH buffer used in food processing. Functional, no quality signal.
- 19supplementcholine chloride
Essential nutrient for liver and brain function. Standard inclusion in complete dog foods.
- 20mineralferrous sulfate
Inorganic iron. Standard mineral source. Iron proteinate is the gentler, better-absorbed premium form.
- 21zinc oxide
Inorganic zinc. Cheapest mineral form on the market. Functional but less bioavailable than chelated alternatives.
- 22manganous oxide
Inorganic manganese. Functional, cheaper than chelated forms, less efficiently absorbed.
- 23mineralcopper sulfate
Inorganic copper. Standard, effective at small doses. Premium formulas tend to use copper proteinate instead.
- 24mineralcalcium iodate
Source of iodine for thyroid function. Functional, required in complete formulas.
Showing first 25 of 51. Position 1-5 has the largest weight in the recipe.
21 of 25 ingredients have a curated note. Coverage grows over time.