Lowland Creek Feline Recipe With Roasted Quail & Roasted Duck Dry Cat Food
Verified Jun 20, 2026
This is a high-protein, grain-free dry cat food designed for kittens through adult cats, featuring duck, poultry meals, and roasted quail and duck as its main animal protein sources. Sweet potatoes, lentils, and peas provide most of the carbohydrates, while added salmon oil, taurine, and a probiotic blend support skin, coat, and digestive health. It’s formulated to be complete and balanced for all life stages, so it can be used as a sole diet for most healthy cats.
Nutritionally, this is a high-protein, moderate-fat dry food that should suit many healthy cats and kittens who do well on grain-free formulas. The first several ingredients are named animal proteins, which is reassuring for meeting cats’ high protein needs, and it includes added taurine, omega fatty acids, and multiple probiotic strains. The main caution is that lentils and peas are prominent in this grain-free recipe, which some owners may want to consider given ongoing research around legume-heavy diets and heart health in dogs (though this concern is less clearly defined in cats).
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At a Glance
KibbleLab Review
Strengths
- High protein level (36% as-fed) with multiple named animal proteins—duck, duck meal, turkey meal, chicken meal, and roasted quail/duck—supporting good amino acid quality for cats.
- Formulated to meet AAFCO nutrient profiles for all life stages, so it can be appropriate for both kittens and adult cats when fed as directed.
- Includes added taurine (0.15%), DHA from salmon oil, and a blend of omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids to support heart, eye, brain, skin, and coat health.
- Contains several probiotic strains plus chicory root (a prebiotic fiber), which may help support digestive health in some cats.
Considerations
- Grain-free and relies heavily on legumes (lentils, peas) and sweet potatoes as carbohydrate sources; while data are more focused on dogs, some owners prefer to limit legume-heavy diets due to ongoing research around heart health.
- Contains multiple poultry sources (duck, turkey meal, chicken meal, roasted duck and quail), which is important to know if your cat has or develops poultry allergies.
- Dry foods are more calorie-dense (about 403 kcal per cup), so portion control is important, especially for indoor or less active cats to help prevent weight gain.
Full Ingredient List
Ingredients and analysis reflect manufacturer data at the time of our last update and can change without notice. Always check the actual product packaging before feeding.
Ingredient filtering helps identify compatible options but is not a substitute for a veterinary elimination diet.
Top 5 Ingredients Explained
01
Duck
Duck is used in pet food primarily as a flavorful animal protein and fat source, commonly included in limited-ingredient or novel-protein formulas for dogs and cats. It supplies high-quality amino acids and energy and can help pets with sensitivities to common proteins, but it is relatively rich in fat (so may be unsuitable for low‑fat or pancreatitis-prone animals), can still trigger allergies in some pets, and requires proper cooking/processing and handling to avoid bacterial contamination.
02
Duck
Duck is used in pet food primarily as a flavorful animal protein and fat source, commonly included in limited-ingredient or novel-protein formulas for dogs and cats. It supplies high-quality amino acids and energy and can help pets with sensitivities to common proteins, but it is relatively rich in fat (so may be unsuitable for low‑fat or pancreatitis-prone animals), can still trigger allergies in some pets, and requires proper cooking/processing and handling to avoid bacterial contamination.
03
Turkey
Turkey is commonly used as a primary animal protein in dog and cat foods, offering highly digestible, high‑quality protein and supplying essential amino acids along with B vitamins, phosphorus and zinc to support muscle maintenance and metabolism. Its fat level varies by cut so products can be lean or richer; some pets may develop allergies to poultry, cooked bones are hazardous, raw meat carries bacterial risk, and owners should rely on balanced commercial formulations (and ensure adequate taurine for cats) if turkey is a main ingredient.
04
Chicken
Chicken is a common animal-based protein in dog and cat foods, supplying essential amino acids, B vitamins, and energy-dense fats that support muscle maintenance, growth, and overall health; for cats it also contributes toward dietary taurine but must be present in sufficient amounts or provided via supplementation. It is prized for its digestibility and palatability, though some pets develop sensitivities or allergies to chicken, and nutritional value and safety depend on ingredient quality and processing—raw chicken carries pathogen risks and whole bones can pose choking or GI hazards.
05
Sweet Potato
Sweet potato is used in pet foods as a digestible carbohydrate and source of soluble fiber, vitamins (notably beta‑carotene), minerals and antioxidants, often helping with stool quality and serving as a binder or energy ingredient. It is generally well tolerated by dogs and can support gut health, but because cats poorly convert beta‑carotene to vitamin A and require preformed vitamin A from animal sources, sweet potato is not a substitute for meat-based nutrients; its relatively high carbohydrate content also means portion control is advised for overweight or diabetic pets and it should be cooked for best digestibility.
Nutritional Breakdown
How to read As Fed versus Dry Matter
As fed shows the numbers straight off the label, water included. Dry matter removes the water so you can compare a wet food and a dry food fairly.What is calorie density
How many calories the food packs per unit. Denser foods mean smaller portions for the same calories.Product Details & Brand
Product Specs
AAFCO Nutritional Adequacy
What is AAFCO
Association of American Feed Control Officials. It sets the nutritional
adequacy standards US pet foods are measured against.
What is AAFCO
Association of American Feed Control Officials. It sets the nutritional adequacy standards US pet foods are measured against.Brand
Taste of the Wild is a popular grain-free pet food brand offering formulas based on ancestral canine and feline diets. It features novel proteins and whole ingredients, marketed as a natural, premium alternative for health-conscious pet owners.
Visit Taste of the WildManufacturer
Diamond Pet Foods maintains a rigorous quality assurance program that includes in-house testing for mycotoxins, pathogens, and nutritional analysis. The company adheres to FDA, AAFCO, and HACCP standards, employing extrusion and cooking processes designed to ensure product safety.
Manufacturing details are compiled from public sources and not independently verified; they may not reflect contract manufacturing or co-packing.
Recall History
Taste of the Wild Lowland Creek Feline Recipe With Roasted Quail & Roasted Duck Dry Cat Food has no recalls since 2014.
Source: FDA Pet Food Recall Database · Monitored daily
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Frequently Asked Questions
Has Taste of the Wild ever been recalled?
We have no recalls on record for Taste of the Wild. We monitor the FDA Pet Food Recall Database daily.
How does KibbleLab rate foods?
Our scores are based on ingredient composition, nutritional profile, AAFCO compliance, and health considerations. We don't penalize by-products, grains, or synthetic preservatives. Brands cannot pay for higher scores.
Is KibbleLab a substitute for veterinary advice?
No. KibbleLab provides data-driven food analysis, not medical advice. Always consult your veterinarian before making dietary changes, especially for pets with health conditions.
KibbleLab provides informational content only. This is not veterinary advice. Always consult a qualified veterinarian before changing your pet's diet.
KibbleLab may earn affiliate commissions through product links. No one can pay for a higher score, or to change what we recommend for your pet.
Product data sourced from manufacturer websites, AAFCO statements, and FDA recall database. Last verified dates reflect our most recent data check.