Pet Spaces  ·  5 min read  ·  June 8, 2026

Homemade dog treat essentials: my favorite tools

A few simple kitchen tools can make homemade treats easier, more enjoyable and a lot less messy. These are the ones I actually reach for.

When Lana hears the freezer door open, she appears almost instantly. It doesn't matter where she was a moment ago — sleeping on the couch, watching birds in the garden. The second she thinks a homemade treat might be involved, she's standing beside me with those hopeful golden retriever eyes.

Over the years, I've discovered that making homemade dog treats doesn't need to be complicated. A few simple kitchen tools can make the process easier, more enjoyable and a lot less messy. If you're thinking about making treats for your own dog, these are some of my favourite essentials to keep on hand.

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The essentials

My favourite treat-making tools

Everything you need to bake, freeze and store homemade treats your dog will love.

The classic

Silicone Treat Molds

Bone-shaped, food-grade silicone — perfect for peanut butter freezies, yoghurt bites or baked biscuits, and flexible enough to pop treats out cleanly every time.

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For natural treats

A Dehydrator for Natural Treats

The secret to long-lasting homemade treats — gently dries meat, sweet potato and fruit into chewy jerky-style snacks with nothing added but time.

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For baked biscuits

Cookie Cutters for Homemade Biscuits

Bone-shaped cutters in two or three sizes — roll, press, bake, done. The shape is half the charm, and they make a simple oat dough look like something special.

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Summer staple

Popsicle Molds

Pour, freeze, pop — frozen pupsicles are the easiest treat you'll ever make, and these paw-shaped molds make them look just as good as they taste.

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Store beautifully

Airtight jars

Airtight ceramic jars with bamboo lids keep homemade treats fresh for up to a week — and they look beautiful enough to leave right on the counter.

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Full collection

Shop the full collection

All five picks in one curated Amazon list.

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Now fill those molds

Three recipes to get you started

Simple, dog-safe recipes with three ingredients or fewer.

Frozen

Blueberry Yogurt Bites

  • Plain yogurt (unsweetened)
  • Fresh or frozen blueberries

Blend yogurt with half the blueberries until smooth, then pour into molds. Press a few whole blueberries into each cavity before freezing — they add a lovely texture and look beautiful once set. Freeze for 3 hours and serve straight from the freezer.

Great for: hot days, sensitive tummies
Frozen

Banana Peanut Butter Pupsicles

  • 1 ripe banana
  • 2 tbsp peanut butter (xylitol-free)
  • ½ cup plain yogurt

Blend all three ingredients until smooth, pour into popsicle molds and freeze overnight. Lana's absolute favourite.

Great for: enrichment, hot days
Baked

Pumpkin Oat Biscuits

  • 1 cup rolled oats (blended to flour)
  • ½ cup plain pumpkin puree
  • 1 egg

Mix into a dough, roll out, cut with bone cutters and bake at 180°C for 25 minutes until golden. Store in an airtight jar for up to a week.

Great for: training treats, gifting
The best treat is one you made yourself — with good ingredients, a little patience, and someone very excited waiting by the kitchen.
From Life With Lana  ♡
At a glance

How to start baking for your pup

You don't need to do it all at once. Start with the molds, make one recipe, and build from there.

01
Choose a Mold

Bone, paw print or popsicle — pick the shape that excites you most

02
Pick a Recipe

Three ingredients is enough to start — peanut butter, banana, oats

03
Bake or Freeze

Most recipes are either 20 minutes in the oven or a few hours in the freezer

04
Store Properly

An airtight jar keeps baked treats fresh for a week at room temperature

05
Make It a Ritual

A Sunday batch session is one of the cosiest things you can do together

06
Enjoy the Reaction

There is nothing quite like watching your dog eat something you made for them

Making your own dog treats doesn't have to be a production. It can be quiet and simple — a bit of time on a Sunday afternoon, a handful of good ingredients, and a dog who somehow always knows something exciting is happening in the kitchen.

The tools are the thing that makes it sustainable. When your molds are easy to use, your jars are beautiful on the counter, and your cookie cutters are right where you can find them, the whole process becomes something you actually look forward to. That's the point of having the right kit.

A gentle reminder: always check that any ingredient you use is safe for dogs — especially nut butters (must be xylitol-free) and any add-ins. When in doubt, keep it simple. The simplest recipes are often the ones dogs love most.

If you try any of these finds, I'd love to hear how you get on. Drop me a note on @lana.thegoldenretriever on Instagram — Lana's the best taste-tester I know.

Common questions

Good to know

Are silicone molds safe for making dog treats?

Yes — food-grade silicone molds are completely safe for making dog treats. They are non-toxic, heat-resistant, easy to clean and flexible enough to release treats without breaking them. Always check that the mold is labelled food-grade before use, and avoid any with strong plastic smells, which may indicate lower-quality materials.

What is the easiest homemade dog treat to start with?

Frozen treats are the easiest place to start. Simply blend peanut butter (xylitol-free), banana or plain yoghurt, pour into a silicone mold and freeze for a few hours. No baking, no special equipment, no fuss — just something your dog will absolutely love, especially in warmer months.

How long do homemade dog treats last?

Baked treats stored in an airtight jar at room temperature last up to one week. In the fridge they keep for two to three weeks. Frozen treats keep well for up to three months in the freezer. Using a proper airtight jar makes a significant difference to freshness — the cute ceramic jars in this list do the job beautifully.

Do I need a food dehydrator for homemade dog treats?

Not at all. A dehydrator is a wonderful tool to have, but most homemade dog treats are either baked in a regular oven or frozen. A dehydrator is especially useful for making jerky-style treats from meat or sweet potato, which have a longer shelf life and a chewy texture dogs tend to love — but it is absolutely not a starting requirement.

What ingredients should I avoid in homemade dog treats?

Always avoid xylitol (found in some nut butters), grapes, raisins, chocolate, onion, garlic and macadamia nuts — all toxic to dogs. Stick to dog-safe staples like oats, banana, plain pumpkin, peanut butter (xylitol-free), sweet potato and plain yoghurt. When in doubt, a quick search or a chat with your vet will confirm whether an ingredient is safe.