Another thumbs up for orijen. Worth the price. I get about a month out of a bag for my two cats, which I pay about $20 for in my neck of the woods.
One of my cats could probably eat anything and thrive. Well, he has - his history includes time living in a car.
My little female cat (admittedly my darling adored I would do anything for her cat) was a wreck about 18 months back. We feared she might die. Best diagnosis was likely IBD. (much wonderful veterinary involvement in all this; love my vets!) I researched a lot and put them both on a home-made raw diet. Yep, it’s gross to make and icky to feed but they LOVED it and the best part? Cured my cat.
Once she was healed, healthy, and vibrant again I transitioned to a canned, grain-free food for a while. Once they were both great on that, transitioned again to a dry, grain-free food (not orijen) and then transitioned to orijen once I learned about it from a store owner. (I’m keeping the raw food diet as my ‘big guns’ should she ever have a similar reaction to stress in our future).
Great quality ingredients, they seem to utilize it very well, and they LOVE the stuff. She at least is a very picky eater. I’ve fed both the seafood and the chicken-based formula with success (chicken seems tastier to them).
What I found with these two, as well as my previous cat with renal issues, is that high quality grain free food is a lot easier on their system than most special diets which are grain based.
Oh, side note, the canned wellness grain free stuff was a hold nose and turn away for both my cats. Too chunky. Um, carrots? Really? Expensive fail.
I’m also a fan of here’s your food (we make a fun production out of it), enjoy your meal. Didn’t feel like eating? Oh well, it went away and you’ll be offered it at your next mealtime. I don’t free feed, I give a portion at roughly set mealtimes. Works for them and us.
best of luck!