Making your own fish food

Babydaull

New member
hey guys, I have a 20 gallon nuvo fusion. I have two clownfish and a flametail blenny. My corals range from softies to sps. I also have a green bubble tip anemone. I have watched a bunch of videos about making your own fish food because it saves money and you can be sure your fish are getting the right nutrients. Does anyone have experience with this? any good recipes?
I am thinking salmon, tilapia, krill, mysis shrimp and then something to bring it all together. any thoughts?
 
Here's what ive used in the past as a guide, from brineshrimp direct.

Mac's Famous Fish Loaf
A proven recipe for Reef Tanks that drives marine fish wild and adds zest (and color) to your reef tank.
Contributed by Kevin M., a.k.a., "ReeferMac," who can sometimes be found on several online forums, including www.ReefCentral.com. Kevin maintains a 230-gallon, mostly SPS tank, as well as a variety of marine fish, including a Sailfin Tang, a Rabbitfish, some Chromis and Clownfish.
Approximate cost of the recipe per batch $160-200. One batch lasts one year or more as fed every-other-day.
This Recipe is comprised of roughly equal parts (by volume) of dry and wet ingredients that are thoroughly mixed, placed in molds and frozen.
Dry Ingredients:
About 200 grams pulverized, unseasoned sun- or gently dried alga, including but not limited to nori, dulse, alaria and kelp. (Keep some pieces large depending upon the size of your fish.)
8 oz. Decapsulated Brine Shrimp Egg
2.5 oz. NatuRose® Powder (source of astaxanthin)
6 oz. GP Larval Diet 50-micron size
2 oz. Freeze-dried Copepods
2 oz. Freeze-dried Rotifers
1 oz. Freeze-dried Bloodworms (partially pulverized)
1.5 oz. Freeze-dried Krill Superba (partially pulverized "” again depending upon the size of your fish.)
Wet Ingredients
This is largely subject to what's available at your local seafood counter "” preferably fresh, but frozen will do.
Salmon (skin removed)
Tuna steak
Scallops (if you can afford it, invertebrates love it!)
Lobster Legs (smash with hammer, remove most of the shell "” same with Crabs and Clams. Avoid putting shell into blender)
Crab
Clams
Haddock
Smelt
Shrimp, especially shrimp! (frozen shrimp are easy to grate)
8 oz. Frozen Cyclopeeze
125 ml. Selco
125 ml. Tahitian Blend Algae Cryopaste
Appliances:
Jell-O-Beans Jiggler trays (or, plastic shallow ice tray)
Medium-duty food processor or glass blender
Two 5 gallon plastic buckets (one for dry ingredients, one for wet)
Kitchen shears (for cutting up larger pieces of alga, seafood, etc.)
Cheese grater
Rubber gloves (optional)
Directions:
Mix dry ingredients thoroughly in one bucket. Save the powders for last as it gets a little messy once the powders are added.
Grate, cut, dice and otherwise render the combination of wet fresh and frozen ingredients into a range of particle sizes and mix by hand in the other bucket.
Mix Selco and Tahitian Blend into wet ingredients. Add water sparingly to assist in thorough mixing.
Then it gets messier! Gradually transfer the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients and mix together. Take care to eliminate pockets of unmixed ingredients. Gloves will make this process less painstaking, but on the other hand, Kevin claims this cold mix feels good on arthritic joints.
Once wet and dry ingredients are thoroughly mixed, fill the ice trays or Jell-O-Bean trays and freeze. If using freezer bags, keep the thickness between 0.5" to 1"
Feed at the rate of one Jell-O-Bean every other day. Hand feed the bigger chunks to the larger fish or even some of the larger inverts (brains, anemone, etc.)
Precautions:
Use a dedicated blender. Fish oil has a way of staining blenders. Unauthorized use of a food blender may result in a dented frying pan (you get the picture.)
Don't overfeed. Observe feeding behavior and adjust amounts fed so as to prevent excess or uneaten food from fouling your tank.
Do not be surprised if your fish get very excited when you approach the tank at mealtime.
 
that sounds like a great start haha. I got a great answer but I just have a 20 gallon and a few fish so maybe something that isn't so much would work better for me.
 
I'd maybe add more common aquarium frozen foods to your mix like krill and make sure to use PE Mysis because that's got the highest protein content out of all of the mysis shrimp available. Also add stuff like clams, because you have a blend some sort of algae based food needs to go in their like seaweed or nori.
 
Honestly that's a great recipe, UTCReefer!
Babydaull, you could scale back to fit your tank?
I'm not nearly as diverse. I puree whatever seafood scraps I can beg from my local fish monger, mix well and freeze, then cut up into cubes, break apart and store in a freezer bag. I feed one cube a day . Every other day I add .5ml Selco and the days that I do not I feed a nori sheet (I have several large algae grazers). Every other day I also feed pellets.
It all depends largely on what type of fish you are feeding and what is available to you locally to add to your "mix."
Try some small batches and see what works. I hated the box grater, it was a lot of work, but on a smaller tank it might not be so bad.
Try, succeed or fail, try again.
 
yeah I guess I could just scale it back a bit. I a new to this and a lot of the ingredients I have never heard of sadly.
 
I certainly didnt use all those things since it would cost way too much but it did give me a good idea of all the things to try and find to fit my budget.
 
Thanks! I'm assuming you just open them up and let all the fish feed as they wish from the half shell? I might try doing that with shrimp split along the dorso-ventral axis as well.
 
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