Store-bought puppy treats disappear fast, cost more than they should, and still do not always help when teething turns a sweet pup into a tiny chewing machine. Frozen homemade treats solve a bunch of problems at once because they soothe sore gums, give puppies something safe to focus on, and let you control every ingredient.
That matters more than people think, especially with picky eaters or puppies with sensitive stomachs. A cold treat can calm the chewing chaos, slow down snack speed, and keep random shoe attacks slightly less dramatic.
Homemade frozen puppy treats are also one of the easiest budget-friendly wins in pet care. A few plain, dog-safe ingredients can turn into soft frozen bites, lickable snacks, or chewy little cubes that my dog goes after like they are premium five-star cuisine.
Banana Yogurt Puppy Bites
Teething puppies usually want to chew on everything, but not everything deserves to become a chew toy. These banana yogurt puppy bites work so well because they are cold, soft enough to lick and nibble, and simple enough that even sensitive little stomachs usually handle them well.
Banana adds natural sweetness without getting weird, and plain yogurt gives the mix a creamy texture that freezes nicely without turning rock hard. This is one of those recipes that feels almost too easy, but my dog goes crazy for it every single time.
Ingredients
- 1 ripe banana
- 1/2 cup plain unsweetened yogurt
- 1 tablespoon unsweetened pumpkin puree
- 1 tablespoon water if needed for blending
- Silicone mold or ice cube tray
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Peel the banana and break it into chunks so it blends faster and more evenly. Use a ripe banana because it mixes smoother and gives the treats a naturally sweet taste puppies tend to like.
- Add the banana, yogurt, and pumpkin puree to a blender or small food processor. Blend until the mixture looks smooth and creamy with no large lumps left behind.
- Check the texture before pouring it into molds. If it seems too thick, add a small splash of water so the mixture settles into the mold without trapping air pockets.
- Spoon or pour the mixture into a silicone mold or ice cube tray. Fill each section only partway if you want smaller training-sized frozen treats instead of chunky snack blocks.
- Freeze the treats for at least three to four hours until fully set. Do not serve them half frozen because the texture gets messy and pups end up wearing more of it than they eat.
- Pop out one piece at a time and let it sit for a minute if it seems too firm for a very young puppy. Serve in moderation, especially for smaller breeds, and always keep an eye on your puppy while they enjoy it.
Why Your Dog Will Love It
The cold creamy texture feels great on sore gums, and the banana smell makes these extra appealing without needing anything fancy. Puppies usually lick these first, then nibble the edges like they just discovered the greatest invention in history.
Tips
- Shortcut: Mash everything with a fork instead of blending if the banana is very ripe and soft.
- Feeding idea: Use mini molds to make tiny bites for crate-time treats or short training rewards on hot days.
- Storage: Keep them in a freezer-safe container for up to 2 months so they do not pick up freezer smells.
Blueberry Coconut Cooling Drops
Some puppies get bored fast with the same flavor over and over, and that is when a small switch can help. These blueberry coconut cooling drops are great when a pup wants something icy and tasty but does not need a giant treat the size of a hockey puck.
Blueberries bring a mild sweetness and a soft fruit flavor, while unsweetened coconut milk gives the mixture a smooth frozen texture. I like this one for puppies that enjoy licking more than chewing, and honestly, it disappears embarrassingly fast in my house.
Ingredients
- 1/4 cup fresh or frozen blueberries
- 1/2 cup unsweetened coconut milk
- 2 tablespoons plain unsweetened yogurt
- 1 teaspoon unsweetened pumpkin puree
- Silicone mini mold
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Wash the blueberries well if you are using fresh ones. If you are using frozen berries, let them sit for a few minutes so they blend more easily and do not stress your blender for no reason.
- Add the blueberries, coconut milk, yogurt, and pumpkin puree to a blender. Blend until the mixture becomes smooth and lightly speckled with berry color.
- Taste is not the goal here, but texture definitely matters. If the mixture looks too thin, add a little more yogurt, and if it feels too thick to pour, add a spoonful of coconut milk.
- Pour the mix into a mini silicone mold so each piece stays small and puppy-friendly. Smaller portions work better for teething pups because they get the cooling benefit without overdoing treats in one sitting.
- Freeze until solid, which usually takes around four hours depending on the mold size. Once frozen, remove the pieces and transfer them to a sealed freezer container to keep them neat and easy to grab.
- Offer one or two drops at a time, especially if your puppy is still getting used to dairy or new ingredients. Always introduce frozen snacks gradually and watch for tummy issues, because puppies love proving enthusiasm does not equal self-control.
Why Your Dog Will Love It
These little drops smell fruity, feel cold, and melt slowly enough to keep a puppy busy for a few extra minutes. The texture is soft and icy instead of hard and crunchy, which makes them especially nice for sore gums.
Tips
- Shortcut: Stir mashed blueberries into the liquid ingredients if you do not want to dirty a blender.
- Feeding idea: Serve one after a short walk or tuck a couple into a puppy-safe enrichment toy.
- Storage: Freeze in batches and store for up to 6 weeks in an airtight container.
Pumpkin Oat Frozen Nibbles
Puppies with sensitive stomachs can be so dramatic about snacks, and to be fair, sometimes they have a point. These pumpkin oat frozen nibbles are a solid choice when you want something gentle, filling, and soothing without loading your puppy up with a bunch of unnecessary ingredients.
Pumpkin is one of my favorite dog-safe staples because it is simple, useful, and easy to work with. The oats make these a little thicker and more satisfying, so they feel more like a real snack than a frozen smear that vanishes in three licks.
Ingredients
- 1/3 cup plain pumpkin puree
- 1/3 cup plain unsweetened yogurt
- 2 tablespoons finely ground oats
- 1 tablespoon water
- 1 teaspoon natural peanut butter made without xylitol
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Grind the oats in a blender or food processor until they look fine and powdery. That step matters because whole oats can make the texture chunkier than you want for a young teething puppy.
- Place the pumpkin puree, yogurt, ground oats, water, and peanut butter into a bowl. Stir everything well until you get a smooth, thick mixture with the peanut butter fully mixed in.
- Let the mixture sit for two or three minutes so the oats absorb some moisture. This helps the treats freeze into a creamy, slightly chewy texture instead of separating into weird layers nobody asked for.
- Spoon the mixture into small silicone molds or onto a parchment-lined tray in little dollops. Keep the portions small because frozen treats should stay fun and soothing, not become half the day’s calorie count.
- Freeze until firm, then test one by pressing it lightly with a spoon. You want it frozen through but not rock solid, especially if you are serving it to a younger puppy who still needs softer textures.
- Give one nibble at a time and allow it to soften for a minute if needed. Wipe up leftovers after serving because once these start melting, they turn into a pumpkin situation pretty quickly.
Why Your Dog Will Love It
The pumpkin flavor is mild, the peanut butter smell pulls puppies in fast, and the chilled texture feels soothing without being too hard. This is the one I reach for when a puppy seems cranky, chew-happy, and generally done with everyone.
Tips
- Shortcut: Use oat flour instead of grinding rolled oats yourself.
- Feeding idea: Break larger pieces into smaller bits and use them as post-nap cooling snacks.
- Storage: Keep in the freezer for up to 2 months, and thaw for 1 minute before serving if they freeze very hard.
Watermelon Yogurt Lick Cubes
Some puppies do not want to chew much when their gums are bothering them, and that is where these lick cubes shine. They are cold, refreshing, and mostly meant for licking, which gives sore mouths some relief without forcing a pup to work too hard for it.
Watermelon is a great warm-weather ingredient as long as it is seedless and rind-free, and it blends into a light mixture that freezes beautifully with yogurt. These feel a little extra in the best way, but the ingredient list stays wonderfully low-maintenance.
Ingredients
- 1 cup seedless watermelon, chopped
- 1/3 cup plain unsweetened yogurt
- 1 tablespoon unsweetened pumpkin puree
- 1 teaspoon chia seeds optional and only for older puppies already used to them
- Small ice cube tray
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Remove all seeds and any rind from the watermelon before you do anything else. That part is non-negotiable because puppies are talented at turning small mistakes into big digestive drama.
- Add the watermelon, yogurt, and pumpkin puree to a blender. Blend until the mixture becomes smooth and a little frothy, with no fruit chunks floating around.
- If your puppy already handles chia seeds well, stir in a tiny amount after blending. Skip them completely for very young pups or for puppies with easily upset stomachs because simple is usually smarter.
- Pour the mixture into a small ice cube tray, but do not fill each compartment all the way to the top. Smaller cubes are safer, easier to portion, and much less likely to turn snack time into an overexcited gobble fest.
- Freeze the cubes until solid and then remove them from the tray. Let one cube sit for a minute before serving if it seems too firm, especially for smaller puppies or those in the early teething stage.
- Offer a cube on a washable mat or in a bowl so your floor does not become part of the recipe. Supervise your puppy while they lick it down, and do not leave multiple cubes out to melt into pink mystery puddles.
Why Your Dog Will Love It
These are cold, lightly sweet, and easy to lick, which makes them perfect for puppies who want relief more than crunch. The watermelon smell grabs attention fast, and the creamy finish keeps them interested until the last bit is gone.
Tips
- Shortcut: Mash the watermelon first and mix by hand if you do not mind a slightly less smooth texture.
- Feeding idea: Serve one cube after playtime or tuck it into a shallow dish as a cooling enrichment snack.
- Storage: Store in a freezer bag for up to 1 month and serve straight from the freezer after a brief softening rest.
Peanut Butter Banana Frozen Kong Filler
When a puppy is teething and bouncing off the walls at the same time, a plain treat sometimes will not cut it. This peanut butter banana frozen Kong filler gives you something that lasts longer, keeps a pup busy, and turns a puppy-safe toy into a gum-soothing project.
The texture comes out thick and creamy, which makes it ideal for stuffing into enrichment toys or spreading inside grooves. My dog inhales the fresh version in about ten seconds, but frozen, it buys me actual quiet time, which feels borderline magical.
Ingredients
- 1 ripe banana
- 2 tablespoons natural peanut butter with no xylitol
- 1/3 cup plain unsweetened yogurt
- 1 tablespoon unsweetened applesauce
- Puppy-safe rubber toy or silicone mold
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Mash the banana in a bowl until it becomes very smooth. Small lumps are fine, but do not leave big chunks because they make stuffing the toy more annoying than it needs to be.
- Add the peanut butter, yogurt, and applesauce to the mashed banana. Stir until the mixture looks thick, creamy, and evenly blended from top to bottom.
- Spoon the mixture into a puppy-safe rubber toy, pressing it down gently as you go. Packing it well helps the filling freeze evenly and keeps it from falling out in one big disappointing blob.
- If you do not want to use a toy, spoon the mixture into silicone molds instead. Both options work, but the toy method makes the snack last longer and gives your puppy something to lick and gnaw at safely.
- Freeze for several hours until fully firm. When serving from a toy, let it sit for one or two minutes first so the outer layer softens slightly and your puppy can start licking without frustration.
- Offer the filled toy in a supervised area where your puppy can settle in and work on it. Remove any uneaten portion after snack time and wash the toy well before the next round, because frozen treat residue gets funky fast.
Why Your Dog Will Love It
The peanut butter smell does most of the recruiting work, and the cold creamy filling keeps puppies engaged much longer than a quick bite treat. It feels rewarding, tastes rich, and gives sore gums something safe to press against.
Tips
- Shortcut: Make a double batch and freeze extra filling in molds for faster toy refills later.
- Feeding idea: Use this as a crate-training helper or a calm-down snack after rough play.
- Storage: Keep frozen portions for up to 6 weeks, and refrigerate unused fresh mixture for no more than 2 days.
Chicken Broth Carrot Ice Buttons
Not every frozen puppy treat has to taste like dessert, and honestly, some dogs prefer savory snacks anyway. These chicken broth carrot ice buttons are a great option when your puppy loves meaty smells, ignores fruit, and acts personally offended by anything too sweet.
The broth gives the treats strong flavor without much effort, and the finely grated carrot adds a little texture and dog-safe goodness. This recipe is especially handy for puppies who need extra encouragement because the smell alone gets tails moving pretty fast.
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup low-sodium unsalted chicken broth
- 2 tablespoons finely grated carrot
- 2 tablespoons plain unsweetened yogurt
- 1 tablespoon plain cooked shredded chicken
- Silicone mini mold
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Check the chicken broth label before using it. You want low-sodium or unsalted broth with no onion, no garlic, and none of the sneaky extras that make human convenience foods a pain for dogs.
- Finely grate the carrot so the pieces stay tiny and easy for a puppy to manage. If you use thick shreds, they can freeze into stringy bits that are harder to lick or nibble comfortably.
- Stir the broth, grated carrot, yogurt, and tiny pieces of cooked chicken together in a bowl. Mix well so each molded treat gets a little of everything instead of one cube being all broth and the next being a chicken jackpot.
- Spoon the mixture into a mini silicone mold and press the chicken bits down slightly with the back of the spoon. That keeps the solids from floating and helps the treats freeze into neat little buttons.
- Freeze until solid, then pop out one or two pieces as needed. Let them rest briefly before serving if they feel too icy, especially for smaller puppies or those with more tender gums.
- Serve these as supervised mini snacks, not full meals, and keep portions modest. Savory treats can be a huge hit, which is great, but a puppy would absolutely vote for bad decisions if given the chance.
Why Your Dog Will Love It
The smell is rich, savory, and impossible for most puppies to ignore. The icy texture cools the gums while the little bits of carrot and chicken make each bite more exciting than a plain frozen cube.
Tips
- Shortcut: Use baby food chicken puree only if it is fully dog-safe and free from onion, garlic, and added seasonings.
- Feeding idea: These work well as special high-value rewards after grooming, short training sessions, or crate settling.
- Storage: Freeze for up to 1 month in a sealed container and serve in small portions to keep treat intake reasonable.
Final Thoughts
Frozen puppy treats are one of the easiest ways to make teething a little less chaotic and a lot more manageable. They are cheap to make, simple to rotate, and way more useful than pretending a puppy will somehow stop chewing random nonsense on pure good manners.
Try a couple recipes, see which texture your puppy loves most, and keep portions sensible. A good frozen treat routine can help soothe sore gums, keep snacks safer, and make your puppy one very happy little menace.

I’m Pallab Kishore, the owner of Little Pets Realm — an animal lover and pet care enthusiast sharing easy tips, healthy recipes, and honest advice to help every small pet live a happy, healthy, tail-wagging life.