
Quick Trick For Training Dog To Stop Stealing Food

Southern Fried Chicken + Epic Food Trucks From Around the World

A Spicy Spin on Chicken Dinner + Richard Blais' Simple Orange Ch…

Rach's Steak Sauce Burgers + Tips For Grilling Chicken Wings

Our July 4th Show: Watermelon Piggies, Rach's Sloppy Joes + More

Tom Selleck Talks "Blue Bloods" Success + Rach's Minute Steak an…

The Hilarious Jason Biggs + Rach's Subs With Chicken, Peppers & …

Rach's Twist on Pasta Night + This Couple Flipped Their Entire H…

Rach's Sheet Pan Dinner + 3 Chefs Take Family Dishes to the Next…

The Iconic Dolly Parton + Chef Geoffrey Zakarian's Braised Short…

Best Sunglasses For Your Face Shape: Square + Heart-Shaped Faces

The First Meal Rach Ever Made on TV—Pancetta-Wrapped Shrimp

Molly Sims' 3 Beauty Must-Haves Under $10 + Strawberry Shortcake…

7 Sheet Pan Recipes—Meatball Parm, 2 Pizzas + More

Mamma Leone's-Style Veal Parm + "Hot Bench's" Judge Patricia DiM…

Rachael Is Hosting Taco Night

Make Your Own Takeout Chicken Teriyaki + Tim Tebow AND Puppies

Harlan Coben Is Back To Talk 35th Book + Kristin Chenoweth

Rach's Garlic Bread Rolls + Another "Manover" Featuring a Major …

Rob Lowe Takes Viewer Qs + Rach’s Chicken Drumsticks
If your dog is a notorious food thief like one viewer's pup named Nala, the author of Lucky Dog Lessons, Brandon McMillan, advises you to nip those counter-surfing ways in the bud ASAP. (Watch Nala really go for it in the video above!)
"This can be very dangerous for a dog," Brandon says. "There could be chicken up there, chicken bones, which [are] potentially fatal to a dog."
His simple solution? Invest in a baby monitor — to have eyes in the kitchen whenever you're not there — and fill a water bottle with 20 pennies.
Every time you see your furry friend jump on the counter through the baby monitor, open the kitchen door and shake the bottle of pennies.
"This sound will stop her from getting on the countertop," Brandon tells our viewer. "You want her to be convinced that every time she puts her paws on the countertop, she's sending a signal to you magically to jump in the room."
Do this consistently for about a week, the pro dog trainer says, and you'll be golden.
RELATED: 190-lb. Therapy Dog Picks Out His Own Tie and Sees Patients With His Human Mom!
Plus, there's another way to teach your pooch impulse control — and all you need are two leashes.
Tie one leash to a chair in your home and take control of the other one. Place food in front of your dog, like a pork chop, and say "no" while gently pulling them to the side and pushing the food farther away.
"I'm using no force whatsoever," Brandon says. Watch him demonstrate in the video above.