Neither Barney and now Jasper would eat food out of a bowl.
Oh good, looks like I'm in good company

Thanks for that reassurance, I had thought eh, I don't want him to depend on me spoonfeeding him, but actually if he'll work for his food through training that's pretty good, and I imagine scatter feeding him is enrichment in a way.
He has freeze dried raw which is in nugget form so I put it in egg boxes, hide it in boxes with paper in, simple hiding it in places to scent trail. Smaller pieces of food can be put into plastic bottles for them to knock around and knock food out. Raw can be put into calf hooves or kongs.
I forgot to add that we tried puppy kong toys, both the traditional and bone shaped variety, and similar but easier puzzle toys (lick mat, a cube with ridges that you rub food onto, a couple of other "fun/puzzle" feeding toys) and he has a little lick but if it's hard for him to get he just gives up. Sometimes even if it's easy

That being said he seems completely nonplussed by any kind of chew toy but loves rope, cardboard, bottles... So I'll try using something like a toilet paper tube or egg carton. Fingers crossed he doesn't forgo food in favour of cardboard
If there is a problem with Malik not eating sufficiently then I would be creative with him for example with the raw, get a plastic mat of some sort, roll it into meatballs and place it around the mat one at a time, have a couple of mats or plates around the kitchen and play go find it with the meatballs, great for training stay and release, with the kibble which I assume you will be phasing out, a snuffle mat or slow feeder might help but if scattering works then great.
Some great ideas and I can see "go find" working well with him. Thanks a million
We have a few food dispensing and puzzle toys that we mix up, but I also play games with towels and scrap fabric for freeze dried or kibble. One game is I sprinkle the food out on a large play mat, cover it with towel and repeat for a second tier or even a third. Ozzy has to snuffle, dig and push the towels to uncover the food. Another idea is to take pieces of scrap fabric, wrap food in them, then roll them into a folded towel for the pup to unroll the towel and unwrap the food.
This might work for him too, but definitely not with the mushy raw we're feeding, I'll have a look if some quality freeze dried is available locally! Thanks!
So check the amounts that are recommended against the total amount of food he has in the day.
I've checked my math but it's always good to have another set of eyes. He weighs 3.3kg at 10 weeks old, so feeding him 8% of his body weight would mean he would be getting 264g of raw once we fully transition him to raw. With his current size and his parents' sizes he's likely to be a bigger mini so if his expected adult weight is 9kg, 2-3% of that is 180 - 270. Big range there and he could grow to a smaller size so maybe he would do well on less than the 264g. Anyhow I'm only offering him half of that at this stage and gradually increasing. Then he's also getting half of the recommended kibble quantity which is all in training treats now and I offer the rest but he's not crazy about it. And yes we're phasing that out. Please someone correct me if my math is off!
I assume you are sticking to routine times for feeding and that they are well spaced apart including being spaced apart from training sessions or walks with treats.
Yes, doing our best, usually we have him rest for a while and then wake him up with some play and training (no treats just toy and verbal reward) because he wouldn't even look up if we offered him food while he was drowsy
I wouldn't worry about not doing what is "normal", do what works for you
Thank you - this was good to hear
An update is that last night we went out and got him a different brand of quality raw for dinner, and he seemed way more interested and ate a full meal (with slight encouragement)

His breeder says her dogs won't touch the first brand we've tried him on either, despite every other dog I've heard of loving it. Might just be that he liked the variety, but fingers crossed he continues to do well and I'll try out some more fun games for him. I'm thinking of also getting him back to at least 3 meals because he probably gets quite full.