Just to add to Matt’s correct answer: Animals are countable (almost always), so you need a determiner in the singular. The determiner is usually an article (a, the), a demonstrative pronoun (this, that, these, those), some, any, no, or a possessive (my, your, our, etc.). Omitting the determiner in the singular would be wrong. Meat, on the other hand is (usually) uncountable, so if people say “I like cat”, the meaning is that they like cat meat — to eat. In context, you’d probably be understood, but it’s a very common point of English grammar, so I’d suggest that you work on mastering it.
Edit: Corrected “relative pronoun” to “demonstrative pronoun”.