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by Kristin

How to Write a Recipe Like a Pro

September 12, 2011 in Tips

As part of the #Irishfoodpix day at Bord Bia last week, where the 40+ bloggers in attendance learned how to hone our food photography and styling skills, I gave a short talk on recipe writing. You might know me as one half of the IFBA along with Caroline or through my Edible Ireland or Dinner du Jour blogs, but in my day job I’m a freelance editor specialising in cookery and food books and have worked with many of Ireland’s best chefs and food writers. These are my top five tips for how to write a recipe like a pro.

1. List ingredients in the order they’ll be used.

Many people think they should list the most important or the biggest ingredient first, especially if it’s meat, but this isn’t best practice. Listing ingredients in the order in which they’ll be used in the method is not only more logical, but it makes it easier for cooks to follow along. Or if a cook loses their place in the method, a quick glance at the ingredients list will show them what comes next. If you’ve been cooking for awhile, you can probably figure out how to cook most recipes just by looking at the ingredient list – first this, then that.

2. If it doesn’t matter what order ingredients are used in, list them in descending order of weight, volume or number.

If you’re making a dish that calls for onions, carrots, celery and courgettes to all be added at the same time, it looks more elegant and orderly on the page to list them as 3 courgettes, 2 carrots, 1 onion, 1 stalk of celery. The same is true of liquid measurements and tablespoons/teaspoons. It’s a small thing, but it will make your recipe look more polished and professional and will show that you’ve taken care with it and have thought everything through.

3. Be specific.

A cookbook is really just a glorified instruction manual, so it’s important to be as clear as possible by being specific and spelling out everything. For example, say what type of heat you need to cook over (low, medium or high), give sizes of fruit and veg (e.g. large potatoes, small leeks), specify sizes of frying pans, bowls and baking tins and always give cooking times for individual steps. It’s important to specify cooking times to give readers an idea of how long certain steps or the whole recipe will take. Even a little detail like the size of a bowl or pan matters – if you’re using a bowl that other ingredients will need to be added to, make sure to specify a large bowl, or if you’re making, say, a pasta sauce in a pan that all the drained, cooked pasta will need to be added to eventually, make sure to specify a large pan. Here’s an example of what it means to be specific: don’t say ‘saute the onions, then add the carrots’, but rather, say ‘saute the onions in a large frying pan for 10 minutes on a medium heat, until softened but not browned, then add the carrots’.

4. Don’t assume anything.

Most writers cater for all levels of cook, and that includes beginners. Always explain things fully in a recipe and don’t assume readers will be able to fill in any blanks. Read through your recipe as if you’re a beginner cook – is everything clear? In The Recipe Writer’s Handbook, the authors say, ‘A recipe should appear simple and easy to prepare. It should not confuse the reader, require guesswork or offer inadequate guidance. Consumers want to be told what not to do, as well as what to do.’ If you follow tip 3 to be specific, this will go a long way towards making sure any reader, no matter what their skill level, can successfully make your recipe. And this leads us to tip 5.

5. Take advantage of chances to educate your readers.

By now, you’ve probably learned a lot of tips in the kitchen, whether it’s through your own trial and error, taking cookery classes, reading cookbooks or watching cookery programmes on TV. Why not share your knowledge with your readers? It can often be done by just adding a little bit more text onto the end of an instruction in the method. For example:

  • Instead of saying ‘brown the chicken in batches’, say ‘brown the chicken in batches, taking care not to overcrowd the pan so that the meat sears instead of braises’.
  • Instead of saying ‘cook the garlic on a low heat’, say ‘cook the garlic on a low heat so it won’t burn and become bitter’.
  • Instead of saying ‘sift the icing sugar’, say ‘sift the icing sugar to make sure your icing won’t have any lumps’.
  • Instead of saying ‘place the tart tin on a baking tray and pour in the filling’, say ‘place the tart tin on a baking tray before you pour in the filling to make it easier to transfer to the oven and to catch any drips’.

It might seem repetitive to say these things in every recipe, but remember that people won’t be reading the recipes on your blog or in your book straight through, like they would a novel, but rather will pick and choose them and so might miss some valuable information if you only say it once.

Another part of educating your readers is trying to anticipate questions or worries they might have as they make the recipe. For example, a short note like ‘don’t worry if the mixture looks curdled’ or ‘the cake should still have a slight wobble in the middle’ is all it takes to reassure your reader that they’re doing things right.

Julia Child was a pioneer in educating home cooks through her books. In an interview, she said, ‘I found that the recipes in most – in all – the books I had were really not adequate. They didn’t tell you enough. … I won’t do anything unless I’m told why I’m doing it. So I felt that we needed fuller explanations so that if you followed one of those recipes, it should turn out exactly right. My feeling is that once you know everything and have digested it, then it becomes part of you.’

Think of it this way – the best recipes are ones where the writer is like a friend in the kitchen with you, there to help out or reassure you if needed.

***

If you would like to learn more about recipe writing, I recommend Will Write for Food: The Complete Guide to Writing Cookbooks, Blogs, Reviews, Memoir, and More by Dianne Jacobs and The Recipe Writer’s Handbook by Barbara Gibbs Ostmann and Jane L. Baker (though if you were only going to buy one, go for Will Write for Food).

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by Kristin

Top 10 Tips from Bloggers International by Móna Wise

August 10, 2011 in Tips

Back in June, Móna Wise from the WiseWords blog (and @WiseMona) attended the first meeting of Bloggers International, which took place in County Laois as well as in Chipping Norton, England. Móna, who also recently attended the Plate to Page blogging workshop in Germany, went along to learn how to improve her blogging style, attract more readers and earn money from blogging. We asked Móna to draw up a list of the top 10 tips and lessons she learned from the evening. Thanks, Móna!

1. Research key words and implement them into a blog post: use Google keywords.
If you’re writing a blog post on apricots, then type it into Google search and try to incorporate a few of the ‘found’ words into your piece. This helps your article get discovered by the search engines. However, this was followed up with a word of caution: ‘Best practice is to optimize your blog post with only one or two key words.’

2. Research your post.

This is a no brainer, right? I’m guilty of sitting down with my laptop ready to ream off another blog post only to realise that I have no idea what I am talking about and need to do some research. If you are not knowledgeable on your topic, find a topic you are well versed in and write about that.

3. Keep your blog vibrant. Use short sentences and everyday language. Write as you speak.
I think any blogger, anywhere in the world, can take note of this one and hopefully learn something. There are so many blogs out there and the writing is just so forced. Didactic even. Sit down and have a conversation out loud with your monitor. Talk (out loud) about what you want to write and then start writing. In that tone, using that same voice. There is no need to overcomplicate it.

4. It’s not how many tweets, but what you tweet that counts.
It’s not how many tweets you have tweeted that show how fabulous you are, but more what you have tweeted and how you have engaged your followers/fans that matters.

5. Can a newspaper edit a blog post and publish it without permission? No, but it happens all the time.
Protecting your work is important, but unless you trawl the internet to find where your stolen work is resurfacing, this is just something bloggers have to come to terms with. There was quite a bit of grumbling from the audience on this one.

6. Stop obsessing about numbers and focus on engaging your readers.
This is why a lot of people blog – they want to develop a nice ‘it takes a village’ feel on their website or Facebook page. If you are trying to generate revenue from these two models, then spend your time engaging the customers you have already and stop chasing your tail trying to recruit followers/fans that may never ‘buy’ from you.

7. What are must-have plug-ins for WordPress blogs?
SEO All in One or the Ultimate SEO plug-in. I’m not going to lie to you. I have no idea what this one means. I know that SEO means ‘search engine optimisation’, but that’s it. All I know, and the reason I included this, is that when the panel members talked about this, it was like there was a sale on at Brown Thomas and everyone was racing to buy the newest Kate Spade purse. I don’t think I have either of these plug-ins on my blog but now feel that without them my blog will never reach its true potential and be ‘found’.

8. Facebook is not a silver bullet. You need to be ahead of the curve to achieve. Be creative.
I think a lot of people use Twitter and Facebook to drive business / readers to their blog (or website), but I can tell from my own experience that this only works and translates into sales with revenue if you take the time to engage your readers. Be social. Hang out. Chat. Tweeting just to get someone to click on your link might actually help you lose readers. Listen to your readers. Walk before you run. Ask your readers what they would like to see on your blog. Let them develop your ‘community’. If you get 50 of your current readers involved, they will ‘work’ for you by sharing your content. Interact with your readers and always respond to comments.

9.  How can you make money? Advertise your expertise – work will come from that.
This is what everyone wants to know. Very few bloggers make money just from blogging. You have to market yourself and the services you offer. Once you have a steady flow of followers, you will earn a bit of credibility and be the ‘go to’ person for what you have on offer. Slow and steady wins the race.

10. Two-way communication is what blogging is all about.
I think that Marie-Ennis O’Connor summed it up the best for any blogger out there. If you are a blogger (or want to start blogging), keep in mind the most important ingredient in the recipe for successful blogs. Without the readers, you are just a bunch of words (and sometimes pretty photos) on a page.

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