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How Often To Post On A Food Blog 2018

There are days when writing is a breeze, and others where the words just don't flow. In both cases, having a structure to work off and knowing what's important to answer helps the flow so that you can get more done in less time.

Important: Read Google's guide on building high quality sites.

Just like in baking, having a post formula (or recipe) to follow can save you time, and headache.

To help you with this, we've created two amazing resources:

  • Recipe Update Checklist for updating older posts
  • Recipe Post Template for writing new posts

Coupled with the right tools and search engine configurations, you can get more engagement and pageviews with the same amount of work.

Jump to:
  • Recipe post anatomy
  • How to use headings
  • Keywords + Topic Modeling
  • Content: in the recipe card, or post?
  • Extra content ideas
  • Variations
  • Disclosures
  • Q: Is E-A-T directed at food bloggers?
  • Q: Can I use "how to" schema alongside recipes?
  • Q: How often should I post?
  • 💬 Comments

Recipe post anatomy

When you look at the top results for recipes, you'll find that there's a pattern to the content, which we'll call the "anatomy" of the recipe post:

  • Establish yourself: what is your E-A-T (expertise-authority-trustworthiness) and why are you a credible source for this recipe?
  • Hook: two sentences about what the recipe is about, try to catch the reader's attention and lay out the promise you'll deliver on: why should the visitor keep reading?
    • note: we recommend having enough content in the hook to push the first image below-the-fold on mobile, for pagespeed purposes
  • Finished product image: what the recipe will look like when it's done
  • Intro paragraph: what's your personal background and relationship to this recipe? Why are you writing about it? Is it a family recipe? Something new you tried and loved? A request from a reader?
  • Primary ingredients + image: what is this recipe centered around? Is it a particular meat or vegetable? Is it prepared a specific way? You'll often see the prepped but uncooked ingredients in the image here.
  • Process shots + instructions: this varies by recipe, but is generally centered around each "step" in your instructions, describing how to perform that step is done and showing your ingredients at the end of that stage
  • Recipe plugin: this shows the recipe in the traditional cookbook format, with an ingredient list and instructions list. The primary purpose is to present the information in a familiar, easily-readable format and consists of things like:
    • Recipe image
    • Ingredients
    • Instructions
    • Notes
  • Alternate recipes: this can either be other variations of your recipe on your own blog, or on other peoples' blogs
  • Call to action: this is often at the end, but could be anywhere in the recipe; calls to action include newsletter signups, buy now buttons for a featured Amazon affiliates product, surveys/polls, or anything else you want a visitor to do
  • Ads: the current state of food blogging is that most bloggers are compensated by advertising on the website; these are sprinkled throughout the blog and the ad networks (Gourmet Ads, AdThrive, Mediavine)
  • Pinterest: you can either specify a specific image for pinterest (and add the recipe title overlaying the image), or use a pin-it plugin to let your visitors pin any image on the post

How to use headings

Proper use of heading tags are critical not only for the readability of your post, but also for search engines. These are our recommended guidelines for using headings in recipes:

  • Modern guidelines for headings
  • Advanced "Jump To" Links
  • How to use emojis to boost click through rates

Here are some external resources for learning how to properly use headings:

  • Using headings to structure content (webaim.org)
  • SEO best practices for headers (SEJournal)
  • Best practices for headers (Google)
  • How to use headings on your site (Yoast)

There's been some bad advice circulating recently, about using header tags for entire sentences and paragraphs. Don't do this. Headers are not to be used for styling or "gaming" search engines.

Note: a "header" is a section of your website. A "heading" is a section heading using h2, h3, etc.

Keywords + Topic Modeling

Keyword research is a cornerstone to good content - you need to know which keywords you can compete for (keyword difficulty), and balance that against good search volume (50 searches per month isn't going anywhere).

But keywords aren't the end-all-be-all. We no longer recommend using the keywords in the headers. This is because search engines are moving to more of a topic modeling method and user-intent. Search engines understand what the primary topic of a page is without spamming the keyword thoughout the post.

Rather than simply spamming the keyword throughout your post, simply use relevant headings to cover different aspects of the recipe (see below: extra content ideas).

For more information, see: https://blog.marketmuse.com/keyword-research-doesnt-help-create-better-content

Content: in the recipe card, or post?

The recipe card should contain all the instructions and ingredients required to make the actual recipe. It must answer the question: if someone were to print the recipe card, would they have all the necessary steps to make it?

The actual post is where you can outline the decisions about what ingredients you chose, why you chose them, and any special considerations about why the reader would choose to make that recipe (eg. it's great for dinner, or a bar mitzvah, or it contains all 9 essential amino acids).

You also want to put your process shots in the post content, rather than the recipe card.

As a general rule of thumb, your post will rank in Google based on the content outside of the recipe card. This means you want to put your keywords, and the bulk of your content, outside of the recipe card.

Extra content ideas

Too many food blogs put personal anecdotes in the wrong places, and in the wrong amounts. Typically, this is done to fatten up the word count, or add paragraphs for their ad network to insert more ads into. These blogs won't be penalized for this in the future, but they will lose ranking as more relevant websites replace them.

Adding content isn't bad, in fact, it's great - if you do it right. What you want to do is addtopically relevant content, and answer questions that readers have. This ties back to the topic modeling ranking that search engines are moving to.

We recommend including paragraphs for:

  • Storage instructions: can this be stored for leftovers? for how many days?
    • how to refrigerate [meal]
    • how to freeze [meal]
    • how to reheat [meal]
    • even basic instructions like separating high moisture ingredients from dry ingredients can go a long way to helping the reader
    • I wish someone told me earlier in life that lemon juice prevents guacamole from browning
  • Side dishes: what goes well with this? how do you turn it into a balanced meal? this is a great place to internally link to other recipes.
    • if it's a carb or meat-heavy meal, which veggies work well with it?
    • soups?
    • salads?
  • Drink pairing: tea? coffee? beer? wine? what kind? most of you won't be sommeliers, but pairing muffins with coffee, or ceviche with a corona is a no-brainer.
  • Scaling the recipe: not all recipes scale ingredients linearly - if some proportions need to be adjusted when making more (or less), say so. You don't need twice as much water if you want to make twice as much pasta.
  • Variations: can this easily be made gluten free? dairy free? nut free? low carb? paleo? If you're not an expert in these, don't try to fake it. It can also be a great place to link to your fellow bloggers who have an (insert-diet-here) variation of your recipe, and build a network.
  • Mistakes you made: did you make this a bunch of times before you got it right? this kind of content is perfect for putting into your recipe. It demonstrates that you've put time and effort into getting it right, and it can help your readers troubleshoot their cooking, if something doesn't turn out right. Plus, it can sometimes be hilarious:
"why is my bread" google searches
mmmmm... rubbery

Variations

Offering ways to vary the recipe is super useful to the reader. Depending on the circumstances, they may want to add fiber, add flavor, maybe color (for presentation), or eliminate certain ingredients.

Here's an example of a high quality recipe variations section that includes quantities for the recipe, so that readers aren't guessing at how much should be added.

recipe variations example: add bacon, bell peppers, grated carrots, parmesan cheese, dill vs. parsely

These can be further sub-grouped into ideas for flavor, for presentation, for health.

Disclosures

There's also a few site-wide notices that aren't part of the recipe itself, but will necessarily take up valuable screen real-estate:

  • Sponsored content disclosure: whether the post is a sponsored post, contains affiliate links or ads, you'll need to disclose this according to the FTC; we recommend simply putting this on all recipes to ensure your bases are covered
  • Cookies disclosure: some government agency mandated that pretty much every webpage on the entire internet needs to tell you that they use cookies; toss this one in

Are there any other content areas that you see commonly in the top food blogs, and wish were easily available? Let us know below!

Q: Is E-A-T directed at food bloggers?

A: No. E-A-T stands for expertise-authority-trustworthiness, and it's a coincidence that the acronym is food related. For more details, see this article on the quality rater guidelines for food blogs.

Q: Can I use "how to" schema alongside recipes?

A: No.

Note: if you're using recipe cards like WPRM or Tasty Recipes with the schema disabled, you can then use the "how to" blocks/schema from Yoast. Recipe posts however, require recipe schema.

Q: How often should I post?

See: how often should I post?

Q: Aaron has started a food blog on which he wants to post his recipes. he wants to place a high-quality image next to each cooking step. which file format should he use so that users do not experience a lag when loading the high-quality images on the website?

In-content images should use JPGs, exported at roughly 80% quality in a photo editor so that the uploaded file is around 200-250 kb. This is not a hard and fast rule, and may require additional testing. For more details, see image filesize vs. pagespeed.

We recommend uploading 1200-px width images for future-proofing. For more information, see modern in-post images.

What's vastly more important is that you're using a plugin like WP Rocket to lazyload your images. This tells the browser not to load your image until it comes into view of the device, and has a huge impact on page speed.

Another key factor is that your website should have "thumbnails" registered at different sizes, so that the correct image size is served to different devices. This used to be the theme's role, but has been moved into the Feast Plugin's Modern Image Sizes.

How Often To Post On A Food Blog 2018

Source: https://feastdesignco.com/how-to-write-food-blog-recipe-post/

Posted by: weekslontoll.blogspot.com

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