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How to Blog: My Rules

By January 24, 2013November 15th, 2015110 Comments

I hear from a lot of you that what you like the most about our site is that you never know what youโ€™re going to find from one post to the next. I love getting this note โ€” because it confirms that a) you guys are paying attention, and b) because it allows me to write inside-baseball posts like this one and know that you will still come back tomorrow in search of the perfect tandoori burger. Correct?

Today I want to answer a question Iโ€™ve been asked a lot: How do you write this blog?ย  Which Iโ€™m also going to interpret asย How do you write and How did you start?ย Itโ€™s an involved question, one Iโ€™m not sure Iโ€™m entirely qualified to answer yet, and one that, youโ€™ll see, sends me in several different directions below. (To give you an idea, the working title of this post for the past few months had been โ€œEverything I Learned About Blogging I Learned in Magazinesโ€ before I realized I had so much more to say.) The truth is, I had no idea what I was doing when, in the winter of 2010, GoDaddy told me that Yes! The URL dinneralovestory.com is available! But Iโ€™ve figured out a few things along the way and thought it might help those of you thinking of starting your own blog. (As for starting a career in food writing, you cannot get any better than this post by Amanda Hesser.) What I wrote below should not be mistaken for The Definitive Rules of Blogging 101. There are about eight million people out there generating eight million hits a day and maybe even making money from it โ€” and if thatโ€™s what you are after, you should skip this post and seek their advice. Iโ€™ve accepted now that this site will most likely never be the source of a down payment on that house in Block Island overlooking Mohegan Bluffs. (Why God, Why?) But for a satisfying job that has led to unexpected places, these are the rules Iโ€™ve lived by.

Lesson 1: Shorter Isnโ€™t Necessarily Better. Better is Better

My crash-course in blogging lasted about two weeks. I had just lost my job at Cookie, the parenting magazine where I was editing features, and a website called to see if I could help out launching a few blogs on their lifestyle vertical. I was feeling a little lost โ€” not to mention there was not one more corner of the house to organize, which seemed to be my way of dealing with my sudden daily aimlessness โ€” so I said yes and pretty soon was on the 8:43 commuter train again, headed to a downtown office where the staffers checked every box for website start-up. (Skull caps: Check; Bright Eyes station playing on Pandora: Check; Enrollment in artisanal, fetish-y food project: Check.) Everything happens faster online (first lesson) so my supervisor did not waste anytime laying down a few crucial rules about blogging to his seemingly prehistoric new freelancer. Donโ€™t write in long paragraphs. Donโ€™t write long at all. Online readers like quick hits. They like lists and bullet points whenever possible! Say things that will start a conversation in the comment field. (Or better yet, incite a riot in the comment field!) Tweet everything! Post everything on facebook! And my favorite, which I think about every single day:ย Remember: Producing content is 10% of the job; Promoting it is 90%. Ay yi yi.

For week one I just followed orders and repeated to myself โ€œDonโ€™t be old.โ€ But by week two, I was done. Hereโ€™s the thing. My supervisor was right about every single thing above. If you want more visitors ย (and any blogger who tells you he or she doesnโ€™t is lying) you can get there more readily by following all of his rules. But you could also assume a certain amount of intelligence from your reader and write the way you want to write, the way most readers want you to write, that is, honestly. The masses might not come right away, but if you take time to write something that is pure and resonant and comes with no behind-the-scenes agenda, people will respond. And you will respond to their response. I remember early on in my DALS life when my ambitions were a little grander, I called my VC friend Roger in Palo Alto for a counseling session on building the โ€œbusiness.โ€ He gave me the best piece of advice โ€” or at least the best piece of advice that I felt most comfortable with. Donโ€™t think about anything but the content for the first year. You need to earn the trust of readers and you need to distinguish yourself. The only way to do that is by paying close attention to what you are producing every day. Roger flip-flopped the formula for me and set me back on the path I knew so well from magazines, and that had never really led me wrong before: 90% of your time should be spent thinking about content, fresh new ideas, and presenting those ideas from a fresh perspective. Your perspective. Everything else? 10%.

Lesson 2: Define Your Mission

One of my earliest magazine jobs was at a major womenโ€™s lifestyle title. The editor at the time was a veteran magazine editor named Carrie โ€” she had been in the industry for 25 years, wore all black along with trademark black-framed editor glasses. I didnโ€™t know a whole lot, but I knew enough to know that I should write down every single thing she said and commit it to memory. At our Tuesday line-up meetings, sheโ€™d hold up some new book that we should be paying attention to (I one-clicked Botany of Desire as soon as she held it up saying less as a suggestion than an absolute command, โ€œPay attention to this guy. His name is Michael Pollanโ€); or of a magazine that was doing something new and exciting visually (Everyday Food! RIP!ย ); or simply what her latest fashion philosophy was. (โ€œGap Clothes, Prada Accessories!โ€œ) On the Tuesday meeting after September 11th, she told us that she had thought long and hard about our magazine and its place in the new world and decided there was going to be a revamped mission. โ€œWe are not a magazine people come to for the newsโ€ she told us. โ€œWe are a magazine that tells people how to handle the news.โ€ ย She went on to say that from that point forward the mission of the magazine could be pared down to three simple words: Comfort, Community, and Control. They became known as the three Cโ€™s,ย and if we had an idea we wanted to assign for the magazine, it had better fit into that description. Boy did we roll our eyes at the Three Cโ€™s! But boy did they ever work. Having a mission sharpened our focus. It helped us define who we were and why people came to us. When I moved on to my next job and oversaw a large section of the magazine, the first thing I tortured my team with was defining its mission. I also spent about six months writing the mission for this blog. I knew it would be as important for me to lay a blueprint as it would be for anyone who happened to drop by to see what the heck I was up to. This page is one of the most visited of the site. Which is another way of saying This is where I reel them in.

Lesson 3: No Harm in Making Things Pretty
If you spend a little money on a good designer, you will be ahead of 99% of the websites out there. It can take a lifetime to articulate to a designer the look you are after (I was lucky to earn my Masters in this at Conde Nast) but it helps to โ€œpull scrapโ€ as Carrie used to say. Bookmark anything online that you respond to โ€” not just blogs, but websites, textures, colors. Create an inspiration board on Pinterest to stay organized. Or do it the old fashioned way, cut layouts out of magazines and pin it on an actual physical bulletin board. Fonts are incredibly important. Colors are incredibly important. I knew I didnโ€™t have have a lot of time with online readers so I knew the visual first impression would be crucial. When I was working with my very gifted designer, Ava, I sent her photos of baby birds with their mouths wide open. (Because my dad used to say that his three kids asking to be fed and clothed and, you know, parented, conjured up this image.) After a few back-and-forths she landed on the masthead you see at the top of this blog. I love those birds and feel they are a crucial part of my identity. She also mustโ€™ve gone through 25 different logos before creating the chalkboardy font. I think because Dinner: A Love Story fell under the โ€œmommy blogโ€ umbrella, her first instinct โ€” like a lot of people โ€” was to go precious and cutesy and retro. So for a while there, every time she sent me something to review, I kept returning it to her with the same instruction: โ€œNo! More fโ€“ked up!โ€ The creative director at Cookie (who is now at Bon Appetit) taught me that one. Thanks Al!

Lesson 4: Ask Yourself: Whatโ€™s the Hed & Dek?

This might sound a little crazy, but it took me a little while to learn that anything worth reading, for the most part, has a central idea behind it. It doesnโ€™t have to be aย bigย central idea, but it has to have an idea. You need to ask yourself, what is the point of writing this? Blogging is a dangerous medium for the same reason that it is a marvelous one: because you can do whatever you want whenever you want to and however you want to. I donโ€™t think thereโ€™s a single person out there who hasnโ€™t read a post by someone and wonderedย Who cares? Why is this person spending so much time on this?ย In magazines, there was a little exercise weโ€™d do beforehand to make sure this never happened. Weโ€™d do a little something called an OUTLINE. It didnโ€™t really matter what the outline looked like, what was important was the Title and the Subtitle. (Or, in magazine parlance: โ€œthe hed and the dek.โ€) What is the hed and the dek? Before I write anything โ€” whether it was a chapter in my book, a post, a magazine story โ€” I try to ask myself this. If I canโ€™t explain it in a title and a subtitle, Iโ€™m in trouble. If I can, thereโ€™s my idea. Itโ€™s really nothing more than the topic sentence we learn about in third grade writing. Once I know what I want to say, I spend the rest of the piece saying it.

Lesson 5: Seek Out an Editor (Preferably an Editor Who Knows What He or She is Doing)

You need someone circling your copy saying things like: Build to this more. Have a point of view.ย Tell a story. Paint more of a picture.ย You need someone to say to you โ€œThereโ€™s almost always a better way of communicating that thought without using an adverb,โ€ as Andy did early on in my career. You need someone like Tom Prince, one of my first mentors in magazines, who while editing a story I wrote for Real Simple, came across the word โ€œspud,โ€ circled it, then wrote in the margin: โ€œNever.โ€ I had a B.A. in English from at a pretty solid New England private college and yet I graduated having no idea how to write a compelling lead for a story. For four years I wrote 10-page analytical papers on Toni Morrison and Henry James and Kate Chopin and did fine (Iโ€™ll conveniently ignore the C-freaking-minus I got on that Leslie Marmon Silko paper) yet somewhere along the way, I forgot how important it was to tell a story, to build to something, to set up the idea in a way that keeps the readers engaged. To use words that advance the story, not words that trip it up.ย To use strong verbs. (Iโ€™ll never forget coming across a sentence my friend Mike wrote in Esquire a hundred years ago โ€” โ€œWe cocktailed-and-hors dโ€™ouevred all nightโ€ฆโ€ โ€” and thinking: You can do that??) My editors in magazines were there to remind me that academic writing is good for academia. But writing with style and voice? Thereโ€™s nothing wrong with that โ€” in fact, thatโ€™s the goal.

โ€ฆAbout that Voice

When I feel flat or just plain lost โ€” as I do almost every week, ย just ask my husband โ€” the medicine I crave is reading writers with strong voices. ย You know how when you travel to another country then after a few days start thinking in that countryโ€™s language? Thatโ€™s what happens to me when I am immersed in good fiction. The trick is not to steal other writerโ€™s voices, but to let them loosen your own. Like pasta water with sticky pappardelle.ย The quickest-acting tonics for me are contemporary short stories by masters like Matt Klam (โ€œIssues I Dealt With in Therapyโ€ in Sam the Cat) Jhumpa Lahiri (anything in Unaccustomed Earth), George Saunders (โ€œSemplica Girlโ€ inย Tenth of December); but Iโ€™ll periodically jump in and out of classics like My Antonia and Vanity Fair too.ย Also, have you read Catcher in the Rye since your English teacher made you read it in 9th grade? I dare you to pick it up and not immediately want to pen your own Great American Novel. I dare you!

Lesson 6: Think About Pacing & the All-powerful โ€œMixโ€

That whole thing about โ€œnever knowing what youโ€™re gonna getโ€ when you show up on our site? Thatโ€™s not as random as it seems. Andy and I went running together a few months ago (which I canโ€™t stand, for the record, because he thinks Iโ€™m running slower than him on purpose! to make him mad!) and spent about one mile of the total three arguing about what should go live that Wednesday: Shaun Tanโ€™s Book Recommendationsย or Mushroom Pizza? (Bet thatโ€™s the first time that sentence has ever been written.) Whatโ€™s the difference? Well, not to make you feel guilty or anything, but we care a lot about the way you read this stuff. And that means thinking about the โ€œmixโ€ of the content and the way one post follows another. We know that you probably donโ€™t want three fish recipes in a row. Or three non-recipe posts in a row. Nor do you want to read a 3,000-word rant right after a 3,000-word rant. (Which is why tomorrow, you will most likely be getting a one-sentence post. Are you so sick of me? I canโ€™t believe you are still reading.) At any given moment on this website you can scroll down the home page and find some combination of content that instantly telegraphs the mission of this website: There will always be photographs of food, family, and books. Again, I have magazine-making to thank for this instinct.

Lesson 7: Donโ€™t Not Write Because Someone Else Has Done it Better

If you are thinking about starting a blog or a book or some other ambitious writing project, do yourself a favor, do not google the topic of whatever it is you plan to write or blog about. It will be depressing and almost impossible for you to not react like this: โ€œWhy am I bothering when so many more talented people have beaten me to it?โ€ If you ignore this advice and start spiralling down to dark places, then just watch Patti Labelle killing the ABCs on Sesame Street. Do you think she said to herself, โ€œIโ€™m not going to bother singing the alphabet when at least a zillion people have sung it before me?โ€ Doubt it. Remember: Every story has been told, but not your version of it.

Lesson 8: You Do Have Time
Every time I hear someone say โ€œI donโ€™t have time to do all thatโ€ I always reply the same way: โ€œWell then you are a perfect candidate to write!โ€ No one has time, and if you are busy, that means you have lots of fertile soil to till for content. Deadlines and limited blocks of time are your friends. They are productivity gods. Recently I had an entire day to work on edits for a Bon Appetit story. What shouldโ€™ve taken me 3 hours took me 10 because I expanded it to the amount of time I had. And not that I am in any way comparing myself to Jack White here, but in this clipย about his creative process (courtesy of the most excellent Talent Code), he says basically the same thing: โ€œDeadlines and things make you creative. Opportunity and telling yourself you have all the time in the world? All the money in the world? All the colors in the palette? That just kills creativity.โ€

I never really know how long a post is going to take when I start writing.ย Some days I will write one in the 20 minutes between dropping off the kids at the bus stop and catching the train to the city. Some posts that I think will be pre-coffee toss-offs, take days. ย Andy is famous for sitting down at the computer within ten seconds of getting an idea, then 72 hours later emerging from a stupor saying, โ€œCan you believe we just spent three days of our lives writing that?โ€ (And then a week later, heโ€™ll write the instant classic Stromboli in under 15 minutes.) When you are a writer, there has to be a certain amount of pain-denial going on every day. If I remembered how long and involved some of these posts tend to be, I might not ever embark on them. This post you are reading was first entered into my WordPress queue on May 3, 2012. It didnโ€™t take eight months to write. It took eight months of accumulating thoughts (every time I had one, Iโ€™d scribble it in the post draft) and then about a day of polishing everything up. As any dinner-maker will appreciate, itโ€™s always a little more efficient when you donโ€™t have to start from scratch.

Lesson 9: It All Goes Somewhere
There is literally no reason not to write. Nothing bad can come of it. Even if no one reads what you are writing, you have a chronicle of something. You are creating something. Iโ€™m not the first to say it, but the act of creating almost always leads you somewhere you never would have gone otherwise, and makes you see things differently. How is that ever bad? The luckiest among us might even get nice notes from readers saying how much what weโ€™ve written has inspired them. Iโ€™m telling you, if you are coming from a real place, thereโ€™s no question that will happen.

ย 

110 Comments

  • Avatar Caitlin says:

    this is awesome. Thank you!

  • Avatar Deirdre says:

    Love this. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

    I can be my own best blocker, telling myself that posting isnโ€™t what brings in the money, that others are doing it better, and that everything else on my to-do list should be done first.

    Your list has given me lots to work on this year. And FYI, your banner (in 2010, before chalkboards were everywhere) is what drew me in, your yogurt-chicken made me come back, and your reflective posts like this one are what made me a cheerleader for your site and book.

  • Avatar Bea says:

    Hard to put into words the thanks, gratitude, admiration and awe I feel at reading something so well written. Thanks for the honesty and inspiration. It is posts like this that make me come back to your blog again and again. (Oh and maybe for the dee-licious recipes tooโ€ฆ)

  • Jenny Jenny says:

    All these amazingly generous comments are reminding me of another rule. Revise, revise. Polish. Go back, revise. (This is one thing thatโ€™s VERY different about blogs vs. magazines.) I have been polishing this thing all morning as you guys have been reading it and have to resist the urge to add a whole โ€˜nother set of rules. I think Iโ€™ll save them for another day, though. And Kelley: Andy, me, and my friend Todd just had the same exact classic conversation on the way to work the other day โ€œIf we had all the money/time/etc in the worldโ€ฆโ€ (as we do periodically) and I totally agree with you that it should be rephrased the way you suggest. So brilliant! Thanks everyone and more laterโ€ฆ

  • Avatar Melissa@Julia's Bookbag says:

    The reason I love your food blog more than any other is because I know Iโ€™m going to get a story to go along with the food. I love that. Thank you for continuing to do what you doโ€ฆ..

  • Torrie @ a place to share... says:

    this (no, THIS) is what i needed to push me back into the deadline mode that i have โ€œslippedโ€ out of and therefore, have failed to write since 12/7/12โ€ฆ the longest iโ€™ve ever let my blog go untouched.

    thank you for this.

    {what a sweet #1 comment that was to see immediately reading your post}

  • Avatar Lauren says:

    This is terrific. Well done and thank you!! (And also thanks for the apricot and mustard chicken that I have been making approximately once a week since your book arrived on my doorstep.)

  • Tina says:

    I love the โ€œ(โ€ฆI canโ€™t believe youโ€™re still reading?) part! The Hed & Dek concept is helpful to me. Noticing your husband is commenter #1 made me smile. PS: My husband took advantage of getting a bookplate for my copy at Christmastime. Iโ€™m glad you went ahead & sent it without waiting for him to respond with my name. ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Avatar Michelle says:

    T H A N K Y O U .

  • Courtney says:

    My favorite part of this is your closing comment โ€“ โ€˜if you are coming from a real place, there is no doubt that will happen.โ€™

    I truly believe in authentic work and even if only my mother up the road is reading my blog it gives me joy to write it.

    Now, I truly need to work on a mission statement for myself! I love that idea.

  • Avatar Wendy says:

    Thanks so much for taking the time to write all of this down and share it here. Really inspiring!

  • Avatar Caitlin says:

    I feel like Iโ€™ve said this a dozen times before and Iโ€™m sure Iโ€™ll say it again, but this is my favorite post so far. Lesson 7 and lesson 9 are so important for me to read. Iโ€™m not a blogger, but I do love to write, and I am constantly stopped in my tracks (for months at a time) by people who do it so much better. Sometimes I put down a book, or read something here, and think, well, theyโ€™ve done it. I canโ€™t come close to that. My words canโ€™t be needed. But it all does go somewhere, doesnโ€™t? Loved all of this.

    You guys continue to make DALS my favorite place on this big olโ€™ interweb.

  • Avatar robin says:

    I just wanted to say I love your blog and the book and I am not at all surprised that this much thought goes into it โ€“ but you do a great job making it look easy (again, probably thanks to your magazine background)
    Thanks for creating this!

  • Avatar Stacey says:

    Long time reader, but this is my first comment. I just wanted to thank you for making our mealtimes better (tried the stromboli last night โ€“ big hit!) and our daily lives a bit brighter. This post is invaluable. I would love to start a blog some day. Right now I am content taking notes in my dinner diary.

  • Avatar Stearns 205 says:

    Amongst the highlights of my 4 years: Crushing an essay on Woman Warrior for BarryO. Top 5 lowlight: getting crushed by BarryO for my Silko paper. Like go be a chemistry major demolished. Haha. Just kiddingโ€ฆ sort of.

  • Avatar Stearns 205 says:

    (great post btw. very informative. wish I were a writer and had something to say.)

  • Avatar Arlene says:

    Today I became inspired, to get out of my own box! To go beyond the expectation of people and satisfy the passion within. I decided to pour my interests and past times into something more creativitly gratifying. I am starting a BLOG. I have no idea how to start other than the decision itself. Interested in finding out about your cookbook I came across your BLOG. And to my surpriseโ€ฆ BEHOLD โ€œHow to start a Blogโ€. This is no accident my friend :). So thank you for sharing and inspiring! Valuable and helpful advice!

  • Avatar krystina says:

    Wow โ€“ this is amazing. I just discovered your site about a week ago (Iโ€™m perpetually late to the party) and Iโ€™ve been flipping through the archives since.

    That notion of โ€œother people have done it before and are still doing it, better than I willโ€ rang so hard in my head when I started my own blog last year that it actually prevented me from posting much; I kind of half-assed it the first few months. Iโ€™ve mostly gotten over that- I saw the stromboli post plus 2-3 others the day afterโ€ฆhemmed and hawed over whether I wanted to make it, but (as you mentioned) I know I do have a unique perspective, so I made it and wrote about it, and it was so much fun. Holy run on, Batman.

    That was a long winded way of saying thank you, but really, thank you. This is so getting bookmarked.

  • Avatar Emma says:

    The rule I have for myself when writing is to just do it โ€“ sit down every day and write. The stories come eventually.

  • Avatar Wendy says:

    I have to say all the comments about smiling while reading your posts resonate with me. Your blog comes across as so genuine, down to earth as well as damn funny which is what keeps me coming back. Thank you.

  • Jenny Jenny says:

    Yes, Emma, thatโ€™s a good one. If you watch the Jack White clip he says โ€œWork ethic and creativity ride togetherโ€ and then later โ€œDo the work everyday.โ€ And Stearns 205 โ€” yep, BarryO for me too. Only I didnโ€™t crush a whole lot in his class to counter it.

  • Avatar Amanda @ DinnersintheFourOneFive says:

    Werenโ€™t you the one who told me to start a blog? I must admit, doing a blog feels so half-assed for me at times. However, I appreciate that itโ€™s an electronic diary of our dinners though, because more often than not, I go back to it to see what is on the menu for that night. I love that others click on it (through DALS no less!) and that flatters me to no end to have your vote of approval. That said, my lil ol bloggy blog will never be more than just that, a little corner of my world.

    I love what DALS has become and whatโ€™s in store for it in the future!

  • JulieD says:

    All great advice! Iโ€™m still sad over Everyday Food going away! ๐Ÿ™ So glad a friend sent me a link to this post โ€“ your blog is beautiful!

  • Red says:

    This is just so SANE. Thank you for taking the time to write it. I follow a lot of lifestyle bloggers who are clogging up my Google Reader and Instagram today with Alt Summit stuff. Itโ€™s so nutty and whipped up with anxiety and competition and ranking and promotion. This post was a breath of fresh, clean air on the state of blogging, writing, and creating content.

    Thanks.

  • Avatar Ceri @ Sweet Potato Chronicles says:

    How much do I love this post? So, so much. (Uh oh, adverb, adverb!) Itโ€™s devilishly easy to fall into the trap of feeling like any old thing can be thrown up online. But all any of us โ€“ bloggers, magazine writers, novelists โ€“ have is the relationships we create with readers. Everything else that comes along will always be as a result of that.

    Long live DALS (and posts about dinner, books, kids, writing and whatever else you crazy kids get up to!).

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