Monday, March 3, 2014
How to improve your blog writing

Chapter 4 -Food Bloggers learn about good writing
I felt like I was back at school when John Cooke, food writer and marketer took us through the basics of writing about food for our blogs.
John started by reading two pieces with very different styles: AA Gills Table Talk and Claudia Rodens Arabesque. The point of this was to help us understand that good writing is good writing whatever the style and that good writing tries to tell you something you dont know. Which is exactly what he then proceeded to do:
- Think about why you are writing and who you are writing for, off line or online?
- Write as if you are writing to one person
- Where will it be read? PC? Tablet? mobile phone? Size matters!
- Do your research - find out something your audience doesnt know
- Avoid cliches: Drizzle not, No to Nom Nom
- Edit and write again in half the space (be your own editor)
- Do the overnight test - DONT PRESS THE BUTTON
- Read it aloud to yourself, read it to someone else if you can
- Being funny isnt easy, leave it to the comedians
- Think about colour in your writing, use similes
- The start is very important, make sure the first sentence grabs your audience
- End by referring back to where you stared
.jpg)
"The best meal I ever had was not about fine dining, there was no Michelin star chef, nor a sommelier. In fact I wore flip flops and we drank local beer. I dont remember the name, but it was ice cold and hit the spot. I cant remember what we ate, but we rode in a cable car to the top of a mountain and stepped into a different world. The menu was unintelligible but the views over Penang were unforgettable. We could have had a cheese sandwhich and it still would have been a memorable experience. I may not recall the menu but I can almost see, smell, taste and hear it some 30 years later."
Although the memory was mine, Kellie was a superb co-writer and editor and I doubt the piece would have had the same impact without her input. I am trying to avoid cliches, but in this case, two heads are definitely better than one.

Many thanks to John for his workshop, it was good to be reminded that, just like cooking and baking, writing is a craft which requires practice and constructive criticism to improve.
Why dont you tell me about your most memorable meal?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment