Copyright © 2003
Pamela White
Publishers post guidelines for writers that require published clips to be sent with their query letters. Writers cannot get published clips unless they have been published.
These are the times
that try writers' souls.
| The logic is just as perplexing when writers try to break into new niches. Food editors ask for food-related writing samples prior to assigning stories to new writers. Never fear, there are ways to conquer that old "Catch 22." Here are six ways writers and chefs can break into food writing. Some are sneaky roundabout ways; others make use of editors' needs for new writers to pen essays and travel pieces. Combining food with another writing niche is yet a third way to acquire those valuable food writing clips. | About the author: Pamela White is the author of FabJob.com's "Become a Food Writer," and editor of Food Writing, an online newsletter. Visit her website at www.food-writing.com |
"If your writing job is starting to get in the way of your search
for the perfect meal, its time to consider a switch to food writing."
| One: Try a sneaky way to get a food writing clip. Look at your professional expertise. How does it connect with food? If you are an architect or you've worked with one to design a kitchen, use that to write an article for a handy man magazine. Include tips on how to lay out a kitchen so that food lovers or amateur chefs will be delighted with the results. Do you know a professional party planner or are you known for your gatherings? Write up a holiday event, including recipes, for your local newspaper or a regional magazine. Love the outdoors? Write about building a barbecue for a do it yourself magazine, or share tips on fileting fish for the weekend fisherman. | Two: Write a personal essay about food. It's not only professional food writers that are writing essays about food memories, favorite meals and picky eaters. Everyone has a tale to share about summer fruit, Fourth of July cookouts or first bites of TV dinners. Who is going to buy these essays? Read the food magazines. "Saveur" runs expressive essays on everything from bread soaked in milk to a first experience with a mango. "The Square Table," an online, non-paying market, accepts essays on dining. "Woman's Day" and "Family Circle" publish essays on food and its impact on family, life and relationships. "Parents," "Parenting" and "Child" publish advice regularly on getting picky eaters to try new foods. |
Three: Report on your vacation. But instead of writing something
as banal as "what I did on my summer vacation," write a travelogue,
including short reviews of restaurant meals.Oh, you didn't travel to Provence last June? Write about traditions at
your family reunion. Why not do a round up of five or six small
barbecue joints in Kansas City?Stayed close to home? Write about the food at the water, amusement,
or theme park - what was good, bad, or healthy.If you did travel abroad, I hope you took plenty of notes and photographs.
Once you have your idea for a travel and food piece in mind, start looking
for markets. Local newspapers in both the place you visited and where you
live are possible markets.
Frugal-themed newsletters and websites use articles on traveling and
eating on the cheap.
An article about how to dine well at amusement parks and fairs
would interest readers of parenting and women's magazines.
| Four: Teach a cooking class; take a cooking class. Write it up as a publicity piece for the cooking school. Alternatively, write up how to teach a cooking class as a home-based business for women's magazines or entrepreneur publications. Maybe you live in a city that has food events, like Taste of..., wine tastings, chili cook-offs, or baking competitions? Alternative newspapers, weekly newspapers and regional magazines are possible markets for articles on how to put on a baking, or cooking, contest, the best in local wines, or which restaurants offered the best bites at a large gathering. | Five: Combine food writing with another niche. Write about kitchen gardens, herbs grown in window boxes, winter gardens, starting seeds. Interview organic gardeners, local farmers, and who's selling at the farmer's market. Combine camping, RV's and fishing with recipes and quick snacks to pack that are easy to transport yet tasty. Think further -- sports-minded magazines (don't forget dance and cheerleading publications) can use recipes that provide quick energy with minimal fuss. Health writers can write articles on diets that help chronic conditions: pain, yeast infections, migraines, arthritis. |
Six: Pick a lesser known holiday and write it up for fun. St. Swithin's Day is an ongoing joke at our household. It falls on July 15, so we claim St. Swithin to be the patron saint of barbecue. You can pick an actual holiday -- something that isn't done to death -- or write about a special holiday your family has created.
These ideas are also starters for established food writers looking to expand into other markets. Pick one, or mix and match for your food writing success.
the end
About the author: Pamela White is the author of FabJob.com's "Become a Food Writer," and is also the editor of Food Writing, an online newsletter. Visit her website at www.food-writing.com
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