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Writer's
Guidelines - Share
Your Ideas With Us!
Fiery-Foods
& Barbecue Magazine and www.fiery-foods.com cover the
entire realm of fiery-foods and barbecue, including gardening, spicy
products, cooking, barbecuing, and travel. It is our goal to present
the most interesting information, articles, photos and recipes about
these fascinating subjects. If you’re passionate about a certain
area, share your ideas with us!
Please
query with ideas first. Do not send unsolicited submissions, as they
will not be read or returned. All queries are to be emailed to here
along with clips of recent works and contact information.
Articles
should be concise (2000 words or less, though we may consider using
longer articles as a multi-part series) and, more often than not,
include recipes. Please state availability of photos and/or other
visual material.
If
contracted, send the article either in the body of the email or as
an unformatted Microsoft Word document (single-spaced, flush left,
with NO bold, italic, underlining, or changes of font or sizes).
Detailed recipe format instructions can be found below.
Our
payment rates range from $250.00 (web site only) to $350.00 (web
site plus magazine). The fee will be paid within sixty days of
publication. In the event that an unpublished article is determined
to be unacceptable for any reason, a kill fee of twenty-five percent
of the writing fee will be paid. Fiery-Foods & Barbecue
Magazine and www.fiery-foods.com acquire exclusive first
world-wide publication rights, as well as non-exclusive electronic
rights and the right to use the article, with further payment, in
any future anthology. By submitting an article, you are authorizing
the editing of your work.
We
strongly suggest that potential contributors browse our web site and
read the Latest Articles.
Also, we will be glad to send you a sample copy of the magazine upon
request.
Thank
you for your interest in contributing to Fiery-Foods &
Barbecue Magazine and www.fiery-foods.com. We look
forward to hearing from you!
Instructions
for Writing Consumer (Non-Chef) Recipes
Format
When you
write a recipe, do not add any formatting at all. No bold, italic,
large type, underlining. Do it all in one typeface, preferably Times
New Roman. Make everything flush left. Single space everything, and
put a single space between the recipe elements, below.
There
are 5 elements to every recipe: title, headnotes, ingredients,
instructions, and yield.
Title
Make the
title interesting but not overly long. "Baked Beans" is a
boring title. "Aunt Ellen’s Baked Beans for a Sunday Dinner
with Family" is too long. "Baked Beans Spiced with
Cayenne" is interesting.
Headnotes
An
informal introduction to the recipe that can have any or all of the
following elements:
-
history
or origin of the recipe
-
unique
or interesting ingredients
-
what
to serve it with or over
-
any
special warnings or instructions that you wish emphasized
If the
recipe requires advance preparation, like marinating, or dough
rising, you should mention that here. (Note: This recipe requires
advance preparation.)
The
length of the headnotes should be three to six sentences.
Ingredients
THE
INGREDIENTS MUST BE LISTED IN THE EXACT ORDER THEY APPEAR IN THE
INSTRUCTIONS, so you should write the instructions first, then use
them as a guide to write the ingredients list. Guidelines:
-
do
not abbreviate: write out teaspoon, cup, and so on
-
use
the following form: "one tomato, peeled and chopped."
Or, "one cup peeled and chopped tomato," depending on
which you choose.
-
use
numerals: "2 cups cooked rice," not "two cups
cooked rice."
-
it
is easier to give prep instructions in the ingredient list than
telling people in the instructions to cook the rice, or peel the
tomatoes, or dice the carrots.
-
unless
it is a key ingredient (as in baking), do not specify the amount
of salt used; allow the cook to use discretion by writing
"Salt to taste."
Instructions
Many
cooks think recipes have to be minimal, but this is not our style.
Do not truncate the instructions by leaving out the articles;
always use "a," "an" and "the."
Write the instructions as you would write the headnotes.
Guidelines:
-
describe
the pan or other equipment used. Right: "In a skillet, fry
the beef cubes in the oil..." Wrong: "Fry the beef
cubes in the oil...." Right: " In a small bowl, beat
the egg yolks with a whisk..." Wrong: "Beat the egg
yolks...."
-
specify
temperatures when possible. "Bake in a 350 degree F. oven
for...."
-
specify
the length of time it takes to cook the ingredients:
"Simmer for 30 minutes...."
-
describe
how to assemble the dish for serving, as "Place the rice in
a bowl, add the curry on top, and garnish with the cilantro
leaves."
-
remember
that more information is better than too little information–we
will edit and it’s easier to cut info than to have to have you
explain what you left out.
Yield
The
correct format for this is:
Yield:
About 3 cups
or
Yield: 6
servings
Sample
Recipe
The
recipe below is a sample of how to write a clear, coherent recipe.
Machaca
Burritos
Common
throughout the Southwest in home cooking but not so common in
restaurants (who knows why?), this savory shredded meat burrito is a
meal in itself. The word machaca is derived from the Spanish machacar,
to pound, an apt description of the appearance of the meat. This
recipe is from our late friend, Barbara Graham.
Place
the roast in a large pan with water to cover and simmer until tender
and the meat begins to fall apart, about 3 to 4 hours. Remove the
roast from the pan, remove the fat and bone, and shred the meat by
hand or with a fork.
Return
the meat to the pan, add the green chile, tomato, onion, and garlic
powder, stir well, and simmer until all the liquid has been absorbed
by the meat, about ½ hour. Place the meat in a large flour tortilla
with the tomato, lettuce, cheese, and sour cream, if used.
Yield: 6
to 8 servings
Heat
Scale: Medium
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