Food Biz
The Power of Self-Publishing in Food Media
Food writers and recipe developers go rogue with newsletters, videos, podcasts, and more—but have we seen this story before?
Photo by Mark Weinberg
On Black & Highly Flavored, co-hosts Derek Kirk and Tamara Celeste shine a light on the need-to-know movers and shakers of our food & beverage industry.
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8 Comments
Eliot P.
March 26, 2021
My favorite indie food newsletter is Seasonal (https://seasonal.substack.com/), which investigates the San Francisco Bay Area food system one fruit and vegetable at a time. I love how compelling each story is, how it piques my curiosity about things I've never thought about before, and how much voice and enthusiasm comes through. There are always unique angles: science, natural history, cooking, agriculture, etc. I seriously hope Netflix turns this into a series like Salt Fat Acid Heat. Highly recommended.
Anna B.
March 3, 2021
I love seeing this movement toward newsletters. As Nichelle pointed out, it's nice to be free from the overly perfected scene on Instagram. I love subscribing to newsletters, and just started my own on Substack.
Marcy G.
March 3, 2021
I love this topic. I’ve been doing a monthly newsletter called A Note from Marcy on my own website since 1997 and monetized it or my site (there’s a partial paywall) since 2004. At that time, I was gathering a reader/visitor base, due in most part to my initial career as a freelance food writer in print. I only monetized my site to discourage recipe ‘borrowing’ wherein people would scoop up my content and post it on recipe repository sites. At the same time, I began a career in traditional publishing. That disappeared in 2008 and I started self-publishing.
Now my site is just shy of the quarter-century mark (!) and thriving as is my self-publishing efforts (of black and white cookbooks no less!) and I look forward to publishing my 12th cookbook this spring. If you write and publish enough, eventually you will find traction.
Am I famous? No but certainly I am not unknown? Am I insanely wealthy? No but I’ve done enough to qualify as having ‘succeeded’ (and supported three sons solo throughout this journey). I do the minimum social media. It takes me off-course from producing content and I can’t compete with celebrity. But I believe in myself and my passion for my work.
I believe at the end of the day that great content, consistently done, still rules. The second thing I believe is to find and curate your reader and write with them in mind rather than scatter your efforts. Just write, publish, repeat and have faith.
Now my site is just shy of the quarter-century mark (!) and thriving as is my self-publishing efforts (of black and white cookbooks no less!) and I look forward to publishing my 12th cookbook this spring. If you write and publish enough, eventually you will find traction.
Am I famous? No but certainly I am not unknown? Am I insanely wealthy? No but I’ve done enough to qualify as having ‘succeeded’ (and supported three sons solo throughout this journey). I do the minimum social media. It takes me off-course from producing content and I can’t compete with celebrity. But I believe in myself and my passion for my work.
I believe at the end of the day that great content, consistently done, still rules. The second thing I believe is to find and curate your reader and write with them in mind rather than scatter your efforts. Just write, publish, repeat and have faith.
Lynne C.
March 11, 2021
Fantastic perspective, Marcy. And, as a baker, you included a formula, of course--thanks!
Rebecca F.
February 24, 2021
such a fantastic dive into this topic, cathy! who else is subscribed to about 450 amazing food newsletters/patreons/youtube channels these days? (I don't want to miss anything!)
Smaug
February 23, 2021
There's something to be said for a time when one needed to get through editors and fact checkers to be published. However, traditional outlets seem to have abandoned cooking almost entirely- at least newspaper food sections that I've seen in the last decade or so consist almost entirely of puff pieces on local restaurants, with maybe an occasional recipe or even more occasional piece on technique. Even television- there are hardly any cooking shows anymore, as they've been replaced with preposterous contests, travelogs and yet more puff pieces on restaurants and retail products.
Nandita G.
February 22, 2021
So much of this is about control of content and conditioning readers. Self publishing has, for long, been the way out for authors (like me) and writers who are now routinely narrowing the chasm between themselves and their audience/ reader. I’ve crowd funded indie published 6+ niche cookbooks so far, and my readers are global. The success of this model is a testimony to the failure of traditional format and massive overheads of making a cookbook. When I pitched my first cookbook (2013), most publishers would have rather created “short -stacks” of a topic *they* wanted to promote than back a new female author of color/ immigrant sharing her ethnic cuisine. Much has changed in the public eye. But even though these (some) authors are “successful”, others like them suffer in anonymity. Why? Cause they don’t have a powerful platform, existing clout or a personality yet. It is the readers job to navigate a crowded space to find someone who aligns with their interests - and magazines can help. A curated newsletter, no matter how well done, just won’t.
Liz S.
February 22, 2021
Interesting! I started blogging ... as a means of communicating with family and friends, when I was on a long (8 months) RV trip in the U.S. ... this was in June 2007. Pioneer Woman was in it's early stages. I have continued my blog and thoroughly enjoy writing, photography ... story telling. I found I wrote better (as in I was better pleased) for a public audience than I did journaling where I always sounded whiny.
Fast forward to all of the blogs and YouTube and Instagram ... and I am a cook, baker, self employed computer programmer, living my dream life (kind of hermit-like) in rural NW Montana with my dog and my cat :)
I am not a fan of "newsletters", but I did take a look at Substack and will take a closer look.
Currently, I am mostly a YouTube follower of some favorite cooking channels, sailing channels, photography channels. I do not have "traditional" tv ... and rarely watch any series (for 20 years). At any rate, I am a consumer of info via the internet options.
Food content favs: Food52 site, Food52 YouTube, Other YouTube cooking channels: KitchenSanctuary, Refika'sKitchen. I am a bit over SmittenKitchen, PioneerWoman ... and FoodNetwork in general. I like the more personal vibe of my current favs ... and I know Food52 is NYC, but I gravitate to the rural channels/sites ... mostly.
Fast forward to all of the blogs and YouTube and Instagram ... and I am a cook, baker, self employed computer programmer, living my dream life (kind of hermit-like) in rural NW Montana with my dog and my cat :)
I am not a fan of "newsletters", but I did take a look at Substack and will take a closer look.
Currently, I am mostly a YouTube follower of some favorite cooking channels, sailing channels, photography channels. I do not have "traditional" tv ... and rarely watch any series (for 20 years). At any rate, I am a consumer of info via the internet options.
Food content favs: Food52 site, Food52 YouTube, Other YouTube cooking channels: KitchenSanctuary, Refika'sKitchen. I am a bit over SmittenKitchen, PioneerWoman ... and FoodNetwork in general. I like the more personal vibe of my current favs ... and I know Food52 is NYC, but I gravitate to the rural channels/sites ... mostly.
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