Friday, July 29, 2016

Zippy Orzo Summer Salad

Orzo Summer Salad! With chicken and orzo, loaded with fresh veggies, and finished with a zippy lemon dressing and goat cheese. | pinchofyum.com
Summer, summer, summerrrr.

This salad screams all things summer at me, and I am happy about it.

Currently, as I write this post, we are getting ready to pack up and head to the cabin with my family for a few days. Which also screams summer. If you live in the Midwest and you do the “up north” thing, you totally know this scene:

Cleaning out the fridge. Trying to locate your beach towels and swimsuit after 11 1/2 months in storage. Running the dishwasher and taking out the garbage. Sending bae to Caribou for a rooibos tea latte with almond milk (heyyy caffeine free) to sustain your packing energy. Without caffeine.

Doing a mental run-through on all electronic devices and related chargers – and this includes very important food electronics such as a blender and a spiralizer and a food processor because you know for a fact that there will be no such luxuries at the cabin. Planning to wear a cute outfit and do your hair but realizing you said you were going to leave an hour ago and you really don’t have time for that – plus, let’s be real, it’s the cabin and the only people you will see up there are, well, they’re actually probably deer. Washing the sheets and making the bed so that you don’t hate life when you come back home again. Making sure you have that stuff that warm weather dwelling people wear when they go out in the sun – what do they call that again? Oh yeah, sunscreen. Do we even own sunscreen?

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Packing up a cooler with odds and ends from the fridge or freezer that might be able to be made into a meal, because you are Midwestern and you are scrappy above all else. And finally, shoving a mash up of winter, fall, and summer clothing into a suitcase (up north can get cold, as you know) and grabbing your sunnies and running out the door, getting in the car, and driving off into the great UP NORTH LAND.

And then inevitably realizing you forgot something super important (no but seriously! it’s going to be such a long week without your almond butter) and then going back, and then leaving for real this time.

Orzo Summer Salad! With chicken and orzo, loaded with fresh veggies, and finished with a zippy lemon dressing and goat cheese. | pinchofyum.com

In the midst of all this pre-cabin chaos, we have THIS SALAD.

It’s very possible that I loved this salad so much because I was enormously hungry when I ate it last night, but I also think I love it because it just completely embodies summer.

Orzo Summer Salad! With chicken and orzo, loaded with fresh veggies, and finished with a zippy lemon dressing and goat cheese. | pinchofyum.com

It’s fresh dill. AHHHHHHH fresh dill! I sort of forgot about fresh dill for a few years there, but wow. It is nothing short of cool and fragrant and miraculous.

On top of the dill, it’s rotisserie chicken cut up into tiny pieces because you are in pre-cabin mode and rotisserie chicken is delicious. Go with it.

And because it’s summer and veggies taste better this time of year, it’s cucumbers and spinach and fresh sweet corn and just a little bit of that garlic bite that we love.

But in an effort not to get too veggie up in the house, it’s also goat cheese and WHOLE WHEAT ORZO. I have never in my life had whole wheat orzo until this moment and it is just everything. I literally stood over the stove just eating it, tossed with some straight up lemon juice olive oil sea salt magic, feeling only happy things because it’s whole wheat and it is the most fun shape/texture and it’s being paired with delicious whole foods and vegetables. Also see note about being enormously hungry.

So naturally, let’s finish it off with a heavy handed drizzle of lemon juice and olive oil sprinkled with salt and pepp. Right? SO RIGHT.

Orzo Summer Salad! With chicken and orzo, loaded with fresh veggies, and finished with a zippy lemon dressing and goat cheese. | pinchofyum.com

I hope you’re celebrating summer, whether it’s by going to the cabin to relax for a few days and/or making this salad in between all your rushing around.

Summer = this orzo salad = joy.

Zippy Orzo Summer Salad
Author: 
Serves: 3-4
 
Ingredients
For the Salad:
  • 1 cup uncooked orzo
  • 1-2 cups rotisserie chicken, shredded or cut into small pieces
  • 1-2 cups chopped cucumber
  • 1-2 cups baby spinach
  • 1-2 cups fresh sweet corn (3-4 ears), cut off the cob
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
For the Dressing:
  • olive oil
  • lemon juice
  • a small bundle of fresh dill, minced
  • a small bunch of green onions, sliced
  • salt and pepp
Instructions
  1. Cook orzo according to package directions.
  2. Heat a little bit of olive oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the garlic and the corn; saute until the corn is bright yellow and tender.
  3. Toss all ingredients together, including dill, green onions, and olive oil, lemon juice, and salt and pepper to taste. Serve hot or cold. YUMMYYYYYY.

 

 

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Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Come Have a Look Around: Workshop Edition

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You guys! It feels like it’s been forever since I wrote a blog post.

It hasn’t been forever, obviously – it’s only been one week since I last checked in. But a week has felt long. And it feels good to mentally be back in this internet space, sitting on the couch with my fingers flying across the keyboard of my laptop between frequent PLEASE PET ME interruptions from Sage, checking back in with you (how are you guys doing?) and letting you know a little bit about what’s been going on at the studio in recent days.

This will either become a new series (ideas are running laps around my brain right now) or it might become just a single post with an fun and unusual title, but either way  – I’m calling today’s post COME HAVE A LOOK AROUND: Workshop Edition.

For the record, and just to get this out of the idea zone and onto virtual paper, I’m thinking it would be fun to do COME HAVE A LOOK AROUND: Studio Edition, COME HAVE A LOOK AROUND: Kitchen Edition, COME HAVE A LOOK AROUND: Home Edition (just give me five years to clean up and organize real quick), and maybe COME HAVE A LOOK AROUND: Garden Edition, except I didn’t do a garden this year because, just, I don’t even have a good excuse, okay? Garden Edition is next year.

Okay but today! Today is COME HAVE A LOOK AROUND: Workshop Edition.

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We’ve had a great run of summer workshops this year. In the months of June and July, we had 40+ people including workshop attendees and volunteers make their way to our little P-O-Y studio in Minneapolis from all over the United States and Canada.

AMAZING, right? It’s seriously the coolest to have the chance to bring people together for something as strange and wonderful as FOOD PHOTOGRAPHY. –> What is life. I ask myself this almost every day.

We have had a really good time. And by really good time, I mean we’ve eaten a lot of deliciously delicate fried tofu and citrus-saucy broccoli salad with goji berries and other pretend-to-be-fancy things.

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Now that summer workshops are done, I should tell you: JUST YESTERDAY we opened registration for our fall workshops! We have two happening in September and you can find the registration information right here. 

If food photography is your thing – or you want to make it your thing – we would be so super excited to have you visit us in studio this September for a workshop.

Also worth noting –> fall in Minneapolis is… I mean, I’m biased, but it’s epic. It’s really hard for me to imagine a place that does fall colors, fall temps, and the overall fall scarves-and-boots-and-hot-coffees-to-go vibe better than our little Minnesota-nice city.

That’s all I needed to say! Now: come on in and have a look around.

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PartnersWe are so well-fed and well-supplied during the workshops, it’s almost just ridiculous.

From mind-blowing broccoli tofu salad (and I literally mean MIND-BLOWING) to next level, saucy, herb-loaded, stacked turkey sandwiches to a Seven Sundays muesli styling bar breakfast complete with berries and toasted coconut and almond milk, we are not lacking in the food department.

We also get lots of our photography backgrounds from the one and only dynamic duo behind Erickson Wood Works, and this round of workshops we were able to do a giveaway for some very adorable Hanselmann Pottery.

So all in all, an AMAZING group of businesses and brands that we are proud to have as sponsors.

Thanks to everyone who came out for a summer workshop! WE ♡ YOU.

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For more information about upcoming available workshops, check out the registration page.

 

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Friday, July 22, 2016

Traffic and Income Report – June 2016

 

Traffic and Income Report for June 2016

Hi there!

Bjork here checking in for Pinch of Yum’s June traffic and income report. Lindsay is doing a workshop at the studio today so I thought it would be a good time to jump in and catch up on the income reports. The last few reports were published a bit late so it’s nice to catch up and get things back on track.

For those that aren’t familiar, we started doing these monthly reports almost five years ago.

When we first started publishing these they were a way for us to report back on the things that we were learning as we attempted to build the blog into a business. Truth be told we didn’t really know if it was even possible to have a blog that was a business. We thought it was, but we didn’t know for sure. We considered it an experiment.

Over the years, after lots of hard work (and time), we started to see some results from the experiment. Lindsay found ways to improve the content she was producing, which in turn helped to increase traffic to the site, which in turn made it possible to start creating an income.

In many ways these reports have morphed from blogging reports to blogging+business reports, as Pinch of Yum has transitioned from a 1.25 person blog (Lindsay + some of my time) into a full-fledged business with an official team and an “office” (we call it the studio).

Are you interested in doing some similar to what we’ve done with Pinch of Yum? My advice to you is to find something that you love doing, not just something that you love the idea of doing.

There’s a big difference.

It’s an important concept to understand. Here’s why:

Your work is like a train. It’s the ride. It’s the thing that moves you along each and every day. If you love doing it then you can get up every day and make progress. It might be slow, especially when you’re just getting started, but it doesn’t matter, because you love doing it. Even if the train moves just a couple feet you don’t feel like it’s wasted time. You enjoy it. And you can get up tomorrow and do it again, this time with a few thoughts on how you can do it a bit better. With a food blog that work equates to developing recipes, photographing, planning your content, writing and communicating via text, etc, etc, etc…

When you love the idea of doing something you think about the destination, where the train can take you, not the ride that is required to get to the destination. If the train only moves a couple of feet it’s frustrating and discouraging, because you just want to get there. It’s less about enjoying the ride and more about trying to move things forward asap so you can arrive at the destination. With a food blog the destination often equates to being your own boss, having a flexible schedule, having “followers”, getting lots of likes, etc, etc, etc…

Those are all great things. It’s not that you shouldn’t want those things, it’s just that you should try and find a train that allows you to enjoy the ride AND the destination, not just the destination.

The good news is that there are thousands of trains that you can board. There’s no single railroad that leads to each destination. So, as you ponder the train you’re currently on, or one that you might be boarding, remember to think about what the ride will be like, not just the destination.

Let’s jump in and take a look at the numbers for June…

Income Report Numbers

Income

Note: Some of the links below are affiliate links. All of the products listed below are products and services we’ve used before. If you have any questions about any of the income or expenses you can leave a comment and we’ll do our best to reply.

Expenses

Traffic Totals

Below are some Google Analytics screenshots from the month of June 2016.

Traffic Overview

Traffic Overview - June 2016

Top Ten Traffic Sources

Top Ten Traffic Sources - June 2016

Mobile vs. Desktop vs. Tablet

Mobile vs Desktop vs Laptop - June 2016

Income Report Takeaways

The Summer Slump

I love almost everything about summer. The weather. The plants. The sports. The cabin. The grilling. It’s awesome.

The one thing that’s not so great is the traffic. For us, at least.

Every industry has seasons, and for the type of recipes that we publish on Pinch of Yum the peak season tends to be January through March while the valley season tends to be June through August. i.e. The Summer Slump.

2016 has been interesting in that we experienced our highest traffic month ever in January (woo hoo) followed by a slow but consistent decline each month after that (womp womp).

Organic Search Traffic from January - June

Truth be told neither Lindsay or I spend a ton of time in Google Analytics, but it was good to jump in while preparing this post and do some digging. Here’s what I found:

Pinterest Traffic: January 2016 – June 2016

It seems to be that the biggest impact of lost traffic comes from Pinterest, with the most noticeable change taking place around the middle of March.

Total Traffic from Pinterest January - June

Direct Visits: January 2016 – June 2016

Around the middle of April we also see a drop in Direct Traffic to the blog. I did some digging and couldn’t figure this one out. I’ll report back if I do.

Total Traffic from Direct Visits January - June

Organic Search Traffic: January 2016 – June 2016

Organic Traffic has remained relatively stable throughout, with an expected but not significant dip after Q1.

Organic Search Traffic January - June

So what’s the big picture takeaway from all of this? In business terms the takeaway is that it’s important to stay diversified and build your following in multiple places. Another important (but less talked about) takeaway is that it’s important to think about how you can build your business without needing to direct people back to your website.

Not that this has to be your ultimate strategy, but at the very least it’s an important concept to understand. Companies like Food Network, Buzzfeed, and Tastemade have started to (or always have) built their brand on platforms with no intent of moving them off the platform and onto their website.

But there’s another takeaway I want to mention. It’s not really a tip or trick or business kind of takeaway. The takeaway is that building something can be kind of scary. True, you have control of what you’re doing, but at the same time it feels like you don’t have any control at all. Things change quickly, and when those things change they can have an impact on all your hard work, and that impact can make you question your hard work and whether it’s worth it to keep doing what you’re doing.

The good news is that, as far as I know, getting frustrated by changes and backwards progress is a universal feeling. I feel it. Lindsay feels it. Almost everyone we talk to feels it. Do you feel it? If you do, know that you’re normal.

My advice is to not try and avoid those feelings, but to acknowledge that they’ll always be there and view them as part of the ride (see intro above).

3 years, not 3 months. Always improving, not always growing. Enjoying the ride, not trying to reach the destination.

Video

Instagram FTW!

Pinch of Yum videos had a lot engagement on Instagram in June, but not so much on Facebook.

True, Pinch of Yum’s following is about 3 times bigger on Instagram than Facebook, but the video results were 50 times (or more) better on Instagram June.

Instagram Video vs Facebook Video

For instance, this iced coffee video had almost 75,000 views on Instagram after 24 hours, whereas the same video on Facebook had under 1,000 in 24 hours.

Two takeaways with this:

  1. Develop a skill, not just a platform. It’s important to think about developing a skill (in this case, creating video) and not just developing a platform. If you have a choice between getting good at Facebook or getting good at video, pick video. If you have a choice between getting good at Instagram vs. getting good at photography, pick photography. The impact and effectiveness of platforms will always be changing but your ability to create compelling content will go with you no matter where you are.
  2. Reach people where they are. This ties back to something I already mentioned (specifically, this: It’s also important to think about how you could build your business without needing to always direct people back to your website). It’s impossible to know for sure, but my guess is that only a few hundred people out of the 175,000 that viewed that video on Instagram ended up on Pinch of Yum. Those visits translate into maybe a few dollars. But that doesn’t mean the Instagram video wasn’t valuable. Pinch of Yum, along with the brand we were worked with for that video (Delallo) received huge exposure from the video, even if it didn’t mean getting many “visits.” If we forced people to leave Instagram to consume the video we wouldn’t have seen the same type of value exchange.

Nutrifox

We’re in the last few days of our beta launch of Nutrifox.

Not familiar? Here’s the quick back story on why we built it:

If you create food and recipe content you know that it’s a really competitive niche. There are thousands of websites, blogs, and social media accounts that share food and recipe content, and hundreds more that are starting each and every day.

It’s a crowded space.

In order to stand out, you need to find ways to add value to your recipes. That’s why a simple recipe isn’t enough anymore. It has to be an awesome recipe accompanied by superb photos and perhaps even a video.

As you know, it’s a lot of work.

But are there other ways you can add value to a recipe without adding hours of work to your day?

We think there is. That’s why we created Nutrifox.

Nutrifox - Easily create, customize, and embed Nutrition Labels

Nutrifox allows you to extract valuable information from your recipe’s ingredient list and embed it onto your website. The benefit is that you get that additional layer of value added to every post with very little work.

As a matter of fact, creating a Nutrifox embed takes less than a minute.

Nutrifox Example from pinchofyum.com

Right now we’re focusing on perfecting nutrition labels. You can see examples on Pinch of Yum, like this one:

Nutrifox on Pinch of Yum

We’re really pumped for Nutrifox.

As I mentioned before, we’re still in the early stages of building this tool, but we wanted to give people access as soon as we created a solid first version.

For this early-bird launch we’re offering one year of access to Nutrifox for $49. That’s for one year. Crazy cheap IMHO. We wrap up the early-bird pricing on Tuesday, July 26th.

Click here to sign up for Nutrifox. <—–

It’s been really fun to see Nutrifox labels out in the wild lately! 🙂

Because of you

It’s because of you that this thing we call Pinch of Yum can exist as it does today. Thank you so much for making these recipes, leaving comments with your love and feedback, and sharing this food around the table with your families and friends.

Every month we use a portion of the income from the blog to support a special project at The Children’s Shelter of Cebu. We view it as a donation from the POY community, not just Lindsay and me.

This month we’re supporting CSC by donating to their meal fund. Every child at CSC gets three solid meals a day. All 90+ of them! That’s a lot of hungry mouths to feed. 🙂

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