A good site structure helps search engines understand and crawl content, and it helps visitors find related recipes. As of 2019, we recommend a simpler website structure that will save bloggers time by removing unnecessarily complex pages, such as recipe indexes and blog pages. This new website structure consists of: The home page (this is […]| Feast Design Co.
The Feast Plugin Starter is the Feast Plugin with all options and settings locked to our recommendations, which reduces the amount of effort and complexity needed to launch a brand new food blog. What this means: you can't change the Feast Plugin settings without upgrading. It's the perfect solution for any brand new food blog […]| Feast Design Co.
Categories allow you to organize your recipes in a way that's good for your site visitors, as well as search engines. This is an opinionated post, based on what we see happen to the majority of inexperienced food bloggers. Your most important pages are your posts, and every new food blogger should focus exclusively on […]| Feast Design Co.
The Feast Plugin completely replaces your theme setup with a rewritten modern standard, built not just around aesthetics, but also making giant leaps in: You can think of the plugin as a brand new theme (minus the styling) designed for 2024, but instead of falling behind on updates, your site is continually updated to meet […]| Feast Design Co.
The Modern Categories enables the category pages to be built with the block editor, just like the homepage and recipe index. This allows: With the Feast Plugin v.10.0.0 release, you can now add custom content just like you do with the homepage and recipe index. See it in action here: (yes, I misspelled sandwiches) Enable […]| Feast Design Co.