Chow is a genuinely culinary [highlight style=”gray”]WordPress Theme[/highlight]. This recipe theme will let you share all your recipes and cooking tips with wide audience. Chow comes with Schema.org support. It means that your blog will be understand not only by people, but also by search engines. Chow comes with [highlight style=”color”]FoodiePress plugin[/highlight] – unique solution for creating and managing [highlight style=”light”]Recipe data in WordPress[/highlight], allowing for advanced search by ingredients, customizable layouts and templates for recipe, print styles and many many features.
[quote author=”Laurie Colwin”]No one who cooks, cooks alone. Even at her most solitary, a cook in the kitchen is surrounded by generations of cooks past, the advice and menus of cooks present, the wisdom of cookbook writers.[/quote]
[dropcap]T[/dropcap]his is example Typography page, with variouse elements that can easily be added using intuitive shortcodes system in this awesome theme. [tooltip title=”First Tooltip” ]You can add tootlips[/tooltip], and you can set the side from which they should appear. For example, hover your mouse cursor over this text and you’ll get the [tooltip title=”Second Tooltip” side=”right”]tooltip from right[/tooltip] or maybe you prefer [tooltip title=”Third Tooltip” side=”left”]tooltip from left[/tooltip]? The [tooltip title=”Third Tooltip” side=”bottom”]tooltip from bottom[/tooltip] is also covered :). There are also other options to make your text looks better in Chow, for example custom list markers:
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- Recipe creator helping to create valid schema.org recipes
- Front-end submit and edit pages for registered users
- Chow Dashboard
- Reviews System
- Favourite posts for registered and anonymous users
- Schema.org Support
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Chow comes with nice looking popup system, it can open videos, images or just text paragraph. Try yourself.
Open Video [popup] So implement your design and place content here! If you want to close modal, please hit “Esc”, click somewhere on the screen or use special button. [/popup]
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Heading h1
Headlines are common on most Web pages. You know the title of what you’re reading. This is the best reason to use headings, and use them in the correct order. Search engines give highest weighting to text included inside heading tags, because there is a semantic value to that text.
Heading h2
Headlines are common on most Web pages. You know the title of what you’re reading. This is the best reason to use headings, and use them in the correct order. Search engines give highest weighting to text included inside heading tags, because there is a semantic value to that text.
Heading h3
Headlines are common on most Web pages. You know the title of what you’re reading. This is the best reason to use headings, and use them in the correct order. Search engines give highest weighting to text included inside heading tags, because there is a semantic value to that text.
Heading h4
Headlines are common on most Web pages. You know the title of what you’re reading. This is the best reason to use headings, and use them in the correct order. Search engines give highest weighting to text included inside heading tags, because there is a semantic value to that text.
Heading h5
Headlines are common on most Web pages. You know the title of what you’re reading. This is the best reason to use headings, and use them in the correct order. Search engines give highest weighting to text included inside heading tags, because there is a semantic value to that text.
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