Recipe Blogs that Accept Free Guest Posts

LIST OF TOP RECIPE BLOGS THAT ACCEPT GUEST POSTS

Below is the list of top recipe sites that might accept your blog posts for free. Posts and links from these authoritative sites are priceless for traffic and search-engine-optimization, but your post must be of the highest possible quality and adhere to multiple other individual rules.

BlogFull TitleHPA DAMoz Spam ScoreOSTDifficultyHow to Submit Link
Healthonabudget.comHealth on a Budget | Budget Friendly Healthy Living Tips for Everyone383900ModerateSubmit Your Guest Post
Wellbeing.com.auWellbeing Magazine | WellBeing.com.au5148111.4 KVery HardSubmit Your Guest Post
Vibrantlife.comVibrant Life – Find online articles, recipes and herb to better your health.403202.6 KVery HardSubmit Your Guest Post
Bargainbriana.comBargainBriana - Frugal Living Without Sacrifice535315.5 KVery HardSubmit Your Guest Post
Unwedhousewifeblog.comUnwedHouseWifeBlog - Good food, Good Life323027ModerateSubmit Your Guest Post
Morethanamountfull.comThe Art of Food Blog - A Healthy Culinary Journey28302013ModerateSubmit Your Guest Post
Menuism.comRestaurant Reviews & Menus - Menuism556171.7 MModerateSubmit Your Guest Post
Sogoodblog.comSo Good Food Blog | Fast Food Reviews Recipes & Coupons515602.5 KModerateSubmit Your Guest Post
Sustainablefoodtrust.orgHome - Sustainable Food Trust - Sustainable Food Trust485606.1 KVery HardSubmit Your Guest Post
Foodbloggersofcanada.comFood Bloggers of Canada514614.9 KVery HardSubmit Your Guest Post
Myrecipes.comExtra Crispy - Breakfast and brunch, served all day | Extra Crispy548435.2 MVery HardSubmit Your Guest Post
Moneysavingmom.comMoney Saving Mom® | Intentional finance. Intentional family. Intentional
business. : Money Saving Mom®
6366175.9 KModerateSubmit Your Guest Post
Thekitchn.comKitchn | Inspiring cooks, nourishing homes6884118.5MVery HardSubmit Your Guest Post
Goodfoodstories.comGood. Food. Stories. | tastes, reviews, travel, how-tos.4450137.4KHardSubmit Your Guest Post
Refrigeratedfrozenfood.comRefrigirated & Frozen Food | Chilled & Frozen Food Stories4347121.4KVery HardSubmit Your Guest Post
Outdoorcanada.caOutdoor Canada4447110.4KVery HardSubmit Your Guest Post
Realenergyfood.comReal Energy Food32304245Very HardSubmit Your Guest Post
Livelovefruit.comLive Love Fruit | Helping You Create a Healthier Life, Naturally47581632Very HardSubmit Your Guest Post
Healthyeatingforfamilies.comHome - Healthy Eating for Families32310888ModerateSubmit Your Guest Post
Projectswole.comProject Swole | Build Muscle. Lose Fat. Look Great Naked.49391939ModerateSubmit Your Guest Post
TermExplainedDefinition
DADomain AuthorityDomain Authority (DA) is a search engine ranking score developed by Moz that predicts how well a website will rank on search engine result pages (SERPs). A Domain Authority score ranges from one to 100, with higher scores corresponding to a greater ability to rank.
HPAHome Page AuthoritySame Applicable to Home Page
OSTOrganic Search TrafficAs calculated by SEMrush

From Wiki:

recipe is a set of instructions that describes how to prepare or make something, especially a dish of prepared food. 

The term recipe is also used in medicine or in information technology (e.g., user acceptance). A doctor will usually begin a prescription with recipe, Latin for take, usually abbreviated as Rx or the equivalent symbol (℞).

The earliest known written recipes date to 1730 BC and were recorded on cuneiform tablets found in Mesopotamia.

Other early written recipes date from approximately 1600 BC and come from an Akkadian tablet from southern Babylonia. There are also works in ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs depicting the preparation of food.

Many ancient Greek recipes are known. Mithaecus's cookbook was an early one, but most of it has been lost; Athenaeus quotes one short recipe in his Deipnosophistae. Athenaeus mentions many other cookbooks, all of them lost.

Roman recipes are known starting in the 2nd century BCE with Cato the Elder's De Agri Cultura. Many authors of this period described eastern Mediterranean cooking in Greek and in Latin. Some Punic recipes are known in Greek and Latin translation.

The large collection of recipes De re coquinaria, conventionally titled Apicius, appeared in the 4th or 5th century and is the only complete surviving cookbook from the classical world. It lists the courses served in a meal as Gustatio (appetizer), Primae Mensae (main course) and Secundae Mensae (dessert). Each recipe begins with the Latin command "Take...," "Recipe...."

Arabic recipes are documented starting in the 10th century; see al-Warraq and al-Baghdadi.

The earliest recipe in Persian dates from the 14th century. Several recipes have survived from the time of Safavids, including Karnameh (1521) by Mohammad Ali Bavarchi, which includes the cooking instruction of more than 130 different dishes and pastries, and Madat-ol-Hayat (1597) by Nurollah Ashpaz. Recipe books from the Qajar era are numerous, the most notable being Khorak-ha-ye Irani by prince Nader Mirza.

King Richard II of England commissioned a recipe book called Forme of Cury in 1390, and around the same time, another book was published entitled Curye on Inglish, "cury" meaning cooking. Both books give an impression of how food for the noble classes was prepared and served in England at that time. The luxurious taste of the aristocracy in the Early Modern Period brought with it the start of what can be called the modern recipe book. By the 15th century, numerous manuscripts were appearing detailing the recipes of the day. Many of these manuscripts give very good information and record the re-discovery of many herbs and spices including coriander, parsley, basil and rosemary, many of which had been brought back from the Crusades.