Recipes
The Recipes tab lists every page on your site that the widget ran on during the selected period, ordered by how many questions readers tapped.
“Recipes” is the in-app term for indexed pages. If you publish a recipe site, that’s literal. If you publish anything else, treat recipe as shorthand for article / post / page. The table works the same way.
The recipe table
Section titled “The recipe table”Two columns:
- Recipe. The page title (or URL if no title is available).
- Question taps. Total taps on that page during the period.
By default the table is sorted by Question taps, descending, so your top-engaging pages float to the top. Click the Question taps column header to flip between descending and ascending.
Search
Section titled “Search”The search box above the table filters by recipe name in real-time. Substring match, case-insensitive.
Pagination
Section titled “Pagination”- Rows per page dropdown: 10, 25, 50, or 100.
- Page X of Y indicator with previous / next chevrons.
- A “Showing N to M of T” count to the right of the search box.
Sorting and search reset to page 1 automatically.
Opening a recipe
Section titled “Opening a recipe”Click any row to open the Recipe peek, a side panel that slides in from the right with per-page detail.
The peek has three sections, top to bottom.
1. Question taps KPI
Section titled “1. Question taps KPI”Total taps on this single page during the selected period. Same number you saw in the table, now headlined.
2. Sparkline trend
Section titled “2. Sparkline trend”A miniature line chart showing how the daily taps for this page moved across the period. Useful for:
- Spotting a page that’s still climbing vs. one that already peaked.
- Catching a spike that aligns with a re-share or a release-note annotation in the sitewide chart.
The sparkline uses the same daily granularity as the main trend chart, so the dates line up.
3. Questions asked on this recipe
Section titled “3. Questions asked on this recipe”A sortable table of the specific questions readers tapped on this page, with the tap count for each.
- Click Question to sort alphabetically.
- Click Taps to sort by tap count (default is highest-first).
This is the qualitative layer: what readers wanted to know, not just how many. Look for:
- Recurring confusions you could clarify in the article itself.
- Questions that hint at a sequel or related post.
- Patterns in intent (substitutions, timing, technique) that inform editorial direction.
If a recipe didn’t get any taps in the period, this section reads “No questions recorded for this recipe.”
Closing the peek
Section titled “Closing the peek”Click the X in the top-right of the panel, click the dimmed backdrop, or click another row in the table. The panel will swap to the new recipe in place.