— Case study

Peppery Pizza Poutine

Pizza & poutine restaurant with online ordering. WordPress + WooCommerce, staff-managed menu, edge-cached marketing pages.

ACCESSIBILITY
100 / 100
BEST PRACTICES
100 / 100
SEO
100 / 100
SHIPPED
2026

— The challenge

Peppery Pizza Poutine needed a site that could handle both marketing and transactional work — communicating the menu and brand to new customers while processing online orders reliably. Getting all three Lighthouse quality axes to 100 / 100 on a WooCommerce build, where third-party plugins often introduce accessibility and best-practice regressions, required deliberate engineering discipline throughout.

— What we built

We built on WordPress with WooCommerce for online ordering and WPBakery for staff-managed menu pages, then tuned every layer against the Lighthouse rubric: semantic HTML for the ordering flow, appropriate ARIA roles on interactive elements, and Cloudflare edge caching on the static marketing pages so the origin only handles order submissions. Plugin selection and configuration were each evaluated for their accessibility and performance footprint before inclusion.

— The result

Peppery Pizza Poutine scores 100 / 100 across Accessibility, Best Practices, and SEO on Lighthouse — a clean sweep that is unusual for a WooCommerce site with active online ordering. Staff manage their own menu via the WordPress admin, Cloudflare absorbs the marketing-page traffic at the edge, and the ordering flow remains accessible to all customers.

  • WordPress
  • WooCommerce
  • WPBakery
  • Cloudflare

— Visit the site

pepperypizzapoutine.com ↗

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