Gralev Letters is an independent editorial publication based in London, focused on the practice of everyday nutrition — the small, considered choices that accumulate, over weeks and months, into lasting change.
Gralev Letters began as a private document — a set of notes compiled by Eleanor Whitfield during a period of intensive reading in nutritional science and the practical literature of food and habit. The notes were not intended for publication. They were, initially, a way of organising a large body of sometimes contradictory reading into something personally coherent.
What became clear in the process of compiling those notes was that the gap between what nutritional research actually says — measured, cautious, qualified — and what most public-facing nutrition content communicates, is considerable. The research tends toward the incremental. Public content tends toward the dramatic. The incremental is, in almost every case, the more accurate account.
The publication grew from the conviction that a readership exists for the incremental account — for writing about everyday nutrition that does not promise rapid results, does not flatten complex evidence into simple directives, and does not mistake the language of marketing for the language of nourishment.
Each article in Gralev Letters is an attempt to add something specific and honest to a conversation that often lacks both qualities. The writing is editorial rather than prescriptive. The tone is measured rather than urgent. The subject, in every case, is the ordinary — the daily meal, the weekly routine, the seasonal rhythm — because it is in the ordinary that lasting nutritional practice actually lives.
"Gralev Letters is an independent editorial publication focused on everyday wellness practices. The publication is not affiliated with any commercial, governmental, or institutional body."
Eleanor Whitfield has written on nutrition practice for a decade, focusing on the intersection of everyday habit and evidence-based nutritional guidance. Her approach is careful and editorial: she does not prescribe, she observes and documents. Her work at Gralev Letters covers balanced eating, portion awareness, and the structure of the daily meal.
Tobias Ashcroft writes on seasonal cooking and the nutritional dimensions of whole-food practice. His background is in food culture rather than formal nutrition study, and he brings an essayistic sensibility to subjects that are often handled too technically. His articles on seasonal eating and gut-friendly cooking have been among the most read in the publication.
Imogen Pembroke contributes occasional pieces to Gralev Letters, focusing on the practical dimensions of nutritional change — how habits form, how they resist change, and what the evidence suggests about effective long-term approaches to sustainable weight management. She is a qualified nutrition professional based in London.
We examine how meals are composed — the ratio of macronutrients, the role of fibre and hydration, and the practical implications of published dietary guidelines for ordinary eating.
Articles on the practice of preparation — how a structured weekly approach to home-cooked meals reduces the friction of daily food decisions and supports consistent nutritional intake.
Seasonal produce offers variety, affordability and nutritional depth. We document the British seasonal calendar as a practical guide to building dietary diversity across twelve months.
Published nutritional research consistently supports gradual, consistent approaches to weight management over intensive short-term interventions. We cover the evidence and its practical implications.
The connection between sport and fitness and nutritional intake — energy balance, hydration, and how active weeks differ from sedentary ones in their dietary requirements.
What it means to eat with attention rather than distraction — the food journal, the considered meal, the habit of pausing before reaching for more — and what the research says about its effects.
"The subject, in every case, is the ordinary — the daily meal, the weekly routine, the seasonal rhythm — because it is in the ordinary that lasting nutritional practice actually lives."
Gralev Letters welcomes correspondence from readers, and considers editorial contributions from qualified nutrition professionals and food writers. Pitches and enquiries may be directed to the editorial address below.