The Perspective
Drevani Journal is an independent editorial publication focused on the everyday — the daily habits, the weekly rhythms, and the seasonal patterns that shape how people in England eat and how their weight responds over time.
An Editorial Record of Everyday Nutrition
Drevani Journal is an independent editorial publication focused on everyday nutrition practices and weight awareness. The publication is not affiliated with any commercial, governmental, or institutional body. It does not promote products, endorse brands, or carry sponsored content.
The journal publishes articles that examine the daily and weekly patterns of food choice, the relationship between what a person eats and how their weight responds over time, and the role of seasonal produce, portion awareness, and physical activity in shaping nutritional balance. Articles are written from a nutritionist's perspective and draw on published nutritional research as well as contributed food diary archives from readers across England.
The tone is observational rather than prescriptive. Drevani Journal does not offer weight-loss programmes, structured eating plans, or personalised guidance. What it offers is a well-considered editorial record of what the evidence around everyday eating habits shows, and how that evidence might inform a reader's own daily practice.
Eleanor Whitfield is the founding editor of Drevani Journal. Her background is in nutritional writing and the independent examination of food policy research. She has been observing and recording everyday eating patterns in the London area since 2019 and oversees the journal's editorial direction, reader correspondence archive, and review process.
Her articles focus on the relationship between daily food choices and weight over the medium and long term, drawing on patterns observed in the contributed food diaries the journal has collected from readers across England.
Harriet Ashcroft joined the journal as a contributing editor in 2022, bringing a background in food writing and seasonal produce research. Her articles examine how the seasonal cycle of available produce affects the weekly nutrition rhythm, and how movement and sport interact with eating patterns across the year.
She contributes two to three long-form pieces per quarter and is responsible for the journal's reader food diary collection programme, through which contributors from across England submit annotated weekly records for editorial review.
Topics the Journal Covers
Diet and Weight
The observable relationship between daily food choices and weight over weeks and months, drawn from food diary archives and published nutritional research.
Seasonal Produce
How the seasonal cycle of vegetables and fruit in England shapes the weekly nutrition rhythm and informs portion awareness across the year.
Movement and Activity
The correspondence between regular movement, sport frequency, and the eating patterns that surround an active lifestyle.
Food Journalling
The practice of keeping a food diary — its value for understanding personal eating patterns and for developing portion awareness over time.
Whole Foods Approach
Examination of plant-based meals, whole grain integration, and how a whole foods approach to daily cooking supports nutritional balance.
Gradual Weight Change
The evidence around gradual, sustainable weight change viewed through an annual lens rather than short-term reactive programmes.
Observation over directive
Drevani Journal operates under the editorial principle that observation is more useful to a reader than directive. The journal does not tell readers what to eat or how to lose weight. It observes, records, and examines the patterns that appear in the evidence around everyday food practice and weight balance.
Articles are written from a nutritionist's perspective but are not intended as professional advice, nor as guidance for the management of any specific condition. Readers with specific concerns about their daily routines are encouraged to speak with a qualified wellness professional.
The journal's independence is structural. It has no investors, no advertising relationships, and no commercial partnerships with food brands, supplement companies, or any other commercial entity. This independence allows the editorial team to examine nutrition questions without commercial pressure.
Sources are cited where peer-reviewed literature is available. Where the evidence base is thin or contested, articles say so. The journal does not overstate what the research supports. This commitment to accuracy is described in detail on the Methodology page.
Contribute a Food Journal
The journal welcomes contributed food diary records from readers across England. Submitted records are reviewed editorially and may inform future articles. All contributions are anonymised before use.
Write to the Journal