Foundation Notes.
Kalem Letters began as a working record — a set of notes accumulated over several years of practical interest in everyday nutrition. It is now a regularly updated editorial publication, read by an audience interested in the same questions: how to eat well, consistently, without unnecessary complexity.
What Kalem Letters is for
Kalem Letters is an independent editorial publication focused on everyday nutrition practice. It is not affiliated with any commercial product, wellness supplement brand, or nutritional supplement company. It does not sell anything. Its operating costs are covered by independent means.
The publication exists because the space between peer-reviewed nutritional research and the practical reality of cooking and eating in an ordinary household is poorly served by existing content. Academic papers are inaccessible to most readers. Popular nutrition content tends toward extremes — restrictive protocols on one end, uncritical endorsement of trend foods on the other. Neither serves the reader who wants a reasonable, evidence-informed approach to the everyday question of what to eat.
Kalem Letters attempts to occupy the middle ground: content grounded in published research, translated into practical implications, presented without commercial motive.
Editorial principles in practice
Articles are selected based on their relevance to the publication's core interest: practical everyday nutrition. Topics are proposed by editors and contributing writers, reviewed for alignment with the publication's editorial direction, and assessed for the availability of credible published research before assignment. The editorial process prioritises topics where the published evidence is consistent and where the practical implications are genuinely applicable in a domestic context.
Each article is reviewed by at least one editor in addition to the writer before publication. Sources are cited where the specific claim rests on published research. Corrections to published articles are noted publicly on the relevant page, with the correction date recorded. Writers are required to disclose any commercial relationship with companies producing products in the nutritional category being discussed.
Kalem Letters does not accept sponsored content. It does not publish reviews of commercial products. It does not accept payment for coverage of any kind. These are not aspirational principles — they are the conditions under which the publication operates and has operated since its founding.
Eleanor founded the publication in 2022 following several years of independent study in nutritional science and dietary epidemiology. She oversees all editorial output and writes the majority of the publication's long-form articles.
Harriet contributes pieces on seasonal cooking, practical kitchen organisation, and the domestic implementation of published dietary guidance. Her writing emphasises accessibility and replicability for the home cook.
Tobias contributes articles on the intersection of physical activity and nutritional practice, drawing on published sports nutrition research and translating it for a general audience engaged in recreational exercise.
Subject areas and recurring themes
The publication covers a defined range of topics within everyday nutrition and wellness practice. Articles are not distributed evenly across all possible nutrition subjects; they concentrate on the areas where the evidence base is strongest and where practical application is most direct.
Balanced plate construction, daily macros, protein-to-fibre ratio, carbohydrate selection, and the structural logic of everyday meals.
Seasonal produce alignment, whole grain sourcing, market-led grocery planning, and the practical case for home-cooked meals.
Calorie awareness, portion awareness, the sustainable weight approach, and the evidence on long-term energy management.
Sport and fitness nutrition at a recreational level: hydration habits, protein requirements, meal timing around exercise.
Fibre-rich diet construction, gut-friendly recipes, plant diversity targets, and the evidence on the gut-food relationship.
The evidence on eating attention and pace, meal structure as a framework for satiety signalling, and the food journal as a practical tool.
Kalem Letters is an independent editorial publication focused on everyday wellness practices. The publication is not affiliated with any commercial, governmental, or institutional body. We recommend speaking with a qualified wellness or nutrition professional before introducing any new habit or routine to your daily life, particularly if you have specific dietary requirements.