About the Publication.
Dalmor Quarterly is an independent editorial publication operating from London. The publication focuses on the documented landscape of everyday nutrition — examining how established principles of diet and nutrition apply to the practical realities of home cooking and active daily life in the United Kingdom.
Dalmor Quarterly was established in response to a gap in the information environment: the persistence of nutritional content that privileges dramatic claims over documented observation. The popular media covering diet and nutrition operates under incentive structures that favour novelty, urgency, and personal transformation narratives. These incentives produce content that is frequently unreliable, sometimes contradictory from week to week, and almost never interested in the slow, structural work of sustainable eating habits.
This publication operates from a different premise. The relevant questions in everyday nutrition are not the dramatic ones — they are the ordinary ones: what does a well-constructed plate look like, how does seasonal availability affect nutritional quality, what does the published research actually say about fibre and satiety, how does an active lifestyle modify the requirements of a balanced meal? These questions have considered answers, and those answers are the material this publication documents.
Dalmor Quarterly is not affiliated with any commercial food, supplement, or wellness brand. It receives no advertising revenue from product categories related to its editorial content. This independence is structural, not aspirational — it shapes the selection of topics, the framing of evidence, and the register in which the publication addresses its readers.
Eleanor has written on food systems, nutritional policy, and everyday eating habits for over a decade. Her editorial focus at Dalmor Quarterly covers seasonal cooking, meal composition, and the evidence base behind balanced dietary patterns. She holds a background in nutrition communication and brings a reportorial standard to the publication's fact-referencing practices.
Jasper contributes to Dalmor Quarterly as a guest writer with a focus on applied nutrition, active lifestyle practices, and the practical interpretation of nutritional research for non-specialist readers. His work draws on published dietary guidelines and population-level nutritional data from UK and European sources.
The practical application of established nutritional principles to home cooking, grocery planning, and daily eating routines. Covering calorie awareness, portion control, and the protein-to-fibre ratio of the modern UK plate.
Vegetables and fruits across the British growing calendar, whole-grain alternatives to refined carbohydrates, gut-friendly recipes built from seasonal produce, and the relationship between food quality and nutritional character.
Weight management from the perspective of sustained behavioural patterns rather than short-term restriction. Covering energy balance, mindful eating, meal planning as a structural habit, and the evidence base for gradual, durable change.
All claims relating to nutritional outcomes reference published research or established dietary guidelines. The publication does not present preliminary or contested findings as settled fact.
Dalmor Quarterly does not publish claims about specific outcomes — for individuals or populations — that cannot be verified against the published evidence base. Editorial framing is observational, not prescriptive.
The publication maintains editorial independence from supplement brands, food manufacturers, and wellness product companies. Topic selection and framing are not influenced by commercial relationships.
Factual errors identified after publication are corrected with a visible correction notice appended to the relevant article. The publication does not quietly revise claims — corrections are acknowledged and dated.
Dalmor Quarterly 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.