Noting the Field
London, January 2026. An independent editorial journal documenting everyday nutrition practices and the considered rhythms of a balanced table.
Observation, Not Advocacy
Ibron Field Notes began as a personal archive. The founding editors, each with a background in nutrition writing and lifestyle journalism, found a recurring gap in the available reading: material that documented eating practice without making extravagant claims for it. The wellness publishing landscape offered instruction in abundance — lists, programmes, plans, and protocols. What it offered less readily was sustained observation.
The journal was established to occupy that gap. Each piece published here begins with a question or a situation drawn from ordinary eating life, and pursues it through documented observation rather than guideline. The subject matter — diet and nutrition, seasonal cooking, mindful eating, active lifestyle, portion practice, gut-friendly recipes, weight management as a long-term pattern rather than a short-term objective — is familiar territory in wellness publishing. The register in which it is approached is not.
Ibron Field Notes is not affiliated with any commercial food brand, supplement company, or retail operation. It is not a platform for sponsored content in the conventional sense. Where commercial relationships exist, they are disclosed in the relevant piece. The editorial independence of the journal is its primary asset, and its protection is a matter of standing policy.
Harriet Marsden has been writing about food and everyday nutrition for over a decade. Her work draws on direct observation of domestic cooking practice and a sustained engagement with the published literature on nutritional patterns and habit formation. She leads the journal's editorial selection and oversees all factual review processes.
Tobias Ashcroft is a food and lifestyle writer based in north London. He has documented his weekly market practice for several years and contributes long-form observational pieces on seasonal eating, meal planning, and the intersection of active lifestyle with whole-food nutrition. He holds a postgraduate background in food systems and editorial writing.
Phoebe Linwood is a London-based writer with a background in nutrition journalism. Her contributions to Ibron Field Notes focus on the documentation of personal eating practice over extended periods — a form of long-form, observational food writing that sits between the personal essay and the field record. Her year-long portion notebook is among the journal's most detailed ongoing features.
Subject Matter and Editorial Scope
Diet and Nutrition
Documented observations on how everyday food choices accumulate. Wholegrains, gut-friendly recipes, and balanced meal construction — noted without sensationalism or guideline.
Seasonal and Mindful Eating
Attention to the seasonal calendar and its natural structuring of the eating week. What the market offers, how it is prepared, and what a recurring practice of considered cooking looks like across months.
Sport, Fitness and Active Life
The intersection of regular physical activity and a nourishing food practice. Movement observations, weekly activity cadences, and the practical matter of fuelling an engaged, active day.
Meal Planning and Whole Foods
Practical documentation of planning balanced meals from whole, unprocessed ingredients. Observed processes, not imposed programmes — the recorded experience of what structured weekly cooking actually looks like.
Portion Control and Appetite
Long-form observational records of portion practice and the gradual recalibration of appetite over extended periods. Not a regimen — a field record of sustained, incremental attentiveness.
Weight Management Observation
Approached as an observational matter rather than a instructive one. Long-running documentation of what dietary patterns characterised by high vegetable diversity and whole foods look like in practice, week after week.
How We Work
First-Hand Observation
Every piece published in Ibron Field Notes begins with direct, first-hand documentation. Writers record what they have observed, prepared, or experienced — not what they have been briefed to report. The field notebook is the primary source document.
Secondary Review Against Published Research
Observational claims are cross-referenced against published research from peer-reviewed journals and reputable institutional sources. The editorial selection prioritises long-running studies and replicated findings rather than single-study or short-term interventional research.
Second-Editor Review
Each article is reviewed by at least one second editor before publication. This review assesses factual accuracy, consistency of register, the absence of overclaimed findings, and adherence to the journal's editorial principles.
Corrections and Transparency
Where errors are identified after publication, corrections are noted publicly in the affected piece. Writers disclose any commercial relationships that could influence their selection of subject matter. The journal's corrections record is maintained as a standing document.