Traven Gazette is an independent editorial journal founded in London in 2024. Its subject is the everyday relationship between people and food — not the aspirational version presented in recipe books or wellness programmes, but the practical, recurring, often imperfect reality of how people in Britain eat across a working week, a season, and a year.
The Gazette publishes long-form field notes, seasonal kitchen surveys, and observational records. It does not publish product endorsements, sponsored content, or material that promises transformation. Every entry is written by a named editor, reviewed by a second before publication, and archived with the date of filing.
The Gazette's subject matter is broad but its register is specific. Entries do not advise readers on what to eat, how much to exercise, or what products to adopt. They record and reflect. A week of lunches observed in a London office. A three-month survey of winter root vegetables. The cumulative pattern of eating when the days are short.
Traven Gazette operates under the following editorial principles: articles are reviewed by at least one second editor before publication, sources are cited where appropriate, corrections are noted publicly, and writers disclose any commercial relationships that could influence their selection of subject matter.
The publication is not affiliated with any commercial food brand, supplement company, or dietary programme. Its independence is a structural commitment, not an aspiration.
Eleanor Ashcroft has spent twelve years writing about everyday nutrition practices for independent publications in London. She founded the Traven Gazette field-notes format in 2024, drawing on a background in food writing and long-form journalism. Her entries focus primarily on the intersection of eating patterns with working life — the midday meal, the desk lunch, the late dinner.
Before founding the Gazette, Eleanor contributed to several independent print and digital journals covering food culture, seasonal produce, and practical nutrition. She holds no affiliation with any commercial food or supplement brand.
Tobias Marsden writes about seasonal produce, kitchen practice, and the intersection of food habits with the British calendar. His entries tend toward the material and specific — individual vegetables, preparation methods, the texture of a season's cooking. He has contributed to the Gazette since its founding issue.
Tobias has a background in food culture writing and has contributed to independent publications on British seasonal cooking and small-scale food production. His kitchen notebook is the primary source material for his Gazette entries.
How people structure meals across the day, from the first cup of tea to the late evening plate. Recurring patterns documented across weeks and seasons, without editorial guideline.
Quarterly fieldwork on what is available at market, how preparation approaches shift with the season, and the steady argument for choosing produce at its natural peak.
Brief observational notes on how physical activity and rest intersect with eating cadence. Not performance-led. Documented from walks, cycles, and morning practices in London.
The Gazette welcomes correspondence from readers. Letters may address a specific entry, propose a subject for future fieldwork, or submit a correction. All correspondence is read by the editorial team. Selected letters are acknowledged in the archive.