Process in Five Stages.
Talenova's guidance framework is structured around a repeatable five-stage sequence. Each stage builds on the last: observation precedes recommendation, and recommendation is only made once the eating context is understood in full.
A structured sequence from intake to iteration.
Mapping the Current Eating Landscape
The first stage is observational, not prescriptive. A structured intake questionnaire and a two-week food journal submission form the basis of an initial eating-habit profile. The practitioner reviews patterns rather than anomalies — establishing a baseline understanding of meal frequency, food variety, and habitual shortcuts before any recommendations are formed.
Particular attention is paid to the social and practical context of eating: working hours, cooking capacity, household composition, and existing routines that anchor the eating day. This context shapes every subsequent recommendation.
Constructing the Nutritional Portrait
From the journal and intake data, the practitioner assembles a nutritional portrait: a structured record of the macronutrient balance, food group frequency, and vegetable and fruit diversity present in the current eating pattern. This portrait is not a score or a judgement — it is a map.
The profiling stage also identifies the practical opportunities in the eating week — those moments where a small adjustment in ingredient choice or preparation method yields the most meaningful shift in overall nutritional composition without requiring large disruption to established routines.
Building the Personalised Guidance Framework
A personalised guidance framework is assembled from the nutritional portrait and opportunity map. This document — formatted as a structured guidance note rather than a restrictive plan — sets out a daily eating rhythm, a seasonal ingredient list, a set of portion reference points, and a small number of preparatory habits to introduce over a four-week initial period.
The framework is intentionally provisional. It is designed to be revised after the initial period rather than followed indefinitely. This provisional quality is not a weakness but a structural feature: it prevents the framework from becoming another rigid eating system and keeps the practitioner's attention on how the guidance is landing in practice.
Introducing Change Without Disruption
During the four-week active guidance period, the practitioner and participant meet for two structured check-in sessions. These are not motivational in register — they are calibration sessions. The practitioner reviews what changed in practice, what did not, and why. Adjustments are made to the framework in real time based on observed outcomes rather than theoretical expectations.
The calibration stage is where most of the meaningful work of habit building takes place. It is in the gap between what a framework recommends and what actually happens in a person's kitchen that the most useful information about food habits lives.
Closing the Loop, Opening the Next
At the close of the initial programme period, a formal review session produces a revised nutritional portrait and a second-iteration guidance note. This document records what shifted, what stabilised, and what warrants continued attention. It forms the foundation of any extended engagement.
For participants who complete a single programme with no further sessions, the revised guidance note functions as a self-directed reference — a compact, evidence-informed account of their own eating habits and the adjustments that proved most durable.
The editorial standards behind the guidance.
Evidence-Informed Recommendations
Ingredient profiles and nutritional recommendations at Talenova are selected based on published nutritional research. Each recommendation is cross-referenced against the relevant body of published work before inclusion in a guidance note.
Ingredient Lists by Season
Talenova's guidance frameworks are updated quarterly to reflect seasonal availability. Each edition of the guidance note includes a regional ingredient calendar aligned with UK seasonal growing and harvesting cycles.
Third-Party Referenced Standards
Where Talenova references specific compositional data, ingredient sourcing documentation, or batch-level nutritional information, those references are drawn from third-party verified sources and are available for review upon request.
Traceability of Referenced Ingredients
Where whole food suppliers are referenced in a guidance note, Talenova maintains a supplier record with origin documentation. Sourcing prioritises suppliers whose facilities maintain food-grade handling standards.
Versioned Guidance Notes
Every guidance note issued by Talenova carries a revision number and date. Participants receive notification when a material update is made to a framework they are actively using. Prior versions are retained in the archive.
Session Records and Archive Entries
Each consultation and check-in session produces a structured session record, filed against the participant's intake profile. These records form the longitudinal archive from which revision decisions are made.
Where the ingredients in the guidance notes come from.
Talenova's guidance notes reference whole food ingredients by name and, where relevant, by seasonal availability and regional origin. The ingredient lists are not abstract — they are grounded in what is actually available in the United Kingdom across each quarter of the year, from UK-grown brassicas in autumn and winter to stone fruit and legumes in summer.
The practice maintains a working relationship with a small number of independent UK food suppliers and market traders. These relationships inform the ingredient calendars included in guidance notes but do not constitute endorsements, and participants are always free to source equivalent ingredients through any channel available to them.
Active ingredients referenced in Talenova supplements are sourced from documented suppliers, with each batch accompanied by a certificate of composition. Sourcing prioritises suppliers whose facilities maintain food-grade processing standards.
Calendars
Suppliers
Reference List