Marenova Quarterly
Open notebook and glass of water on a minimal dark wooden desk in soft morning light, editorial wellness setting

METABOLIC FIELD NOTES.

An independent editorial record of resting energy expenditure, metabolic adaptation, and the habits that sustain long-term metabolic balance.

Read the Record
47

Peer-reviewed research documented since launch

280+

Published studies referenced across the archive

12

Nutritional and wellness specialists on the editorial board

38k

Individuals engaging with the metabolic archive monthly

Evidence-Informed Writing on Energy and Daily Rhythm

Marenova Quarterly documents the current body of nutritional research surrounding basal metabolic rate, resting metabolism, and the measurable effects of daily habits on energy expenditure. Each article is reviewed against published nutritional literature before publication.

Our editorial team applies a technical register to complex metabolic topics — presenting calorie awareness, nutrient partitioning, and metabolic flexibility in terms that reflect the precision of the research while remaining accessible to a general readership.

About the Publication
Editorial workspace with annotated research papers and a precision scale resting on a clean white surface under cool controlled lighting

Areas of Metabolic Inquiry

Resting Metabolic Rate

How basal metabolic rate is determined, the variables that influence it across different body compositions, and the documented methods for accurately estimating resting energy expenditure in everyday contexts.

Adaptive Thermogenesis

The process by which resting metabolism adjusts in response to sustained changes in calorie intake — explored through the published literature on metabolic adaptation, non-exercise activity thermogenesis, and long-term energy regulation.

Meal Timing and Metabolism

Research on how the timing and consistency of daily meals interacts with metabolic rate and weight regulation — including the role of morning metabolism, nutrient partitioning, and consistent eating rhythm in supporting metabolic balance.

Protein and Metabolic Rate

Evidence on protein's role in metabolic rate, from its thermic effect of food contribution to its influence on lean tissue preservation — a significant driver of sustained resting metabolism over time.

Movement and Metabolic Rate

How daily movement patterns — not just structured exercise — contribute to total energy expenditure. The documented contribution of low-intensity daily activity to sustained metabolic rate and long-term metabolic health outcomes.

Whole Food Metabolism Support

The comparative evidence on whole food versus processed food intake in the context of metabolic rate, calorie awareness, and long-term metabolic flexibility — with reference to documented nutrient density and satiety research.

“The slow metabolism narrative is, in most cases, a narrative about accumulated habits rather than fixed biology. The research is considerably more nuanced than the popular summary allows.”

Frequently Asked Questions

A compiled reference index for common questions regarding basal metabolic rate, calorie awareness, metabolic adaptation, and the role of daily movement in sustained energy balance.

Basal metabolic rate (BMR) is the quantity of energy the body expends at rest to maintain core physiological functions — respiration, circulation, cellular repair, and thermoregulation — under controlled fasted conditions. It accounts for approximately 60–70% of total daily energy expenditure in sedentary individuals. BMR is typically estimated using validated predictive formulas (such as the Mifflin-St Jeor or Harris-Benedict equations) or measured directly via indirect calorimetry in a research context.

Adaptive thermogenesis is the documented reduction in metabolic rate that occurs beyond what is accounted for by changes in body mass during sustained calorie restriction. The body responds to a prolonged energy deficit by reducing the metabolic cost of resting functions and spontaneous movement. Published research indicates this reduction can persist beyond the period of restriction itself, contributing to the pattern sometimes described as a slow metabolism following sustained calorie management periods.

Current evidence suggests that meal timing has a more modest direct effect on metabolic rate than meal composition or total intake — but consistent eating rhythm does appear to support stable energy expenditure patterns. Research published in chronobiology and nutritional science journals documents associations between irregular meal timing and reduced metabolic flexibility, as well as differences in the thermic effect of food at different points in the circadian cycle.

Skeletal muscle is metabolically more active than adipose tissue at rest, consuming more energy per kilogram. Published estimates suggest that a kilogram of muscle burns approximately 13 kcal per day at rest, compared to 4–5 kcal for adipose tissue. The practical implication is that body composition — specifically lean tissue mass — is a primary determinant of resting metabolic rate, which is why resistance-based activity and adequate protein intake are consistently featured in long-term metabolic health literature.

Metabolic flexibility refers to the body's capacity to shift efficiently between fuel sources — primarily carbohydrates and fats — in response to availability and demand. A metabolically flexible individual oxidises predominantly carbohydrate following a carbohydrate-containing meal and shifts to fat oxidation during fasted or low-carbohydrate states. Impaired metabolic flexibility is documented in research as associated with reduced ability to regulate body composition over time, though it responds to changes in dietary composition and activity patterns.

Protein has the highest thermic effect of any macronutrient, with research indicating that 20–30% of its caloric value is expended during digestion, absorption, and processing — compared to 5–10% for carbohydrate and 0–3% for fat. Beyond the thermic effect, adequate protein intake is associated in the published literature with the preservation of lean tissue mass during periods of calorie adjustment, which has downstream implications for sustained resting metabolism.

Marenova Quarterly is an independent editorial publication focused on everyday wellness practices, with a specific focus on metabolic rate and the habits that sustain it over the long term.

01

Evidence-Based Editorial

Every article submitted to Marenova Quarterly is reviewed against a minimum of three published peer-reviewed research sources before publication. The editorial standard reflects the publication's commitment to accuracy in nutritional science communication.

02

Specialist Contributors

The publication's contributing writers hold qualifications in nutritional science, exercise physiology, and dietetics. Biographical disclosures are published alongside each article, and any commercial affiliations are noted in the author's declaration.

03

Transparent Methodology

The publication's editorial methodology is documented publicly. Article selection, review process, and correction procedures are described in full on the Methodology page.

04

London, Since 2022

Founded in London by a group of nutrition professionals and science writers, Marenova Quarterly has published 47 feature-length articles across four volumes, with the fifth volume in preparation.