Cooking with what the earth offers, when it offers it.
A slow food journal for home cooks who believe the best ingredient is patience, and the best recipe starts at the farmer’s market.
Against the tyranny of always-available.
We can buy strawberries in January and asparagus in October. The question is whether we should. When every ingredient is available at all times, we lose something quietly important: the experience of anticipation, of a thing arriving in its moment, tasting of the place and season it came from.
The Seasonal Table exists to make the argument — through recipes, guides, essays, and practical menu planning — that cooking seasonally is not a restriction. It is the path to better flavour, better farming, and a more attentive relationship with the food on your plate.
We publish twice a month: what’s coming into season, a recipe we’ve been working on, a preservation technique worth knowing, and a story worth reading slowly over coffee.
Three things we stand for.
Seasonal recipes only
Every recipe uses ingredients at their natural peak. No imported-out-of-season substitutes, no workarounds. If it isn’t the right time of year, we wait.
Techniques that last
Preservation, fermentation, long braises, slow jams — we focus on methods that connect you to a longer tradition and produce results that get better over time.
Honest writing
We write about food with specificity, scepticism of trends, and genuine pleasure in the act of cooking. No listicles, no affiliate links, no sponsored content.
The season in your inbox.
Every two weeks: what’s in peak season, a recipe we’re obsessed with, a preservation tip, and a story worth reading slowly over coffee.
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Four Steps to a Seasonal Menu
Survey the Season
Visit your local market or check our seasonal guide. Note what is abundant, affordable, and at its peak right now.
Anchor Your Week
Choose 2–3 hero ingredients and build 5–7 meals around them. A roast chicken on Sunday becomes stock for Wednesday soup.
Build a Flexible List
Write your shopping list with substitution notes. If the courgettes look tired, pivot to green beans — same recipe, same spirit.
Cook, Adapt, Repeat
Prep what you can ahead of time. Let leftovers inspire tomorrow’s lunch. The plan is a guide, not a contract.