Pertora was established in Bucharest as a response to a particular gap in how nutritional guidance is typically delivered — fast sessions, generic plans, and a calendar that resets every January without carrying forward what was learned.
The practice is built around documentation. Every client maintains a food record that spans at least seven days before the first session. That record becomes the foundation from which a seasonal plan is constructed — not a template, but a working document that evolves across the programme.
The nutritionists at Pertora hold qualifications in nutritional science and are committed to an approach grounded in published nutritional research rather than trend-driven guidance. The vocabulary of the practice is borrowed from the kitchen and the calendar, not from a marketing brief.
Every consultation begins with a written record. No recommendation is issued without a documented baseline of the client's current eating pattern, sport schedule, and food preferences.
Meal plans are tied to the season rather than a fixed calendar year. What is available in a Romanian market in October is different from what is available in April, and plans reflect that honestly.
A plan that cannot be followed on a Wednesday after a late return from the gym is not a useful plan. Each recommendation is stress-tested against the client's actual weekly schedule before delivery.
Ingredient profiles and food group targets are informed by published nutritional research. Recommendations follow the current consensus on balanced diet composition and healthy eating guidelines for adults.
The programme does not end at session three. Follow-up reviews at week four and week eight allow the plan to be revised according to what has actually changed, rather than what was supposed to change.
Between sessions, all dietary adjustments are handled via documented email exchange. The client retains a complete record of every revision made to their plan across the duration of the programme.
The founding of this practice grew from a consistent observation: the most common reason people struggle to maintain a balanced diet is not a lack of information about nutrition. They already know that vegetables are important. They understand that fruit is preferable to a processed snack. What they lack is a workable structure — a set of decisions made in advance that removes the need to improvise on a Tuesday when they are tired and the market is closed.
Pertora's intake process is designed to produce that structure. The 7-day food diary does not capture an ideal week — it captures a real one, with all its compression, its skipped meals, its office lunches and its sport Thursdays. From that real week, a plan is drafted that fits into the same structure rather than asking the client to dismantle their schedule entirely.
The seasonal orientation of the planning methodology comes from a similar pragmatism. A winter plan built around cauliflower, root vegetables, and legumes costs less to follow than one requiring items flown in from a different hemisphere. It is also a more interesting kitchen to inhabit across the colder months.
Pertora operates from a studio in Sector 2 of Bucharest and accepts clients for in-person and remote consultations. Programmes are open to adults across all dietary preferences. We recommend speaking with a qualified nutrition professional before starting if you have specific dietary requirements.
Holds a degree in nutritional science with additional study in sports nutrition. Has worked with adult clients across varied dietary preferences since 2017. Leads the programme design and seasonal plan methodology at Pertora.
Specialises in active-lifestyle nutrition and food pattern documentation. Works primarily with clients who integrate regular sport into their schedule. Conducts intake reviews and manages the follow-up correspondence archive.