Diary
I read the book A Culinary Journey Through 24 Dishes. I have read some books the author wrote before. Every book allows me to see life in other countries. And the dishes really seem delicious to me. So my wife made one dish from another book. It has become my favourite. I recommend reading the author’s books.
Links
- A Culinary Journey Through 24 Dishes
- Official Publisher Page
- How Tilapia and Avocado Farming Can Boost Income in Developing Countries – 089/100 –
Original statements
I read the book -A Culinary Journey Through 24 Dishes-. I have read some book the author wrote before. Every books allow me to see the life in other countries. And the dishes really seems delicious for me. So my wife made one menu from another book. It becomes my favorite. I recommend reading the author’s books.
Corrections and Explanations
“some book” → “some books”
・Explanation: “Some” is used with plural nouns, so it should be “books” not “book”.
・Additional clarification: You are referring to multiple works the author has written, so the plural is required.
“Every books allow me” → “Every book allows me”
・Explanation: “Every” must be followed by a singular noun and singular verb, hence “book” and “allows”.
・Additional clarification: “Every books” is grammatically incorrect; “every” cannot be used with plurals.
“see the life in other countries” → “see life in other countries”
・Explanation: “Life” in this context is uncountable and does not require “the”.
・Additional clarification: “The life” sounds unnatural here unless you are referring to a specific type of life, which is not the case.
“the dishes really seems” → “the dishes really seem”
・Explanation: “Dishes” is plural, so the verb must be “seem” (not “seems”).
・Additional clarification: Subject-verb agreement is important; “seems” is only used with singular subjects.
“delicious for me” → “delicious to me”
・Explanation: The correct preposition is “to” when expressing a personal impression or opinion.
・Additional clarification: “Delicious for me” is sometimes used, but “delicious to me” is standard for expressing taste judgment.
“made one menu” → “made one dish”
・Explanation: “Menu” refers to a list of dishes, not a single food item.
・Additional clarification: You likely mean your wife prepared a single recipe, which would be called a “dish”.
“It becomes my favorite” → “It has become my favourite”
・Explanation: “Has become” is the correct present perfect tense for a recent or continuing result. “Favourite” is the British spelling.
・Additional clarification: “Becomes” is simple present tense and doesn’t fit here. “Favourite” (with “u”) is standard in British English.



