Diaries of a master sushi chef
On this Wikipedia the language links are at the top of the page across from the article title. A diary is a written or audiovisual record with diaries of a master sushi chef entries arranged by date reporting on what has happened over the course of a day or other period.
Diaries have traditionally been handwritten but are now also often digital. Today the term is generally employed for personal diaries, normally intended to remain private or to have a limited circulation amongst friends or relatives. Although a diary may provide information for a memoir, autobiography or biography, it is generally written not with the intention of being published as it stands, but for the author’s own use. The earliest recorded use of the word ‘diary’ to refer to a book in which a daily record was written was in Ben Jonson’s comedy Volpone in 1605. The earliest known book resembling a diary is the Diary of Merer, an ancient Egyptian logbook whose author described the transportation of limestone from Tura to Giza, likely to clad the outside of the Great Pyramid. Meditations, written in Greek by the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius in the second half of the 2nd century AD, already displays many characteristics of a diary.