At the fair, not only can I eat tasty food, but I can also see awesome fireworks. how can you make that a parallel sentence

At the fair, not only can I eat tasty food, but I can also see awesome fireworks.

At the fair, I can eat tasty food, but also i can see awesome fireworks.

At the fair i can eat great food and see amazing fireworks.

To make the sentence "At the fair, not only can I eat tasty food, but I can also see awesome fireworks" into a parallel sentence, you would need to maintain the structure and use parallel elements. The parallelism should follow the same pattern of "not only... but also" to show a contrast or combination of two related actions. Here is one possible way to rewrite the sentence to create parallelism:

"At the fair, I can not only eat tasty food but also enjoy awesome fireworks."

In this revised sentence, the parallel structure is maintained by using "not only" before "eat tasty food" and "but also" before "enjoy awesome fireworks."

Get rid of "not only ... but also" and start both clauses with "I can" -- let us know what you come up with.