02-13-2010, 03:49 AM
Birdâs Nest Soup, poisonous snakes ... oh, the things we consume for love
Some people put on a strong aftershave. Others cue up a little Barry White. Still others go a different route when theyâre looking to get in the mood: they drink a glass of cobra blood.
Sound strange? It wonât if you visit China. To some men thereâand in other parts of Asiaâimbibing the blood of a venomous snake is as conducive to seduction as the soulful tones of Barry.
The concept of the aphrodisiacâa substance that, when consumed, enhances sexual performanceâexists in almost every culture, and dates back as far as ancient Egypt (when amorous couples reportedly ate wine-soaked water lilies to amp up their passion). Martha Hopkins, author of InterCourses: An Aphrodisiac Cookbook, explains that âhistorically, foods that mimicked certain body parts were believed to aid those same body parts, including sexual organs.â That would explain certain populationsâ affinity for sea cucumberâas well as powdered rhino horn.
Thanks to centuries of traditional Chinese medicineâwhich links particular ingredients to an amplified sex driveâmost aphrodisiacs can be found in Asia.
In Korea, the hagfish, or slime eel, takes the shape of an enviably large member and emits a slimy substance when touched, likely accounting for its status as an elixir of love. And there is perhaps no more symbolic aphrodisiac than the balutâa duck egg hosting a partially gestated fetusâhawked in the Philippines as commonly as movie theater popcorn.
Other purported aphrodisiacs get their potency from actual toxins, which irritate (some might say âinflameâ) the bodies of those who eat them. Perhaps the best-known example of this sort is good old Spanish flyâan acidic beetle secretion prized for its ability to cause swelling on contact; or fugu (blowfish), which can lead
to both pleasurable tingling and much-less-pleasurable death.
Despite these risksâand despite the fact that thereâs little medical evidence to back up most aphrodisiac claimsâmany cultures still embrace the belief that certain foods can kick up oneâs sex drive. In the end, an aphrodisiacâs effectiveness likely has the simplest explanation: the power of suggestionâand some very wishful thinking.
âAphrodisiacs are all about the imaginationâwhether youâre eating cobra or sipping hot chocolate,â says Hopkins. âThe mind-set behind it is really what counts.â
Some people put on a strong aftershave. Others cue up a little Barry White. Still others go a different route when theyâre looking to get in the mood: they drink a glass of cobra blood.
Sound strange? It wonât if you visit China. To some men thereâand in other parts of Asiaâimbibing the blood of a venomous snake is as conducive to seduction as the soulful tones of Barry.
The concept of the aphrodisiacâa substance that, when consumed, enhances sexual performanceâexists in almost every culture, and dates back as far as ancient Egypt (when amorous couples reportedly ate wine-soaked water lilies to amp up their passion). Martha Hopkins, author of InterCourses: An Aphrodisiac Cookbook, explains that âhistorically, foods that mimicked certain body parts were believed to aid those same body parts, including sexual organs.â That would explain certain populationsâ affinity for sea cucumberâas well as powdered rhino horn.
Thanks to centuries of traditional Chinese medicineâwhich links particular ingredients to an amplified sex driveâmost aphrodisiacs can be found in Asia.
In Korea, the hagfish, or slime eel, takes the shape of an enviably large member and emits a slimy substance when touched, likely accounting for its status as an elixir of love. And there is perhaps no more symbolic aphrodisiac than the balutâa duck egg hosting a partially gestated fetusâhawked in the Philippines as commonly as movie theater popcorn.
Other purported aphrodisiacs get their potency from actual toxins, which irritate (some might say âinflameâ) the bodies of those who eat them. Perhaps the best-known example of this sort is good old Spanish flyâan acidic beetle secretion prized for its ability to cause swelling on contact; or fugu (blowfish), which can lead
to both pleasurable tingling and much-less-pleasurable death.
Despite these risksâand despite the fact that thereâs little medical evidence to back up most aphrodisiac claimsâmany cultures still embrace the belief that certain foods can kick up oneâs sex drive. In the end, an aphrodisiacâs effectiveness likely has the simplest explanation: the power of suggestionâand some very wishful thinking.
âAphrodisiacs are all about the imaginationâwhether youâre eating cobra or sipping hot chocolate,â says Hopkins. âThe mind-set behind it is really what counts.â


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