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APHRODISIACS: A tour of the world's most infamous

I.M. Boggled

Certified Bloomin' Idiot
Veteran
In honor of "Valentines Day" 2007, A tour of many of the world's most infamous substance's that increase sexual desire or potency.. ;) :D
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Source is Salon Magazine dot com , Feb. 13, 2007
Article by Robert Sietsema
http://www.salon.com/mwt/food/eat_drink/2007/02/13/aphrodisiac/
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APHRODISIACS
A tour of the world's most infamous aphrodisiacs, from dog penis and prunes to swallows' hearts and spaghetti puttanesca.

Consider the oyster.
Found all over the world, the common bivalve isn't pretty:
The gray mottled shell is pock-marked and plain, its uneven halves don't quite fit together. Yet as an inducement to love, its reputation is unequaled. The Roman satirist Juvenal heartily endorsed it, and the 18th century courtesan Marquis de Pompadour deployed it -- along with chocolate and celery -- in her seductive arsenal. (Another of her contributions to sex appeal: Elvis' hairdo.) Casanova sucked down 50 raw oysters each morning while lolling in his bath, gazing at the next gal in line. Even today, young and old men in New York's Little Italy stand at neighborhood oyster bars downing a half-dozen as an inspiration for the evening's activities. It's about the only aphrodisiac everyone can agree on. After all, Aphrodite was spawned from an oyster shell.

But why oysters?
Perhaps it's because, when the shell opens, they bear a blush-inducing resemblance to the female anatomy. There's certainly a curious thrill to teasing a raw oyster out of its shell using only your tongue and teeth, and lapping the juices. In addition, the texture of these slippery creatures resembles the amorous excretions of both sexes...

In a taxonomy of reputed aphrodisiacs, the oyster establishes an important principle.
Specifically, the notion that an aphrodisiac is effective to the extent that it resembles a sex organ is called "mimesis."

Only a handful of aphrodisiacs are vaginal -- most notably the fig, the peach (Remember "Eat a Peach" by the Allman Brothers?), and epithelial orchids, which were made into a slew of potions in France and India during the Middle Ages. When it comes to getting it on, more aphrodisiacs claim to aid in getting it up -- and so are modeled on the penis. Raw leeks, carrots and celery are common mimetics that are prized in many cultures. More ambitiously amorous chefs might try the Kama Sutra's recipe, which suggests boiling asparagus in a combination of cow's milk and ghee, flavoring it with lots of anise. That's anise, not anus.

The Arabs swallowed live skinks -- slippery, long-tailed lizards -- as an inducement to manly feats. Snake blood is another popular aphrodisiac, based on the facile resemblance of penis to snake; some parlors in Malaysia still offer the reptiles perforated near the tail for easy drinking. The Turks preferred satyrion root (the name says it all), a substance so powerful it prompted 17th-century scientist Athanasius Kircher to exclaim, "Odd, they'll make one old fellow of sixty-five cut a caper like a dancing master." Ginseng serves the same purpose today, although the root is thought to resemble the whole man rather than just the dangling participle.

The horn as a symbol of the erect male member may be too obvious to mention, responsible as it is for that enduring expression of ardor, "I'm so horny." But less benignly, the murder of African and Indian rhinos for their horns, used in powdered form in traditional Asian potency medicines, has endangered both species, and the recent uptick in the Chinese economy has apparently intensified the problem. In a pinch, it seems any variety will do, since the bony protuberances of water buffalo and saiga antelope are now in demand.

Aphrodisiac enthusiasts are anything but subtle: Tiger penis or, indeed, the member of any animal thought to display manly characteristics (even the dog -- larger canines preferred), is always en vogue. Intrepid Australian traveler Paul Bakker recounts his experience eating at a unique North Korean restaurant. Ushered late one evening by his state-appointed guides into a low concrete building, with a disco ball, that was part restaurant, part karaoke bar, Bakker discovered that the table d'hôte was pooch. The specialty, considered a form of health food throughout Korea (though I've also eaten dog in Queens, N.Y.!), was served in a series of courses beginning with the backbone, then proceeding through barbecued ribs and on to a series of stews. When Bakker's translator announced that the most important part of the meal was about to arrive, he referred to it as the middle leg. Observed the author, "The shape was unmistakable. As if on cue, a drunken Korean jumped up from the next table and started belting out a patriotic folk song." Bakker doesn't report what it tasted like, or what he was inspired to do after the meal.

Of course, you don't have to go to all the way to Korea to enjoy the revivifying effects of animal penis. Even in the U.S., most Jamaican eateries serve up cow cod soup on the weekends, a thick pottage of the bovine member cut up into little gelatinous pieces and mixed with roots and herbs selected for their similar therapeutic effects. This soup is used more for prophylaxis than for remedial purposes, and, come Saturday night, no Jamaican man feels embarrassed about fortifying himself with a serving in full view of the other diners. When you give it a try, wash it down with one of the roots tonics that are available in the same restaurants, and which sport unmistakable names like Front End Lifter, Tan-Pon-It Long or Agony Drink.

When it comes to sexual comestibles, though dick is desirable, balls will do, too. Rocky mountain oysters, a popular euphemism for bull testicles in the Western United States, cleverly uses one aphrodisiac to refer to another. Next time you're in a Middle Eastern restaurant, scan the menu for "lamb fries," the evasive moniker for charcoal-grilled testicles. I once led a pair of families, children in tow, to a Lebanese restaurant in Astoria, Queens. Along with a dozen or so familiar dishes, we ordered a plate of lamb fries, not quite sure what to expect. When they arrived, the tender meat was instantly recognizable by its almond shape. Imagine our surprise when the young children in our party, who had eschewed most of the food placed before them, fell on the testicles like ravenous dogs. Gradually turning red, the parents watched in silence. They made a pact never to reveal the nature of the meat to the kids, fearing years later they'd be accused in court, kids shouting from the witness stand: "They forced us to eat animal testicles!"

Of course, demanding that aphrodisiacs resemble sex organs is a rather simple-minded approach, and there are still many prescriptions that depart from the formula. As an invitation to erotic adventures, almost any well-prepared meal can be effective (especially if it's served with a few bottles of limb-loosening wine).
According to the Marquis de Sade in "Juliette":
"le bon dîner peut causer une volupté physique"
"a good dinner generates a physical voluptuousness".
Spicy food is especially stimulating, and anise, cinnamon, saffron, garlic, black pepper, white pepper and chili peppers are all thought to have aphrodisiacal properties -- the last three perhaps because they generate a hot sweat, just like sex, and a glow that lingers in the digestive tract.

When introduced into Europe from South America in the 16th century, the tomato earned the name "love apple," and even today, foods that are both tomatoey and heavily spiced are often referred to as "lusty." All red-sauced Italian fare fits this category, especially puttanesca, in which several erotically efficacious ingredients come into play at once. This "harlot's sauce" associated with Naples and Calabria contains tomatoes, red peppers, garlic, onions, anchovies and capers. Eat some poured over, say, penne cooked al dente, and see if it doesn't make you feel like loosening your belt.

Other amorous edibles run contrary to logic. In Elizabethan England, prunes were provided free of charge in brothels. It sounds absurd, but then who knows what they were doing in there? Other favorites of the time included dates, quinces and potatoes -- just arrived from the New World and thought to have magical properties. Brillat-Savarin, waxing overly poetic, asserted that truffles induce "erotic and gastronomic ideas both in the sex wearing petticoats and in the bearded portion of humanity." And Eugene Duren, in his 1901 commentary on Sade, reports that "In some parts of Germany men eat flatulent foods like beans, peas, lentils, and radishes in order that they may attain powerful erections by way of the accumulated gas." Don't try this at home!

Chocolate has always been a popular choice among lovers, although opinions vary as to its efficacy. One anonymous 19th-century pornographer called it "fit for serving maids ... an incentive working not upon the body but upon the mind. It generates a complacent and yielding disposition." Another warns against it, at least for men: "in liquid form it is hot cocoa ... filling your guts with slimy warmth which drives away all thoughts of gallantry."
These days, conventional wisdom dictates that chocolates are most effective when delivered to your sweetie in an oversize heart-shaped box.

But maybe you want to give just plain hearts? Swallows' hearts were among the list of popular medieval aphrodisiacs, as were, by the same reasoning, any pair of lovebirds, like turtle doves baked in a pie. Other unexpected aphrodisiacs of the ages included menstrual blood, fat from a camel's hump, the wings of bees, the powdered tooth of a corpse, male or female hedgehog genitals, bat blood mixed with asses' milk, and salted crocodile. The application can be even more absurd than the ingredient, whether intended to stimulate a flagging manhood, or induce a greater receptivity in the love object, or both. Mathiolis, a medieval German pharmacist who gave his name to several plant species, even recommended refining the camphorlike crystals from the flesh of a civet cat and rubbing them on the penis; a salve of fresh ginger serves the same purpose.

But now that I think of it, rubbing anything on the penis would probably work.

:)
 
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genkisan

Cannabrex Formulator
Veteran
The only thing I have used that I can honestly say had a strong aphrodisiac and stimulant effect was this stuff:

27_erotic_massage.jpg


Here is a link: http://www.genuineafricanformula.com/Scripts/prodView.asp?idproduct=40
 

I.M. Boggled

Certified Bloomin' Idiot
Veteran
My wifes favorite aphrodisiac of choice is Chocolate covered cherries and strawberries, chased down with a wee little bit of champagne ideally.
Me, a six pack of heineken and a can of vienna cocktail weinies and I'm good to go. ;) :D
 
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genkisan

Cannabrex Formulator
Veteran
Well, IM, a rubdown with that massage oil is like drinking a cup of espresso....it has tons of herbal ingredients, and the oil itself is skin permeable, so the herbals get into your blood stream within minutes....

It has yohimbe, sassparilla, gotu kola, ginseng, ylang-ylang and a whole bunch more.....
 

Tarkus

Mother Nature's Son
Veteran
I don't know....I have tried many aphrodisiacs, and none of them has ever made me feel any different. I guess when you are always horny and ready to go at the drop of a hat, nothing is gonna make you more so...
I found that the best way to get a girl in the mood, is making her feel like she is the most important person in the world. I do not have to rely on foodstuffs, powders and potions to get a girl randy, I just use charm.
Although I have always found them very interesting and I love to learn about them, I would not spend any money on them. Nothing works as good as pretending to care...I mean actually caring.
 

Tripco

Active member
That turkish Satyrion root may be "Salep" which is a potion made from roots (in fact, tubers or bulbs) of various plants belonging to the genus Colchicum. Even today, there's a strong belief throughout Turkey, Near East and part of Balcans, that Salep is aphrodisiac of the highest rank (especialy for the older man). That belief particulary comes from the look of Colchicum bulbs: they comes in pair, in size of "pidgeons eggs" (according to book). On the other side, no actual substance that might act as an aphrodisiac was ever found in these plants. Some species within this genus are used in pharmaceutic industry for preparing of some drugs (containing lots of alcaloids, some of them, very poisonous).
 

naga_sadu

Active member
Damn...

I dunno much about the oils, oysters, cow testes and foodplay etc...

A live belly dance performance along w/a hukkah pipe loaded with lotsa great racy sativas never fails a man...
 
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J

JackKerouac

Yohimbe is wicked awesome. It takes some time to build up for it to work though.

Tongkat Ali is alright, but not immediate like Viagra, although it is rather spendy.

Muira Puama is great as a tonic, but no better than ginseng as a "stimulant"

I have done a lot of work in entheogens, but these are my summations as far as aphrodesiacs.
 

Pops

Resident pissy old man
Veteran
When I was 16, just seeing a young female form was enough to do the trick. I needed no special foods. now that I'm in my 60's, even viagra won't get Mr. Johnson to raise his wrinkled, bald head. How the hell does Heffner do it?
 

naga_sadu

Active member
When I was 16, just seeing a young female form was enough to do the trick. I needed no special foods. now that I'm in my 60's, even viagra won't get Mr. Johnson to raise his wrinkled, bald head. How the hell does Heffner do it?

Does this help?

Boost your virility i Also known as carom seeds, ajwain has been used as a virility booster for thousands of years. The seeds (rich in thymol) should be crushed and fried in ghee, butter or olive oil together with an equal quantity of crushed kernels of tamarind seeds.

A teaspoon taken with honey and milk before hitting the sack increases virility and is even said to cure premature ejaculation, according to traditional Indian herbal medicine.

Enhance sexual appetite i Asafoetida or hing is also known as devil's dung or ferula. It occurs both as a light brown resin and as a powder. Its piquancy whets the sexual appetite as much as the tastebuds. Love the peculiar taste or hate it, it's aphrodisiacal when used liberally in cooking!

Increase your staying power i Powdered elaichi (cardamom) seeds, boiled with milk, and downed with a spoonful of honey are supposed to be an excellent remedy against impotence and premature ejaculation.

But watch that you don't overdo this one, as herbalists warn that excessive use could lead to impotency.

Up the feel good factor i Clove or lawang is the dried flower bud of Jambosa caryophyllus. Considered an aphrodisiac in China since the third century BC, cloves also became quite famous in Europe for their feel good factor.

Swedish herbalist Anders Månsson Rydaholm wrote in 1642 that if a man loses his ability, he should stay sober and drink milk spiced with five gms of cloves. Apparently, this would "fortify him and make him desire his wife"!

Stimulate yourself i Garlic (lasun) was used as an aphrodisiac not only among ancient Egyptians, but also among the Greeks, Romans, Chinese and Japanese.

Possibly, most of the aphrodisiacal effect of garlic is associated with the fact that it makes food more appetising, stimulates the secretion of gastric juices, increases the appetite and, generally contributes to a feeling of well-being. In some cases it's also used externally as a paste (crushed and mixed with lard).

Say goodbye to impotence i Throughout Asia, adrak or ginger has lived up to its reputation of being a powerful aphrodisiac. Indian literature recommends a mixture of ginger juice, honey and half-boiled eggs, taken at night for a month, as a remedy against impotence.

Prolong your pleasure i Nutmeg or jaiphal is the ripe seed of Myristica fragrans. Dried nutmeg is supposed to be a 'legal hallucinogenic', but the side effects of the high doses required can be severe.

Nutmeg is supposed to work as a subtle aphrodisiac in far smaller doses (less than half a nut). Some herbalists claim that a mixture of nutmeg, honey and a half-boiled egg will prolong the duration of the sexual act if ingested an hour before intercourse.

Spice up your life i The ancient Egyptians, Greeks and Romans all used pepper or kaalimirch as an aphrodisiac and the Arabs not only added pepper to food, but used it in other ways too.

You can chew a few pepper cons before intercourse to spice up the proceedings. Others recommend a daily consumption of a glass of milk with six crushed black pepper cons and four crushed almonds. This will also act as a nerve tonic.

Sensitise your erogenous zones i Saffron or kesar being the stigma (female part) of the Crocus sativus, it has both a symbolic as well physical aphrodisiacal effect. It can reputedly make erogenous zones even more sensitive. Saffron is a key ingredient in many erotic dishes.

Put your heart into it i Yes, even common salt (namak) can be good for your sex life! One of the most basic spices, rock salt (especially that obtained from the salt mines of Sindh) was considered to be an aphrodisiac and a heart tonic.

Arouse your senses i Vanilla is the cured, full-grown, unripe fruit of an orchid, Vanilla planifolia. The name itself hints at amorous properties, derived a s it is from the Spanish word vainila, a diminutive of vaina meaning vagina (or pod).

It is a powerful aphrodisiac, acting through its odour as much as through its taste. It is important to use the natural product. Synthetic vanillin is far cheaper, but less effective.

Vanilla essence (extracted from the real vanilla) can be added to your bath to produce a mild love-arousing effect, especially when you and your partner bathe together.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/815678.cms
 

Tripco

Active member
Garlic, yes, magic garlic. It is one of most common aphrodisiacs in southern and eastern Europe. Onions will do the trick too. But the only problem is that no woman would get closer than 3 meters away from you. Well, there's a cures for bad breath too...
Very popular in Serbia (especialy in my native south Serbia) is eating food spiced with hot chili peppers or hot paprika. Along with that one should drink some strong alchoholic beverage (50-65% of alc.) such is rakiya (brewed from plums- Sliwowitz, grapes, pears or some other fruit). But, some people becomes too agressive from such combination (i think it's more because of alchohol). Maybe it's not bad for S/M sex?
More peaceful variant is drinking herbal tea made form plants Satureja montana and Satureja hortensis (i think the english term is Savory). It won't work instantly, but in few weeks of drinking it regulary. Famous french herbalist Maurice Messegue has proved eficiency of these plants many times. They're easy to grow and they work for man and woman, both. There's a mountain in eastern Serbia, Rtanj, a kind of magic mountain (place where almost 90% of all european healing herb species can be found, place with absolute majority of all UFO encaunters in ex-Yugoslavia, and also the home of ancient pagan slavic gods). Most famous Satureja comes from that mountain. In the valley in the foot of mountain lies a spa Sokobanja, well known as "Spa for cheating spouses". It says all.
 
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