Enough about oysters, already!
If you want to put some sizzle back into your sex life, food can help
you set the mood. There’s nothing better than a romantic, home-cooked
dinner, featuring some R-rated foods to help turn up the heat. “There’s a
growing body of evidence that some of the vitamins and components in
foods can enhance sexual function and sexual experience,” says Jennifer
R. Berman, MD, the director of the Berman Women’s Wellness Center, in
Beverly Hills, Calif.
Here are some of the food ingredients (and my own favorite recipes) that have been major players in aphrodisiac history and lore, and also have modern-day science to back up their claims.
Here are some of the food ingredients (and my own favorite recipes) that have been major players in aphrodisiac history and lore, and also have modern-day science to back up their claims.
Avocados
The Aztecs referred to avocados as, ahem, testicles, because of their
physical shape. But the scientific reason why avocados make sense as an
aphrodisiac is that they are rich in unsaturated fats and low in
saturated fat, making them good for your heart and your arteries.
Anything that keeps the heart beating strong helps keep blood flowing to
all the right places; in fact, men with underlying heart disease are
twice as likely to suffer from erectile dysfunction (ED).
Almonds
Topping my list of feisty foods, almonds have long been purported to increase passion, act as a sexual stimulant, and aid with fertility. Like asparagus (another one of my favorite sexy foods), almonds are nutrient-dense and rich in several trace minerals that are important for sexual health and reproduction, such as zinc, selenium, and vitamin E. “Zinc helps enhance libido and sexual desire,” says Dr. Berman. “We don’t really understand the mechanisms behind it, but we know it works.”Strawberries
The color red is known to help stoke the fire: A 2008 study found
that men find women sexier if they’re wearing red, as opposed to cool
colors such as blue or green. Strawberries are also an excellent source
of folic acid, a B vitamin that helps ward off birth defects in women
and, according to a University of California, Berkley study, may be tied
to high sperm counts in men. This Valentine’s Day, try making
dark-chocolate-dipped strawberries. And while we’re on the subject,
there’s a reason we give chocolate on Valentine’s Day: It’s full of
libido-boosting methylxanthines.
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