Mister T 45020 Report post Posted December 1, 2013 Not sure if this was posted here, but here goesâ?¦. From the [URL="http://www.ottawacitizen.com/life/relationships/oysters+other+aphrodisiacs+possible+they+more/8909437/story.html"]Ottawa Citizen's website[/URL] Few things dampen passion quite as swiftly as the offering of any delicacy labelled an â??aphrodisiacâ?. The very term smacks of an ageing potentate grinding rhino horn on to his caviar, in the hope of tupping a nubile young courtesan. I remember with quiet shivers the male acquaintance who offered me Horny Goat Weed tea, as if that filthy concoction would render his horny goat-man advances more palatable. Worse still was the lunch at a Japanese restaurant when a man made me try sea urchin, crying with triumph as I pulled a face: â??See! It tastes exactly like sex.â? I am just grateful I missed the days of Spanish fly, when powdered blister beetle was supposed to inflame the blood vessels around the groin, with frequent near-lethal effect. Roald Dahl satirised the practice in My Uncle Oswald, where his protagonist discovers the volcanic qualities of the Sudanese blister beetle and crushes the resulting powder into Prestat chocolates; he employs a gorgeous accomplice to serve the treats to world-famous males (James Joyce, Albert Einstein, Claude Monet, etc), so she can steal their genetic material to sell to baby-hungry heiresses. I presume Dahl was tired of writing about giant peaches. Where the great author hits the nail on the head is the fact that aphrodisiacs seem so pointlessly exhausting. But as we all know, there are exceptions to every rule. I am prepared to allow oysters the rare accolade of being a genuinely sexy foodstuff, especially when there is an â??râ? in the month and bivalves are back on the menu. Last week, the Scotch Malt Whisky Society celebrated its 30th â?? â??pearlâ? â?? anniversary by launching a whisky and oyster pop-up bar to celebrate the seductive qualities of both delicacies. I was invited to give a guest lecture on aphrodisiacs and found myself succumbing once again to the subtle, briny delights of Aphroditeâ??s favourite mollusc. Itâ??s not just the fact that Casanova consumed 50 oysters a day just for breakfast, nor the shellfishâ??s high zinc content, nor even what one friend calls â??the bite of Tabasco on mermaidâ??s inner thighâ?. Nope, itâ??s the suggestive way the thing glistens at you once the shell has been shucked open. When I was editor of The Erotic Review I tried to put a ravishing black and white David Bailey picture of an oyster on the front cover and was smacked down by my horrified publisher; he said it was the rudest photo he had ever seen. Itâ??s little wonder Jonathan Swift once wrote, â??He was a bold man that first ate an oyster.â? The link between oysters and sex is beautifully rendered in Sarah Watersâ??s 19th-century Sapphic romp, Tipping the Velvet, which starts with the sentence, â??Have you ever tasted a Whitstable oyster?â? and moves swiftly on to the slippery softness of inner thighs. Most women I know will admit to the seductive properties of the shellfish, so long as they arenâ??t served on a first date: far too forward for most tastes. One friend keenly remembers the occasion when she was a slip of a thing in publishing and was offered oysters by the late Sir Robin Day at the Garrick Club. Unsure of how many to order, she gamely ventured: â??Twentyâ?, not realising that even the bravest souls usually stop at 12. She then had to slip down the whole platter before the great broadcasterâ??s astonished gaze. It was probably just as well Day plumped for the roast that day. In 2005 a team of American and Italian scientists found that oysters contain rare amino acids that trigger increased levels of the hormones testosterone in males and progesterone in females, lifting their libidinous power far above the symbolic. Even so, I am inclined to be sympathetic to PJ Oâ??Rourkeâ??s line that few things â??increase sexual arousal, particularly in womenâ?, more than â??the Mercedes-Benz 380SL convertibleâ?. And, much as I like oysters, Iâ??d still rate a good single malt as a more potent aphrodisiac. For what Briton ever managed a seduction stone-cold sober? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites