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Food play

 
Wikipedia: Food play
A woman covered in custard.

Food play can have sexual or non-sexual connotations. It often refers to Sitophilia, a form of sexual fetishism in which participants are aroused by erotic situations involving food. The phrase is also used to refer to non-sexual play with food, such as playful and decorative food displays, enjoyment of preparing food, or even a play about food. This article refers to the Sitophilia connotation of food play.

Some foods and herbs themselves are purported to cause sexual arousal in and of themselves. Food play overlaps with other fetishes, including wet and messy fetishism, feederism, Nyotaimori, and Wakamezake. It is differentiated from Vorarephilia, aka "Vore," in that food play fetishizes food while vore fetishizes the act of eating.

A striptease with chocolate.

Sub types

  • Fruit and vegetable fetishism - A sexual activity involving the use of fruit or vegetables for sexual gratification. In addition to use in foreplay, they are sometimes used in penetration.
  • Meat fetishism - A sexual activity where various meats are the focus of erotic desire.
  • Yeastiality - A sexual activity in which bread or bread dough is the focus of erotic desire.
  • Wakamezake (わかめ酒?), also called wakame sake and seaweed sake, is a sexual act involving drinking alcohol from a woman's body. The woman closes her legs tight enough that the triangle between the thighs and mons pubis form a cup, and then pours sake down her chest into this triangle. Her partner then drinks the sake from there. The name comes from the idea that the woman's pubic hair in the sake resembles soft seaweed (wakame) floating in the sea.
  • Food Dangling - A slang word describing an activity during which someone has food dangling from his or her mouth. Usually only the observer is sexually aroused.

Practice

Certain fruits, vegetables and processed meat (Sausages may be fetish objects) have a phallic shape, and can be substitutes for dildos, useful for vaginal penetration of a woman, or anal penetration of either sex. Other foods are so constituted that they can be sexually penetrated by a male, if an appropriate hole is drilled in them, such as the namesake of American Pie.

Cultural references

"I lived in the country, where there weren't many women, and though you're still a kid, inside you feel a man's feeling, and there was no way to relieve this feeling. So the idea, not mine but a real intelligent friend of mine's, of relieving ourselves with, to make love with ... how do I say this? With pumpkins. Pumpkins. Warm, soft, damp, with seeds inside, so round -- and we would -- toom ta toom -- help me find the words, Father -- we relieved ourselves with these pumpkins."
  • Fruit play was done in 9½ Weeks (and later parodied in Hot Shots! Part Deux).
  • On an episode of The Graham Norton Show, an unsuspecting member of the studio audience participated in making the front cover of a food fetish magazine.
  • In the Seinfeld episode "The Blood", George "combined food and sex into one disgusting uncontrollable urge" according to Jerry. George and food-play partner Vivian have a particular fetish for Pastrami, which both Vivian and George find to be "the most sensual of the salted cured meats."
  • In a fifth-season episode of It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Frank and Artemis begin experimenting with food fetishism by engaging in such activities as chewing on the same piece of celery, putting bacon bits in Artemis' hair, and having intercourse in the bathroom of a Wendy's.
  • In the Sex and The City movie, Samantha prepares home made sushi so that her boyfriend can eat it off her naked body.
  • The comedy movie Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood was depicting food play between Ashtray (the protagonist) and Dashiki in a comically disgusting manner.

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Food play" Read more