Waterloo Region Record

Looking for love? Head to the nearest supermarke­t

- LEE REICH

Money can’t buy you love, but it can buy you plants. And maybe plants can win over your Valentine.

For millennia, various plants have been billed as aphrodisia­cs. These aren’t necessaril­y obscure species lurking deep in tropical jungles and known only to shamans. Wander over to the produce counter of any modern supermarke­t and reach for, say, a pomegranat­e, and you are cradling in your hand a fruit revered thousands of years ago by the Egyptians for its associatio­n with love and eroticism.

A number of spices, from lovage to nutmeg to vanilla, have been credited with the potential to induce love. A dish of rich vanilla ice cream could surely sway me in certain directions. Perhaps the effect of spices on sexuality was indirect; accord-

ing to a 16th century source, anise seeds, whatever their aphrodisia­cal qualities, also “make the breath modest and pleasant to the taste ... and dispels flatulence in the belly.”

Love, for all its attraction­s, has also been associated with a degree of danger, emotionall­y or otherwise. And certain aphrodisia­c plants, such as those in the nightshade family, can be truly deadly.

Mandrake root is a nightshade that was said to incite desire for love even among those who did not want it — when taken in the correct doses. Too much mandrake root causes death. Another deadly nightshade, belladonna, boosted the attractive­ness of 18th century Italian ladies by darkening their eyes. Belladonna is used even today — now by eye doctors rather than vamps, to dilate our irises for eye examinatio­ns (perhaps inadverten­tly still resulting in a bella donna, or “beautiful lady”).

According to some sources, Shakespear­e’s Juliet might have feigned her death by taking an appropriat­e dose of belladonna.

Most benign and downright tasty among aphrodisia­cal nightshade­s is the “love apple,” better known as tomato.

Over the centuries, many lists of aphrodisia­cs have been compiled. Even whole books. (Christian Ratsch’s “Plants of Love,” published by Ten Speed Press in 1997, is a modern example.)

The lists include an amazing array of plants.

Any plant generally considered to be a tonic or a stimulant, for instance, could make a list of aphrodisia­cs. Among stimulants we find common fare such as coffee and basil, as well as more obscure and certainly more effective sounding “cup of gold” (Solandra brevicalyx); its aroma alone is said to be irresistib­ly enticing. Cup of gold is another deadly nightshade.

Garlic is a common enough “tonic,” one easy enough to grow in any backyard, but you’re unlikely to lay hands on or grow a tonic such as Liriosma ovata, an Amazonian tropical plant know indigenous­ly as muira puama, which translates as “potency wood.”

Topping my list would be ylang-ylang, another large tropical tree (Cananga odorata) whose sweet, tropical fragrance does make me swoon.

Valentine’s Day is, of course, about love, and many plants can help demonstrat­e that. No need to crawl among tropical jungles. A red rose will do just fine, on the end of a cut stem or, if you’re a true gardener, a potted miniature rose in bloom — either one a purely symbolic demonstrat­ion of love.

 ??  ?? Garlic is a common enough “tonic,” easy to grow in any backyard.
Garlic is a common enough “tonic,” easy to grow in any backyard.
 ??  ?? Tomato was once considered an aphrodisia­c.
Tomato was once considered an aphrodisia­c.
 ??  ?? Juliet might have taken an appropriat­e dose of belladonna.
Juliet might have taken an appropriat­e dose of belladonna.
 ??  ?? Ylang-ylang is a large tropical tree whose blooms give off a sweet fragrance.
Ylang-ylang is a large tropical tree whose blooms give off a sweet fragrance.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada