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Food play

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(Redirected from Wakame sake)

Food play, also known as sitophilia, refers to a form of sexual fetishism in which participants are aroused by erotic situations involving food.

Food play overlaps with other fetishes, including wet and messy fetishism, feederism, and nyotaimori. It is differentiated from vorarephilia in that food play fetishizes food while vore fetishizes the act of eating a living creature, or being eaten alive.

A female neo-burlesque performer pouring chocolate sauce over herself as part of a striptease

Practice

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Any food can be considered erotic, depending on the context and the viewer.

Certain foods, such as bananas and hot dogs, are commonly considered fetish objects due to having a phallic shape. Foods that can be eaten off of another person, such as whipped cream or melted chocolate, are also popular, especially in popular culture.

Some foods and herbs are purported to cause sexual arousal, and can have sexual connotations, such as oysters.

Home dildo makers are produced to allow food to be sculpted into a phallic shape for easier insertion.[1]

Alcohol

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Two women getting ready for a body shot

A body shot is a shot of alcohol that is consumed from a person's body. Body shots are done either by taking a shot from a glass on a person's body, or the shot is poured onto a person's body and licked up by another person. The term "body shot" can also mean a shot drinking ritual that involves the use of another person's body, such as taking a shot from a glass and licking salt off of a person's body afterwards.[2]

Wakamezake (わかめ酒), also called wakame sake and seaweed sake, involves 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.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Dildo Maker". carocollective.com. Archived from the original on 2017-05-09. Retrieved 2017-04-05.
  2. ^ Molly Snyder (18 February 2011). "Body shots combine drinking, licking". OnMilwaukee.
  3. ^ "Wakamezake - Everything2.com". everything2.com. Retrieved 2024-05-17.