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Writer's pictureLaura Zam

Why is Pasta So Sexy?



 (This article originally appeared in Leite's Culinaria, in June, 2021)

 

As we step into a strangely familiar world where mouths are no longer covered, it’s time to safely have our fill of energy, love, comfort, and remembrances. I’m talking, of course, about eating a lot more pasta. 


But wait! Haven’t we been numbing ourselves with this starchy stress-buster since early 2020, our thighs telling this story? Indeed. Yet the kind of carby indulgence I’m proposing is the opposite of pushing down emotions. It’s about feeling more. We need to activate parts of ourselves that also went into lockdown—our romantic and sensual nature.


We've all felt something at the sight of a steamy bowl of, say, linguini. Semolina strands tangle around each other, glistening with olive oil and emanating the perfume of golden garlic. Ravenous? Great. Though other appetites may be calling as well. Is pasta the secret bridge? If so, how does this potion work?


James Hamet is a neuroscience researcher. One of his interests is how the sight of food triggers our brains. “It’s all about the limbic system,” he says. “These collective, unconscious structures go into action whenever we encounter something edible.” With lightning speed, the limbic system determines if a substance is dangerous or beneficial. “We do this based on memory,” he says. 


In the case of pasta, Hamet speculates that since many of us were fed this fare from a young age, we associate it with security and feeling adored. “Just looking at noodles relaxes our nervous system,” he says. This certainly speaks to the symbiotic relationship between my COVID anxiety and my mac n cheese cravings.


Hamet points out that noodle-induced peacefulness can lead to cuddles, which can lead beyond cuddles. In fact, another pasta perk is that our primal brain gets really excited by carbs, which are useful for “heavy activity.” And not just the kind that relate to survival instincts.


To wit: erotic imagination. Mary Adelle Walters works at the intersection of creativity and sensuality via online courses and workshops she runs through her company Creative Sex, LLC. Walters agrees that noodles fulfill an unconscious desire to be nourished, but she alludes to nourishment of the soul.


“Each moment of pasta is sensual,” she says. “The bubbling of it in hot water…the soft nest it makes on the plate….the chew of it.” It's not just the sensory experience in the moment, though. Each of these experiences has the potential to inspire flights of erotic fancy. In other words, creatively igniting all our senses could lead to sparks of other sorts. 


This is confirmed by pasta professional Kevin Nelson, Executive Chef at a hot new restaurant in Louisville Kentucky, The Black Jockeys Lounge. One of Chef Nelson’s signature creations is a creamy, spicy extravaganza known as Diablo (or Devil’s) Pasta. Yummy ingredients include fettuccini, sun dried tomatoes, mushrooms, garlic, diced chicken breast, andouille sausage, sweet peppers, red chili, and shaved parmesan.


Nelson echoes much of what was expressed by the neuroscientist and the sexologist—that pasta elicits powerful remembrances, coloring its personal appeal. Also, blissing out our senses feels good, which can inspire other pleasure seeking. Nelson sees this in his dining room—couples leaning in closer as they get deeper into the meal.


He adds that a conversation about pleasure and pasta needs to include cooking the stuff “Macaroni is a doorway to love,” Chef Nelson says. He goes on to explain that because it’s relatively easy to prepare, pasta is often the featured entree when one paramour invites the other over for dinner for the first time. “Couples often have stories revolving around this meal. Perhaps a first kiss.” Think Lady and the Tramp (and other examples not so G-rated).


Nelson speculates that pasta, as with many meals, could play a role in a relationship’s future. “It’s a great dish to make together because it’s simple,” he says, emphasizing that no advanced culinary skills are required. He told me stress-free cooking leaves room for kitchen flirting: chopping hip-to-hip, running four hands under warm water, reaching across someone else’s body for the wooden spoon.


The final word on pasta's exquisite sexiness, appropriately, comes from Sophia Loren, who famously said, “Everything you see I owe to spaghetti.” Some claim she was referring to cheap childhood meals during her impoverished upbringing. I believe she was communicating so much more—about life and about love. She was beckoning us to understand that pleasure begets pleasure. What food can deliver us back to our body and all its sensual delights? Why, linguini, of course. And fusilli, rigatoni, capellini, ravioli…

 

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