Food and Nutrition
Foods that make you smell
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You're sitting on a train that’s slightly warm, packed with passengers, and suddenly you get a whiff of "rotten egg" stench.
Stop
after stop, the crowd thins out, but that onerous odor remains. You
search for the offender as subtly as you can, so you can find a seat in
the opposite direction. As your head swivels, you’re hit with that
stench again, so strong you could swear it was you.
You
nonchalantly dip your head down toward your underarm — wait a minute.
It is you. But you didn't even work out today. And you took a shower
this morning. And you’re wearing deodorant.
What you eat can
directly affect how you smell, and in more ways than just your breath.
Scientifically, this boils down to the way your body metabolizes the
stinky sulfur compounds found in many foods like garlic, cumin, and
asparagus. While smelling like garlic is not new (it is said to ward off
both vampires and mosquitos), the stench of asparagus-tainted urine
might not be quite as familiar and you may not have even realized that
some of the foods on our list could have this effect on you.
If
you have a hot date, an interview, or plan to be out in public, you may
want to keep these foods off the day’s menu. And if you can't, here are a
few tricks to help deodorize nasty smells.
Red Meat
In
2006, researchers from the Czech Republic collected perspiration
samples from meat-eating and vegetarian men. They then asked a group of
women to identify the foulest odor, based on numerous factors.
Overwhelmingly, the vegetarians’ body odor was found to be much more
appealing than the meat-eaters’.
Deodorize: A simple way to remove
potential stench is to cut out red meat all together. If a vegetarian's
life is not for you, try cutting out some meat and replace it with
seafood or veggie dinners.
Curry/Cumin
The taste of
Tikka chicken may not be worth the lingering stench that comes with it.
The aromas of spices such as curry and cumin can make a home for
themselves in your pores, and stew for days at a time.
Deodorize:
Even a brief brush with cumin can cause a lasting odor. Instead try
cardamom, an aromatic seed of a plant from the ginger family, which
permeates the body quickly and leaves a fresh aroma.
Garlic
Garlic
stink oozes from your skin because allicin, within another sulfur
compound called allin, is released when garlic is cut or crushed.
Allicin breaks down quickly after consumption and converts to other
substances, which cause bacteria to mix with sweat and results in a
strong odor.
However, it is said that if you are at dinner and
both you and your date consume garlic, you’ll be less likely to notice
it. (It’s up to you to take that risk.)
Deodorize: If your
underarms become some serious stinkers, apply white or cider vinegar to
keep you odor-free throughout the day.
Asparagus
The ripe smell of asparagus crops up in a seemingly harmless way, but tell that to the guy sharing five bathroom

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