The Turkey Dilemma, L-Arginine, NO, and Viagra
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I started disliking turkey when apricots got out of season earlier this year, as blended apricots give turkey that tangy zest that made me look forward to eating it on Thursdays. Without that flavor my wife had recommended we stopped eating turkey for dinner. The taste made me consider not buying turkey the next week; however, as per my nutritional self-education, I know turkey is an excellent source of an amino acid called l-arginine that turns into nitric oxide, the same hormone that is stimulated by consumption of Viagra.
Thus I had to find another way to keep turkey favorable to me and my wife’s palette to keep the woodwork at a 16 year-old’s rigidity; sildenafil citrate is out of the question - I don’t even do Advil anymore.The zest returned by squeezing half an orange on the turkey fillet prior to putting into the oven, and broiling the turkey with slices of the other half of the orange beneath it and over it.
L-Arginine can also be found in walnuts, filberts, pecans, brazil nuts, coconut, almonds, cashews, chicken, chocolate, dairy products, oats, peanuts. All of which I include in my diet. Food sources typically only have trace amounts; turkey, however, consumed over a period of a few months may help you treat ED; it worked for me a few years back. That’s a fact.

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