What is the strongest nemesis food for transforming phlegm

There is no such thing as the strongest nemesis food for resolving phlegm. Medicinal substances such as ginger, tangerine peel and Buddha’s hand can be used for resolving phlegm, and you should consult your doctor for details. 1. Ginger, as a traditional Chinese medicine, is pungent and slightly warm in nature. It belongs to the lung, spleen and stomach meridians. It has the effects of warming the stomach and stopping vomiting (treating vomiting caused by stomach cold by warming the spleen and stomach), relieving the surface and dispersing cold (removing the cold from the muscle surface), relieving cough and phlegm, and relieving fish and crab poisoning. It can be used for cold spleen and stomach; vomiting with stomach cold; wind-cold and flu; coughing with cold phlegm; and fish and crab poisoning. This product is not to be taken by those who are hot and those who have Yin deficiency and internal heat. 2. Chenpi, as a traditional Chinese medicine, is bitter, pungent and warm in nature. It belongs to spleen and lung meridian. It has the effect of resolving phlegm and drying dampness, strengthening the spleen and regulating qi. It can be used for eructation (hiccup), vomiting; stagnation of qi in the spleen and stomach, dampness obstruction of eating less and vomiting and diarrhea, distension of epigastrium (abdomen); chest paralysis (stuffy pain in the chest); coughing and phlegm, damp phlegm and cold phlegm. Caution should be exercised in cases of yin deficiency and dry cough, qi yin syndrome, hematemesis, as well as those with solid internal heat, red tongue and little fluid. 3. As a traditional Chinese medicine, Foshan is pungent, bitter, sour and warm. It belongs to liver, spleen, stomach and lung meridians. It has the effects of harmonizing the stomach and relieving pain, dredging the liver and regulating qi (regulating the stagnation of liver qi), drying dampness and resolving phlegm (removing phlegm in the body with dampness-drying medicines). It can be used in treating stagnation of qi in the spleen and stomach, poor appetite and vomiting, gastro-epigastric plumping (stomach distension and discomfort), distension and pain in the chest and ribs, and coughing with excessive phlegm, etc. Contraindications are unclear. Contraindications are not known. The adverse effects of the above herbal medicines are not known. Please do not use the medicines by yourself to avoid adverse reactions.