Soups

Dried Ginger, Poria, Atractylodes and Licorice Soup

Traditionally warms the spleen and dispels cold-damp

Prep
5 min
Cook
45 min
Total
50 min
Makes
1 small bowl
Dried Ginger, Poria, Atractylodes and Licorice Soup

Why people make this soup

After Lunar New Year the weather can stay cold, and Nourilo reminds older readers — especially those with rheumatic aches, wear-and-tear joints, or a tired lower back — to keep warm and out of cold wind. This warming brew is a traditional way to support the spleen and dispel cold and damp.

Who it suits / who should be cautious

  • Best suited to people with a heavy, achy lower back and body, slight puffiness in the limbs, and a cold-damp pattern settling in the lower body; traditionally aimed at spleen-weakness with dampness.
  • This is a warm, drying brew — if you tend to feel dry, hot or thirsty, it may not suit you (one reader felt a bit “heaty” after drinking it).
  • For ongoing or unexplained joint problems, please see a doctor.

Why these ingredients (the food-therapy logic)

  • Dried ginger (gan jiang): Strongly warming; traditionally used to drive out internal cold.
  • Poria (fu ling): Traditionally associated with draining damp and supporting the spleen.
  • Atractylodes (bai zhu): Traditionally used to strengthen the spleen and dry damp.
  • Licorice (gan cao): Harmonizes the other herbs.

Ingredients (1 small bowl)

IngredientAmountNotes
Licorice (gan cao)~8 g
Dried ginger (gan jiang)~15 gFrom a Chinese herb shop
Poria (fu ling)~23 g
Atractylodes (bai zhu)~19 g

Method

  1. Rinse all the ingredients.
  2. Cook in 4 bowls of water down to a generous half-bowl.
  3. Drink warm.

Nourilo’s Tips

This brew targets aches mainly from the lower back down, and best suits a spleen-weak, damp constitution. If the rheumatic pattern comes with liver-blood insufficiency — cold, achy joints, numbness, worse at night, with dizziness or blurred vision — you may add codonopsis (dang shen) and astragalus (bei qi) ~11 g each and prepared rehmannia (shu di) ~19 g.

Community questions answered (selected)

  • Q (Lee): What soup is good for rheumatoid arthritis? Nourilo: You can make more use of astragalus (bei qi) and cinnamon twig (gui zhi) ~11 g each, with adzuki beans (chi xiao dou) and Job’s tears (yi mi) ~38 g each, cooked into a lean-pork or silkie-chicken soup.

  • Q (jojo): Is “dried ginger” (gan jiang) just ginger dried out, or a herb-shop item? Nourilo: Dried ginger is sold at Chinese herb shops; it mainly addresses internal-cold patterns.


Published January 31, 2012 · Adapted and translated for Nourilo from a traditional home-kitchen recipe. Approx. 2 min read.