Sichuan Lily Bulb — Classic Formulas
Chuan Bai He · Bulbus Lilii
Primary Actions
- Moistens the Lung and relieves dry irritative cough - regional sweet-lily material used in the same general sphere as Bai He for dryness, post-illness throat irritation, and mild blood-streaked or sticky sputum.
- Nourishes Yin and quiets restlessness - often taken as a soup or food-medicine ingredient when recovery, sleep, or emotional calm is the goal rather than forceful clearing or transformation.
- Supports convalescence and depleted fluids - especially when poor recovery after illness, dryness, and mild fatigue coexist and a gentler edible lily is preferred over harsher medicinals.
- Acts as a local substitute or culinary analogue to Bai He - preserving much of the same Lung-and-Heart nourishing direction while leaning more obviously toward food use.
Classic Formulas
- Bai He Gu Jin Tang (百合固金汤) - when Chuan Bai He is used in place of generic Bai He, the emphasis stays on moistening Lung Yin, easing chronic dry cough, and relieving blood-streaked sputum.
- Bai He Di Huang Tang (百合地黄汤) - regional cooks and practitioners may use sweeter Chuan Bai He material when treating the restless, post-febrile Bai He Bing sphere through food-like preparation.
- Bai He Zhi Mu Tang (百合知母汤) - demonstrates the same Yin-restoring, deficiency-heat clearing direction that Chuan Bai He inherits when treated as a local Bai He substitute.
- Sweet lily soups with Sha Shen, Mai Men Dong, and Chuan Bei Mu - common convalescent pairings that highlight the gentler respiratory use of regional lily bulbs even outside highly formal prescriptions.
Classical Text References
- Me & Qi's Bai He identity section notes that Lanzhou lily and other sweet edible lilies are not the main pharmacopoeial medicinal source, which helps explain why Chuan Bai He sits in a gray zone between food ingredient, regional substitute, and medicinal lily bulb.
- Botanical and horticultural references commonly associate 川百合 with Lilium davidii and related western-China sweet-lily cultivars, distinguishing it from the more bitter medicinal Long Ya Bai He line.
- This library keeps Chuan Bai He as a separate regional record rather than collapsing it fully into Bai He because the source dataset imported both names and modern trade usage often differentiates them.