Honey … Classic Formulas

Feng Mi · Mel

Primary Actions

  • Tonifies the middle and supplements qi - Feng Mi is used for weakness, poor appetite, dry fatigue, and convalescent states where a food-medicine tonic is preferred over a stronger herb.
  • Moistens dryness and stops cough - traditional use includes Lung dryness, dry cough, throat irritation, and hoarseness when soothing lubrication is needed.
  • Moistens the intestines and relieves constipation - it is a classic gentle choice for dry-pattern constipation, especially in the elderly, postpartum, or depleted patient.
  • Relieves pain, resolves toxin, and promotes healing externally - honey is also used on sores, burns, fissures, and ulcerative lesions to soothe, protect, and generate flesh.

Classic Formulas

  • Mi Jian Dao from the Shang Han Lun tradition - classic honey-based rectal or guided use for constipation when fluids are depleted.
  • Honey and warm water, or honey with sesame oil - long-standing dietetic strategy for dry intestinal constipation.
  • External honey applications and honey-based ointments - traditional wound-care approach for burns, sores, fissures, and ulcerative skin lesions.

Classical Text References

  • Official Chinese references describe Feng Mi as sweet and neutral, entering the Lung, Spleen, and Large Intestine to tonify the middle, moisten dryness, stop pain, relieve toxicity, and externally generate tissue.
  • Classical dietetic and pharmacy traditions also rely on honey to harmonize formulas and to modify the actions of other herbs through honey-frying or honey-pill processing.