I'll discuss a slightly different approach to obtain the same result given in the other answer.
You are given a completely positive quantum map in Kraus representation: some $\Phi:\mathrm L(\mathcal X)\to\mathrm L(\mathcal Y)$ with
$$\Phi(X) = \sum_a A_a X A_a^\dagger, \qquad \forall X\in\mathrm L(\mathcal X).$$
Here $A_a\in\mathrm L(\mathcal X,\mathcal Y)$ are the Kraus operators of the map. Observe that you can always write a channel in its Stinespring representation as $\Phi(X)=\operatorname{Tr}_{\mathcal Z}(VXV^\dagger)$ for some isometry $V\in\mathrm U(\mathcal X,\mathcal Y\otimes\mathcal Z)$. Kraus and Stinespring dilations are tightly related via $A_a=(I\otimes\langle a|)V$ with $|a\rangle$ an orthonormal system for $\mathcal Z$ (more precisely, I should have said that given a channel corresponding to the isometry $V$, the set of operators $A_a$ thus defined gives a valid Kraus decomposition for $\Phi$, and vice versa given a Kraus decomposition the operator thus defined is an isometry).
Note that different choices of orthonormal system $\{|a\rangle\}_a$ result in different Kraus decomposition, but same overall map.
In summary, we have $A_a=(I\otimes\langle a|)V$ for some isometry $V$. The complementary map of $\Phi$ is then the one whose Kraus operators are obtained "projecting on the other side" of $V$. Meaning $\tilde A_a\equiv(\langle a|\otimes I)V$.
I would note that there might be some subtleties with this associated to the different dimensionality of $\mathcal Y$ and $\mathcal Z$, which should however disappear redefining things so that $\mathcal Y\simeq\mathcal X$ and choosing $\mathcal Z$ to have smallest required dimension (i.e. $\dim(\mathcal Z)=\operatorname{rank}(J(\Phi))$).
The intuition is pretty straightforward: if you understood $\Phi$ as evolution through some $V$ followed by ignoring part of the output, the complementary channel is the one corresponding to the same evolution through $V$, but instead ignoring the other (complementary!) part of the output.
Let's consider a few examples to concretise these arguments.
Example: identity channel
Let's start by considering the identity map $\Phi=\operatorname{Id}$ in a $d$-dimensional space, that is, $\Phi(X)=X$ for all $X\in\mathrm L(\mathbb{C}^d)$. Its Choi is $J(\operatorname{Id})=\mathbb{P}_m$, where $\mathbb{P}_m\equiv |m\rangle\!\langle m|$ and $|m\rangle\equiv \sum_{i=1}^d |i,i\rangle$. The Choi has unit rank, and therefore there is a unique choice of Kraus operators: the trivial one with $\Phi(X)=AXA^\dagger$, $A=I$. In this case there is also a trivial choice of dilation isometry $V$: just $V=I_d$. Or equivalently, you might write $V=I_d\otimes 1$, where $1$ is here the "vector" spanning the trivial one-dimensional space, which you'd then trace out in the formula. Things look somewhat weird because this would be a linear map $V:\mathbb{C}^d\to \mathbb{C}^d\otimes \mathbb{C}\simeq \mathbb{C}^d$.
For the complementary channel(s), we'd get
$$\Phi^c(X)= \operatorname{tr}_1[VXV^\dagger]
= \operatorname{tr}(X)\in\mathbb{C}.$$
In words, this is telling us that if all the information about the input state goes into one output, then the other output holds no information about the input.
Note that you get essentially the same result using the other recipe:
$$\Phi^c(X)= \sum_{ij} \operatorname{tr}(A_j^\dagger A_i X) |i\rangle\langle j|= \operatorname{tr}(X) |0\rangle\!\langle 0|,$$
with $|0\rangle$ the only spanning unit vector in the ancillary one-dimensional space.
We should however observe that the dilation used above is not unique. You can show in general that any pair of dilation isometries $V,V'$ are related as $V=(I\otimes U^T)V'$ where $U$ or $U^\dagger$ is an isometry. In this case, this translates into dilation isometries having the form $V=I_d\otimes |\psi\rangle$ for any state $|\psi\rangle$. The corresponding complementary channels then read $\Phi^c(X)=\operatorname{tr}(X) \mathbb{P}_\psi$.
You can also get this result more directly observing that complementary channels are always connected via an isometric channel, see e.g. https://arxiv.org/abs/2011.04672, below Definition 4.5.
Example: isometric channels
Let $\Phi(X)=WXW^\dagger$ be an isometric channel, with $W$ some isometry, and suppose
$$\Phi:\operatorname{Lin}(\mathbb{C}^d)\to\operatorname{Lin}(\mathbb{C}^{d'}).$$
Similar reasoning as before tells you that dilation isometries have the form $V=W\otimes |\psi\rangle$, and the corresponding complementary channels thus are
$$\Phi^c(X) = \operatorname{tr}_1[VXV^\dagger]=\operatorname{tr}(WXW^\dagger) \mathbb{P}_\psi = \operatorname{tr}(X) \mathbb{P}_\psi.$$
Example: dephasing channel
Consider now a dephasing channel:
$$\Phi(\rho) = p \rho + (1-p) Z\rho Z, \quad p\in[0,1].$$
As discussed in this other answer, in the case of this being a qubit-channel, an isometric dilation is
$$V = \begin{pmatrix}
\sqrt p \,I \\
\sqrt{1-p} \,Z
\end{pmatrix},$$
where each of the two blocks here is one Kraus operator.
You can equivalently read this as saying that the dilated isometric evolution looks like
$$|\psi\rangle\mapsto \sqrt p|\psi\rangle|0\rangle+\sqrt{1-p} (Z|\psi\rangle)|1\rangle.$$
The image of the complementary channel is therefore (at least) two-dimensional. We can then also compute it explicitly, getting
$$\Phi^c(\rho) = p \langle I^\dagger I,\rho\rangle E_{00}
+ \sqrt{p(1-p)}\langle I^\dagger Z,\rho\rangle E_{01} \\
+ \sqrt{p(1-p)}\langle Z^\dagger I,\rho\rangle E_{10}
+ (1-p)\langle Z^\dagger Z,\rho\rangle E_{11} \\
= \operatorname{tr}(\rho)\begin{pmatrix} p&0\\0&1-p\end{pmatrix}
+ \sqrt{p(1-p)} (\rho_{00}-\rho_{11}) X.$$
Note that in this case looking at the environment (i.e. the considering the complementary channel) doesn't reveal some of the information that was getting lost in the system, such as information about the coherence terms $\operatorname{tr}(X\rho)$. On the contrary, the environment alone also only has information about the population of the state (albeit in a somewhat degraded form).
In this case, the "missing information" is encoded into the
correlations between system and environment.