logo
This Cucumber Soup Is My Favorite Way to Beat the Heat

This Cucumber Soup Is My Favorite Way to Beat the Heat

Epoch Times2 days ago
One way I love to beat the summer heat is with cold, refreshing food. And cucumbers are the coolest of the cool. Their refreshing flavor profile is the reason that gazpacho feels so fresh. In this cold soup recipe, I let cucumbers be the star. With a handful of ingredients and a blender, you can whip up this soup in 15 minutes.
Why You'll Love It
This soup doesn't require any cooking. In this easy no-cook recipe, I use English cucumbers because they are seedless and have tender exteriors. I also bring in flavor with tender herbs like chives (it's less harsh than raw onion!) and fresh dill.
It's perfect for summer. After rounds of testing, I've developed a really well-balanced soup worthy of your summer repertoire.
Key Ingredients in Cucumber Soup
English cucumbers: Scoop out the watery center of the cucumbers. Yes, English and Persian cucumbers are seedless, but the center membranes are filled with water. Scoop it out and use just the cucumber flesh for maximum flavor.
Greek yogurt: I double down on the soup's coolness with the addition of Greek yogurt for some tang.
Lemon: I balance all the flavors out with freshly squeezed lemon juice.
Tahini: For extra body, I took a cue from the chilled cucumber and tahini soup recipe from Sami Tamimi and Tara Wiley's cookbook, ' Falastin.' While tahini is a main flavor profile in their recipe, I use it to just bond all the flavors together.
Rice vinegar: When developing this recipe, I couldn't help but feel like it needed more. Turns out rice vinegar adds the perfect amount of sweetness without overpowering the soup.
Helpful Swaps
Use your favorite tender herbs. I use dill and chives but you easily substitute herbs like tarragon, chervil, and parsley. Just be sure to use tender herbs over woody herbs (like thyme and rosemary).
Switch up the topping. In this recipe, I used chopped cucumber pieces and herbs to bring in additional flavor and texture. Feel free to add whatever you'd like. Toasted seeds or dukkah would be delicious.
Cold Cucumber Soup
Serves 4
2 tablespoons fresh dill fronds (from 1/2 bunch), plus more for garnish
1/4 cup coarsely chopped fresh chives (from 1 large bunch), plus more for garnish
2 tablespoons coarsely chopped fresh parsley leaves (about 15 sprigs), plus more for garnish
2 medium English cucumbers (about 8 ounces each)
2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice (from 1 medium lemon)
1 clove garlic
1 1/4 cups low fat or full-fat plain Greek yogurt
1/4 cup olive oil, plus more for serving
2 tablespoons tahini
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/4 teaspoon ground white pepper
1 tablespoon rice vinegar
Flaky salt (optional)
Add 2 tablespoons fresh dill fronds, 1/4 cup coarsely chopped fresh chives, and 2 tablespoons coarsely chopped fresh parsley to a blender.
Trim the ends from 2 medium English cucumbers. Cut in half crosswise, then cut each piece in half lengthwise. Scoop out the watery centers with a small spoon and discard. Finely chop the cucumber until you have 1/2 cup and refrigerate for garnish. Coarsely chop the remaining cucumbers and add it to the blender.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

After living in a dozen cities across the globe, I finally settled down in the coastal city where I grew up
After living in a dozen cities across the globe, I finally settled down in the coastal city where I grew up

Business Insider

time14 hours ago

  • Business Insider

After living in a dozen cities across the globe, I finally settled down in the coastal city where I grew up

I spent most of my life moving, never living in a single place for more than a few years. In fact, I attended five different elementary schools, each in a different part of the globe. When I tell people how often I've moved, many assume one of my parents was in the military. However, each move was voluntary, as my parents are Chinese immigrants who left the motherland in search of better opportunities in America. I spent my childhood in several different cities I was born in Nanjing, China, where I lived until I was 5. We moved for the first time after my dad was accepted into a Ph.D. program in San Juan, Puerto Rico, which he mistook for an American state. I immediately fell in love with the city's turquoise beaches and creamy flans. However, I had to white-knuckle my way through kindergarten because I knew neither Spanish nor English — a frustration that left me silent and sullen most school days. After a year in Puerto Rico, my dad decided to pursue his postdoctoral fellowship, this time in Ames, Iowa. The transition from spending long Caribbean days at Catholic school to attending public school in a small Midwestern town surrounded by cornfields was a culture shock, albeit not an unwelcome one. Being the only Asian kid at school meant that my classmates couldn't pronounce my name and questioned everything about me, from what I had for dinner to whether my black hair was real. But to this day, Iowans remain the nicest folks I've ever met. We stayed for nearly two years, just long enough to make my first American friend and be heartbroken when my dad's fellowship ended, forcing us to move once again. I spent a longer stretch of two-and-a-half years in College Station, Texas, where my dad found another postdoctoral position at Texas A&M. After spending most of our time renting apartments and student housing, my folks could finally afford their first house there, a little duplex with a gooseberry tree. However, I was once again the sole Asian student in school, and I longed for a place where I felt like I belonged. Our time there was cut short when my dad's postdoctoral position wasn't renewed, and we had to move again — this time, to California for my mom's new job. I spent my formative years in California Next, we settled in Torrance, a beachside suburb in Southern California, where I spent all of middle and high school. Moving here was a game changer: it had glorious beaches, people I could call friends, and perfect weather to boot. Plus, Torrance was much more diverse than other places we lived. I finally felt at home because it was the first place (outside China) where I didn't have to look for fellow Asians or assess the likelihood that my ethnicity was going to be a liability. In my high school, the homecoming queen and captain of the football team were both Asian. I had groups of friends at church and in school, and we bonded over AP classes and checking out local boba shops. Being settled in one place with people I loved was a thrill. College and graduate school led me to live in different parts of the state: the Bay Area, where I went to UC Berkeley for undergrad, and the Central Coast, where I went to UC Santa Barbara for graduate school. In Santa Barbara, I even met the man who'd become my husband, and we had our first child together. We then spent years living in different cities across the state, but none of them truly felt like the right long-term fit for us. After a brief period of living with my parents in Rancho Palos Verdes, an affluent hillside community full of retirees in Southern California, I left the West Coast for Cambridge, Massachusetts, to pursue a postdoctoral fellowship at Harvard. As much as I loved Cambridge's proximity to Boston, buzzy energy, and easy public transportation, my family couldn't stomach the brutal winters. So, after three years there, we once again headed back to California. Now, I'm finally settled and happier than ever We spent several years bouncing around different California cities for work, but by 2020, I was ready to settle down in a place I could call my permanent residence. Months into the COVID-19 pandemic, we decided to relocate to Torrance — where I'd spent my formative years — and move back into my childhood home. The whole family fell in love with the city's beaches, diverse food options, weather, and spectacular public schools. After two decades away, I was delighted to reconnect with my old high school friends and teachers. I love that my children go to the same schools I did and even have some of the same teachers. Living in all the cities that have marked the different chapters of my life has given me a newfound appreciation for this coastal suburb — something I wouldn't have if I had stayed here all along.

Obvious Facts Somehow People Don't Know
Obvious Facts Somehow People Don't Know

Buzz Feed

timea day ago

  • Buzz Feed

Obvious Facts Somehow People Don't Know

Sometimes, there are facts so simple and obvious that when we finally learn them, we feel instantly dumb for not realizing them sooner. While other times, there are facts that might not be as obvious to figure out, but make you want to yell out, "How did I not already know this?!" when you learn them. For example, many people don't realize that "ubiqu" in "ubiquitous" comes from the Latin word "ubique," which means everywhere. Recently, redditor JMiracle2019 wanted to round up a few of those facts when they asked: "What's a little-known but obvious fact that will immediately make all of us feel stupid?" The thread got over 3K responses. Below are the top and most repeated responses: "Everyone who laughs at the fact that when silent film got sound, they were nicknamed talkies has not spent enough time thinking about the word 'movies.'" —Glove-Both "Tax brackets. If you go up a bracket, you are only taxed on what you made in that bracket. Say you made $60,001, and the next bracket starts at $60,000. You only get taxed the higher percentage on the $1. Too many people don't understand this." —alphalegend91 "South America sits almost entirely east of the US." —CARNIesada6 "The Atlantic entrance to the Panama Canal is further west than the Pacific entrance." —jpwoodell "'Helicopter' is not based on a combo of the words 'heli' and 'copter.' It comes from the combination of the Greek words 'helico' (from 'helix,' meaning 'spiral') and 'pter' (from 'pteron,' meaning 'wing')." —CARNIesada6 "There is a difference between a graveyard and a cemetery. A cemetery is often bigger, while a graveyard is usually smaller and often on or next to church grounds." —pippintook24 "A coffin has that six-sided shape ⚰️, while a casket is a rectangle." —not_suddenly_satire "Percentages are reversible. For example: 38% of 50 is the same as 50% of 38." —sullyai_moataz "The moon appears upside-down in the Southern Hemisphere relative to how it appears in the Northern Hemisphere." —doomslinger "Stainless doesn't mean it won't stain. It means it will stain less or be harder to stain. This also applies to any product that makes a seemingly too good claim, rust proof, fire resistant, etc." —ShingledPringle "The sides of the box on aluminum foil, parchment paper, wax paper, and cling plastic wrap are meant to be pushed in so that they hold the roller in place. That's why they have the little half-circle cutout on each side. (Unless it's a super cheap brand)." —Punk_Luv "Clocks turn 'clockwise' because that is the way the shadow on a sundial turned in the Northern Hemisphere." —mostly_kittens "Cows don't automatically make milk. They have to have a calf first." —ReallyBeForReal "A fortnight = two weeks = fourteen nights." —nanomeister "The term venomous is applied to organisms that bite (or sting) to inject their toxins, whereas the term poisonous applies to organisms that unload toxins when you eat them." —Naive_Huckleberry996 "Biweekly can mean twice a week or every other week, so when someone says biweekly and you have to confirm what they mean, and they act like they're smarter than you because they're convinced there's only one definition, they're idiots." —platypus_farmer42 "The majority of Canadians live south of the 49th parallel; the line that forms most of the border between Canada and the US." —hibbityhibbity "Tea lights weren't originally meant for decor purposes, like Christmas decor. They were meant to sit inside TEA warmers to keep the tea warm for hours. Ya know…cuz it's a fucking tea light. 🤦🏻‍♀️" —Mistealakes "The Amazon 'smile' is an arrow from A to Z, because you can buy anything from A to Z on the site." —A911owner "The fear of long words is called Hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia." —-FAnonyMOUS You can read the original thread on Reddit.

America's Wins: Things The US Actually Gets Right
America's Wins: Things The US Actually Gets Right

Buzz Feed

time2 days ago

  • Buzz Feed

America's Wins: Things The US Actually Gets Right

I think we can all agree that the US has many areas for improvement, especially when compared to other progressive countries. However, despite the country's numerous issues, it surprisingly isn't all bad. In one Reddit thread (which you can see here), people discussed the things they think the US does right, and my cynical self definitely needed this reminder. Here are 18 things the US doesn't completely mess up, as told by both residents and people from other countries: "Our public libraries are a real backbone for the country. Andrew Carnegie's groundwork in building the institution of free libraries, even in small towns, set a precedent that we wouldn't fathom today but couldn't live without." "They often serve not only as an information exchange but as a cultural hub, art gallery, performing arts center, tax aide, voter registration, job resources, etc., in communities. Plus, they're one of the only places you can just exist for hours indoors without the expectation that you must buy something. And I feel like they've adapted to the ever-changing needs of their patrons in modern times faster in the US than most places.'A library outranks any other one thing a community can do to benefit its people. It is a never failing spring in the desert.' –Andrew Carnegie"–fadedVHS "Accessibility code for buildings. I come from a country where disability is looked upon as a crime or fault. The USA does an amazing job of making things accessible. I haven't seen all of the USA, but the majority of the places have amazing systems." "Aggressive self-determinism. Oh, your parents were abusive, and you don't talk to them anymore? Fuck yeah, rad, good for you. Your partner couldn't give you the relationship you dreamed of having. Alright, rad, move on up. You hated your job, and think your future is in being a movie star? Alright. You do you. Send me a premier ticket." "Aussie here. I think entertainment. Everyone talks shit about the US, but then spends most of their time listening to American music, film, and TV." "Valuing actual wilderness in places like national parks. Here in England, they will 'restore' or 'create' natural habitats, which is sort of nice, but they are almost like zoos. They are too small to survive by themselves, so they are actively maintained. And in some English national parks, they actually allow housing developments as long as the architectural design is sympathetic. Here, 'countryside' means farms. There is still a notion in the USA of protecting some large wilderness areas from development." –anon5005 "The US is an absolute science powerhouse. The technology we come out with has touched the lives of nearly every person on the planet." "Automatic complimentary water at cafes and restaurants." "I love that in the US, if you go back to school at 40 or 50, no one blinks an eye. If you get a degree at 80 or 90, you are a total hero. In many cultures, you need to be done with school in your twenties. No one goes to school later in life." "Free public toilets everywhere you go. It's kind of a culture shock to go to a different country and have to pay money to use the restroom. It's a necessity, I would rather people be allowed to use the restroom rather than do their business outside." "Burgers. Motherfuckin' burgers." "I say this as an immigrant who came to this country, so perhaps take it with a grain of salt. But it truly gives people a second chance at life. My life would be nowhere near as good as it is right now if I were back in my home country." "Air conditioning." "The US postal system is the most far-reaching postal system in the world. We will deliver nearly anything to any mailbox. Do you live at the bottom of the Grand Canyon? Say no more, postal donkeys." –Bergy_Berg "How friendly people are. Don't get me wrong, there's a ton of friendly cultures, and even plenty more hospitable ones than the US, but the sheer level of openness and genuine friendliness is something else in the US." "Interstate highway system. Blows my mind that I can get pretty much anywhere I want down there without having to take some crazy roundabout route and have ample places to stop and eat/bathroom/refuel. Also, most people in the USA actually follow the 'pass on the left, cruise right' rule, which is a rarity here in Canada." "Free speech. I can get arrested for saying certain opinions in my country." "The amount of choices at the grocery store. It can be overwhelming, but most other countries don't have nearly the same amount of options for something as simple as potato chips.' –External_fox995 And finally, "We're the nation that created Shrek. That's all I need to say." What else belongs on this list? Let me know in the comments!

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store