Directions:           
               
            Cook zucchini, onion and broth in a saucepan over medium  heat until very soft.  When pierced with a fork , the fork will enter the  vegetables effortlessly.   
            Puree contents of saucepan in blender.  Add ground  pepper, half and half or yogurt and blend again.   
            Serve warm from the blender or chilled.  If storing  soup in the refrigerator, reheat to UNDER the boiling point to serve.  If  the soup is boiled with the cream in it, the soup will curdle.   
            Of course you don’t have to use “College Inn” brand, you can  use any brand or home made broth.  Don’t add salt if you're using  commercial canned broth which is very salty.   
            This soup can be frozen BEFORE adding the cream.  Thaw,  reheat, add cream, stir and serve.  Do NOT boil soup once cream is  added.   
            This soup is fast and easy but still qualifies as “home  made”.  Just tuck those two empty cans under the bottles and tins in the  recycling bin and no one will ever know!  
            
               
            
              
              
             
              Chef Andreas And The Mystery Of The “Long Green Things” 
              from Karen Kinnane  
             
              Ariane’s cousin Andreas trained as a chef under the  Communist regime in East Germany.  Years later after the defeat of  Communism and German reunification he bemoaned to me the fact that the  isolation from Western civilization due to the Communist borders had stunted  the development of German cuisine.  Andreas is not very complimentary  about German food.  I’m a good guest and listen to his theories but in my  head I defend German cooking as much of it is excellent. 
               
              When Ariane and I visited Andreas and his wife in their  fifth floor walk up in Dresden, he prepared a wonderful soup which he called  “Jewish chicken soup”  I thought that was an interesting choice in a  country which had attempted to annihilate all Jews within the German borders  and out of them. But that all happened before Andreas was born so he did not  see the irony.   Andreas served the soup at the table in a huge blue  and white pottery turine (Have to check spelling, this does not look correct  and spell check is no help!), ladling it into matching blue and white soup  bowls.  His soup was delicious, the presentation beautiful.  The  food, company and conversation could not have been better in the finest restaurant  in Dresden.   
               
During lunch Andreas talked about the difficulties of  training as a chef and working as a chef under the Commies.  He spoke of  the chronic and widespread shortages under Communism, and indeed under all  Socialist / Communist regimes as Communism results in the equal spread of  shortage and misery while Capitalism results in the unequal distribution of  wealth but the availability of goods from all over the world.  
              Andreas spoke of the difficulty of preparing any interesting  or exciting dishes with the simple ingredients available for sale in Germany  and Russia under the Commies.  
                
              He complained of the limited palette of  root vegetables, cabbages, beef, chicken and pork.  He began to tell me  that he had been stumped by the inability to get any of those “wonderful long  green things” for cooking. And indeed it appeared that his inability to acquire  those “wonderful long green things” for cooking was a major reason for his  quitting his chef career and going off to become an actor.  As we chatted,  and he continued to mention the absence of the “wonderful long green things”  under the Soviets I wracked my brain to think of about what magnificent food he  was talking!  I could not imagine.  Finally the light went on and I  burst out, “Andreas, you don’t mean zucchini, do you?”  The mystery was  solved!  Under Communism there was no access to zucchini in Germany!   No wonder the wall went down!   
            I told Andreas that under capitalism in America, the sight  of your neighbor coming down your front walk with an armload of zucchini in  garden season was considered sufficient and justifiable reason to draw the  blinds and have the butler answer the door claiming the family was on holiday  and not likely to return for six weeks.  Actually most Americans don’t have  butlers, but the sight of a neighbor heading towards us with a bushel of  zucchinis is not always welcome! 
  
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