Some people don't quite get the point of chilly soups, but I love them.
It's unfortunate that iced soups have a "gourmet" image, with highfalutin names like
gazpacho and
vichyssoise, so you tend to see them only at pricey restaurants. Humbler places, even those for whom chilled soups are an ethnic tradition, often seem afraid to offer it, perhaps with Fran Lebowitz ringing in their ears -- "Cold soup is a very tricky thing and it is a rare hostess who can carry it off. More often than not the dinner guest is left with the impression that had he only come a little earlier he could have gotten it while it was still hot." ("Metropolitan Life, 1978)
The list of chilled soups doesn't stop with the well-known Spanish and French-American versions that come first to mind. There is Turkish
cacik, Polish
chlodnik, Armenian
tahnabour, Bulgarian
tarator, and a wide variety of dishes like Korean water kimchi that aren't exactly soup but serve a similar role.
As
reported here, I had a delicious bowl of cold beet borscht in the Russian-Jewish style at Manny's the other day, nothing fancy but full of beets and with a big dollop of sour cream. It was perhaps a bit one-dimensional -- it could have had more sophisticated seasoning (foods served cold always do need liberal seasoning) -- but it was refreshing and satisfying.
Have you had any good cold soups lately?