Zucchini
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Zucchini (US and Australian English) or courgette (New Zealand and British English) is a vegetable. Its Latin name is Cucurbita pepo.
Courgette comes from the French name of the vegetable, with the same spelling. It is a diminutive of courge, meaning ‘marrow’. Zucchini is the plural of zucchino (IPA: /tsuk'kino/), the Italian for courgette (alongside the more common zucchina), in turn a diminutive of zucca, ‘marrow’.
A zucchini or courgette is a small summer marrow or squash. It can either be yellow or green and has a similar shape to a ridged cucumber. Unlike the cucumber it is usually served cooked. Its flower can be eaten fried or stuffed. It is one of the easiest vegetables to cultivate in a temperate climate.
In 2005, a poll of 2,000 people revealed the courgette to be Britain's 10th favourite culinary vegetable.