Modern speech recognition systems rely on self-attention. Unfortunately, token mixing with self-attention takes quadratic time in the length of the speech utterance, slowing down inference as well as training and increasing memory consumption. Cheaper alternatives to self-attention for ASR have been developed, but fail to consistently reach the same level of accuracy. In practice, however, the self-attention weights of trained speech recognizers take the form of a global average over time. This paper, therefore, proposes a linear-time alternative to self-attention for speech recognition. It summarises a whole utterance with the mean over vectors for all time steps. This single summary is then combined with time-specific information. We call this method ``Summary Mixing''. Introducing Summary Mixing in state-of-the-art ASR models makes it feasible to preserve or exceed previous speech recognition performance while lowering the training and inference times by up to 27% and reducing the memory budget by a factor of two.