The Saturday after Valentine’s day and a duel with Anax.
Now this was certainly one for a hungry person on a long train journey, where the buffet was closed. Every clue has some reference to food, eating, drinking or dining. And most of the answers too.
Could Anax be on a post Christmas diet when he wrote this?
Even many of the anagram indicators where food orientated – the nuts and crackers of 4ac and 9ac reminded me of a two Ronnie’s sketch http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l2e0afvMYqI from several years ago.
Certainly not one for anyone still worried about the excesses of Christmas but very enjoyable in my opinion.
14ac has to be my favourite clue. 10ac was the hardest one I found to parse with some devious meanings hidden in the clue. Many thanks Anax.
Key:
* Anagram; DD Double definition; Underline = definition Italics = anagram indicator
ACROSS
1 Preserve is jam (6)
DD PICKLE
4 Fine nuts and not square sweets (8)
F (fine) + (and not)* + s (square) = FONDANTS
9 Miss World’s last meal’s crackers (6)
D (world’s last) + (meals)* = DAMSEL
10 A café with no area reserved for a cigar (8)
Per (a) + (café – a(area))* + to (for) = PERFECTO
11 Chicken sandwich horse swallows in song (6, 9)
Yellow (chicken) + sub(sandwich) + mare (horse) around in = YELLOW SUBMARINE
14 Tucking into cereal, one very naughty boy (5)
Bran (cereal) around (i) = BRIAN (as in a quote from Monty Python’s Life of Brian)
15 Piece of tableware – its unsophisticated (5,4)
SA (it – sex appeal) + Laddish (unsophisticated) = SALAD DISH
16 One kipper in skillet behind English gourmet (9)
I + cure (kipper) in pan after e (English) = EPICUREAN
18 A solid empty pepper is minute (5)
Pr (empty pepper) + is + m (minute) = PRISM
19 Stupid git – ivy seeds block food processor (9, 6)
(git ivy seeds)* + stem (block) = DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
21 New café in trouble, beginning to see frozen faces? (8)
(café)* in ill (trouble) + s (beginning to see) = ICEFALLS
23 Sort of gas bottles to shelter herbs (6)
Cs (sort of gas) around Hive (shelter) = CHIVES
24 For one bagging a duck, entertained by well cooked bird (5, 3)
Eg (for one) around a + (well)* around o (duck) = EAGLE OWL
25 Like a fungus, wanting really dirty place (6)
Yeah (really – h – wanting) + sty (dirty place) = YEASTY
DOWN
1 It makes rice soft? (5)
DD PADDY as in filed and soft is paddy
2 Vanilla slices on the way – with beef (11)
Plain (vanilla as in ice cream) in coming (on the way) = COMPLAINING
3 What kipper needs is to have air above (3, 4)
Own (to have) after Lied (air – as in tune) = LIE DOWN
5 Upset when eating a mouthful first of all (11)
Once (when) around [verbal (a mouthful) + a (first of all)] = OVERBALANCE
6 Turkey stuffing unusual fare for do? (7)
Dud (turkey) around (fare)* = DEFRAUD
7 Big Apple somewhat tiny core (3)
Hidden tiNY Core = NYC (New York City)
8 Cured meat good in roughly mashed medium (6, 3)
Ok (good) in (mashed)* + m (medium) = SMOKED HAM
12 Mixed raisins – let’s start to weigh for a relative (6-2-3)
(raisins lets)* + w (start to weigh) = SISTER-IN-LAW
13 Plans tea in visit arranged after one (11)
(teas in visit)* after I (one) = INITIATIVES
14 People getting free food, slugs and salty water, as Spooner would say (9)
Lead (Slugs a in bullets) + brine (salty water) – a la Spooner = BREADLINE
17 Company delivering cold beer of high quality (7)
UPS (Company delivering) + c (cold) + ale (beer) = UPSCALE
18 If you would start to peel bananas they will be accepted by soldiers (7)
P (start to peel) + (they)* in Re (soldiers) = PRYTHEE
20 Menu extremely reserved, as peas may be served (5)
Mu (menu extremely) + shy (reserved) = MUSHY
22 Breakfast food for one thousand (3)
Eg (for one – a little repetition from 24ac) + g (thousand) = EGG
Thank you to Anax and twencelas,
Enjoyable, degree of difficulty just right and a good theme – what more could you ask for. The ideal way to get the 19 prepared for a big dinner which I’m now off to cook. I found the Tyneside region pretty hard – thanks for the parsing of 10 and 15. I liked 11 – I’m sure your explanation is correct but to me a SUBMARINE is also a sandwich that only a horse could swallow! Yes, I found 10 the most difficult with 5 not far behind.
Thanks again to both setter and blogger.
10a Sorry for being dense but why does per =a and how do we know to anagram cfe? Thanks
Bamberger – reserved is the anagram indicator as in re-served.
Chambers gives “per” as meaning prep for each or a;
The problem with reading this blog for prize puzzles is that it is usually so long since I finished (or sometimes, failed to finish) the puzzle that I can’t remember anything about solving it.
That said, I do recall problems parsing 15ac (which may have been my last one in) thinking maybe “saladdish” – in the manner of a salad – might mean unsophisticated. Thanks for the explanation.
Bamberger@2: Now that I look again at it, I realise I couldn’t parse 10ac either. I’m sure people will now say that per for a is common but I can’t recall seeing it. However, I see it is in Chambers – “for each or a”. “Reserved” is the anagram indicator, in the sense of re-served or to serve up again.
twencelas: Snap!
Thanks both. I was dead chuffed to finish this – relatively quickly, for me. Some of the parsing eluded me, I confess. As usual, a really interesting variety of clueing from Anax.
Re 10a – “3 meals per day” = “3 meals a day” – not obscure, surely
Not obscure, no, but not something that was linked in my mind.
Maybe I was just in the mood for Anax this morning but I enjoyed this puzzle more than I do a lot of his. Of course, that could have been because I finished it in a reasonable time.
I particularly liked the clues for BRIAN and YELLOW SUBMARINE. PRYTHEE took a while to work out because I’ve only ever seen it spelled “prithee” before so it didn’t spring to mind with the P?Y checkers at the start of the answer. YEASTY was my LOI.
I’m not really into making bucket lists, but if I were, then ‘beating Anax at crosswords’ might well be on it. However, the current score is something like Anax 25-4 Kathryn’s Dad. He doesn’t set that often these days, and I’m getting old, so I’m not holding my breath.
However, I did manage this one, and enjoyed it. Clever theme, which didn’t get in the way of solving it. I especially liked DEFRAUD and COMPLAINING. But I’m struggling to see how BREADLINE can be ‘people getting free food’. ON THE BREADLINE, surely?
Thanks to S&B.
Thanks Anax for an enjoyable challenge and twencelas for the blog. I solved most of this on two bus journeys this morning, but came to the blog with 10ac unsolved. However, the hints in the preamble were enough for me to see the answer before scrolling down to the solution. Not sure if that counts as an unaided solve or not – probably not.
25ac: I took this as “really” = YEA, with “wanting” as a link word, but I think it works either way.
K’s Dad@10 re 14dn: Chambers 2011 gives breadline a queue of poor or down-and-out people waiting for free food, esp from government sources.
I’m afraid I was as dense as bamberger and also don’t really associate “to” with “for” as well as “per” with “a”. When does obscure clueing become simply a bit lazy? Still, always good to learn something, and perfecto is new to me.
1 down, I assume you mean “as in field”. Paddy meaning soft is also new to me, but easily guessed.
Thanks, Pelham.
Many thanks for the fine blog, twenceslas, and to all for your comments.
The theme wasn’t pre-planned. The clue for 2d had been written some time ago and simply reflected the fact that crossword solvers occasionally refer to non-themed puzzles as ‘vanilla’, so I wondered if I’d get away with defining ‘plain’ that way. So in the end it was just a clue I fancied using and, once it was in the grid, I wondered how many clues could have a food/drink theme.
I am very pleased that, nowadays, I can finish Nimrod and Anax puzzles – albeit either with a solving partner or resources at hand.
This was a very enjoyable culinary exercise with every single clue having a food surface.
Hard to select a favourite clue.
That said, with hindsight Anax must surely be annoyed by using ‘for one’ for EG twice (in intersecting solutions).
Many thanks, twenceslas.