Financial Times 15,167 by AARDVARK

An enjoyable challenge with some great surfaces.

This one took me a good half an hour to solve with a couple of parsings giving me trouble, but I got there in the end, with OBITER and ROESTI being the last ones in.

Although this was a tough and enjoyable puzzle overall (I especially liked 8dn and 22dn, but most of the surfaces were excellent), I do have some minor quibbles.

The wordplay at27 ac is slack to my mind, and in 7dn, the “are” in the clue is wrong, and could have been avoided by simply omitting it.

A word on the grid – this one felt more like four mini-puzzles as each of the corners is a bit isolated.

Thanks, aardvark

PS – usual note of caution – I  am notoriously bad a t spotting themes and NINAs, but don’t think there are any here.

Across
1 SCHISM Hosts taken aback about man’s separation (6)
<=MCS (“masters of ceremonies” = “hosts”) about HIS “(man’s”)
4 STAMP OUT Scotch and beer sustains a politician (5,3)
A M.P. in STOUT
9 NASEBY Retreating army controlled by noble, at the margins, close to battle (6)
<=SA ((Salvation) “army”) in N(obl)E + BY

The battle of Naseby (1645) was a defest for the Royalists in the English Civil War.

10 FEEL LIKE Want English butcher back in charge (4,4)
<=E KILL in FEE
11 NOODLE In New York, head for pasta (6)
Double definition

I hadn’t really considered “noodle” to be an Americanism, but at least one of the online dictionaries indicates it is.

12 RYE BREAD Study conducted about the old British bakery produce (3,5)
READ (“study”) about YE (“the old”) Br. (“British”)
13 POE Writer’s iPhone used regularly (3)
iPhOnE
14 ARDOUR Increasingly difficult for Eastender reporting fire (6)
Homophone of ” ‘arder”
17 SUBDEAN Tone down article dismissing second upper-class cleric (7)
SUBD(u)E + AN
21 LOVAGE Herb, a guy primarily besotted? (6)
A G(uy) in LOVE
25 PEG Girl’s parking among others (3)
P (“parking”) + E.G. (“among others”)
26 TURNOVER What one does with a page bringing pastry? (8)
Double definition
27 IRON ON Sort of patch in middle of skirt appearing repeatedly (4-2)
(sk)IR(t)  + ON twice (“repeatedly”)

This doesn’t work for me as “middle of skirt” is either KIR or I

28 MAKE SAIL Mother and I visiting Lakes, shakily begin voyage (4,4)
MA + I in *(lakes)
29 PLACID Police on mountain returning undisturbed (6)
C.I.D. on <=ALP
30 CONSIDER Judge is firm with staff member maybe losing head (8)
CO + (i)NSIDER
31 ASTERN Like a bird towards the tail (6)
AS + TERN
Down
1 SON-IN-LAW Relative cooking at home chops salad (3-2-3)
ON (“cooking”) + IN in SLAW
2 HAS WORDS It’s hard when having to comprehend landing-place in wartime disputes (3,5)
SWORD in H + AS

Sword was one of the Normandy landings

3 SIBELIUS Brother perhaps joined priest and American composer (8)
SIB (“brother perhaps) + ELI (“priest” in the Old Testament) + US

Refers to Jean Sibelius, the Finnish composer who died in 1957.

5 TIE-DYE Italian lifted daughter inside to view stained garment (3-3)
<=IT + D in EYE
6 MALIBU New album snaps start to indicate Pacific resort (6)
I(ndicate) in *(album)
7 OBITER Soldiers are grabbing a mouthful by the way (6)
OR is (not are?) grabbing BITE
8 TRENDY Latest score in rugby’s entertaining final (6)
END (“final”) in TRY (“core in rugby”)
12 ROE DEER Right dictionary always needed to find “small ungulate” (3,4)
R + O.E.D. + e’er
15 RUM Odd tipple drunk by crewman? (3)
Double definition
16 PAL Friend’s running 400 metres backwards (3)
<=LAP

400m is the size of a lap of most athletics tracks

18 NO FRILLS Father has ailments after cutting back on budget (2,6)
<=ON + Fr. + ILLS

Def: A budget airline could also be described as a no frills airline.

19 BARNACLE One firmly sticks rod on clean ground (8)
BAR + *(clean)
20 REINED IN Checked on freshwater fish being served up in pub (6,2)
RE(“on”) + <=IDE in INN
22 ATOMIC Tiny centrepieces displayed in Bath, Rome, Nice (6)
The centre pieces of bATh, rOMe and nICe
23 BROKEN Faulty globe put up, given knowledge (6)
<=ORB + KEN
24 ROESTI Potato dish from Ireland left around English street (6)
R.O.I (Republic of “Ireland”) around E St.
25 PETITE Slight favourite that is maintaining second in steeplechase (6)
PET + (s)T(eeplechase) in I.E.

*anagram

12 comments on “Financial Times 15,167 by AARDVARK”

  1. Hornbeam

    Thanks, loonapick. I took the parsing of HAS WORDS to be H, with SWORD inside AD. I haven’t checked, but I assumed Sword was the code name for a D-day landing (or the first invasion of Iraq?). Great puzzle, Aardvark

  2. Hornbeam

    Typo. I meant, of course, ‘sword’ inside ‘as’

  3. Steven

    Re 2d, ‘Sword’ was the code name of one of the landing beaches in Normandy on D-Day, 6 June 1944.

  4. Loonapick

    Thanks, I meant to go back to that clue after I finished, but in my haste to publish, I forgot.

  5. aid

    With regard to 7D, I would have thought that OR (standing for Other Ranks) would be plural not a collective noun

  6. Loonapick

    Aid@5

    The point I was making relates more to crossword grammar. Soldiers = OR, the letter combination, not the individual letters O and R. The letter combination OR is grabbing BITE.

    In the same way, we wouldn’t use “I am in a plot” for “PLAIN”, for example, because in crossword grammar, I is no longer me, but the letter I, and should be followed by “is”, not “am”.

    Of course, I’m a setting rookie, so I may be wrong, so please, someone with more experience, please tell me if that’s the case.

  7. peterj

    loonapick@6

    Surely OR, being an abbreviation of Other Ranks, is two letters i.e. “O” and “R”, not a letter combination like say Co, Ltd, Inc. So we have “O and R are grabbing BITE”. If “soldiers” was cluing “Men” I would agree with you.

  8. Simon S

    Thanks Aardvaark and loonapick

    It certainly took me longer than half an hour, as I blocked myself by having HER for 25A – definition GIRL’S, embedded (parking) in otHERs…ah well!

  9. Robbie

    Aardvark can write really great clues, but spoilt this with too many weak synonyms and obscure solutions like ‘subdean’ and ‘roesti’.
    I give this 6/10.

  10. Peter Mork

    I’m with Robbie here, and personally my noodle can only hold so many old battles and military abbreviations.

  11. Hamish

    Thanks loonapick and Aardvark.

    Agree with your analysis overall 27ac was sloppy.

    I know of Sword because my father landed there on D Day so not obscure for me.

    Thought SCHISM was excellent.

  12. brucew@aus

    Thanks Aardvark and loonapick

    A tough assignment that took a whole elapsed day to complete across a number of sessions – a couple of train rides, lunch and one last look late for ROESTI to fall.

    Agree that there was some uncharacteristic sloppiness with some of the clues, but the others more than made up for it.

    Finished all over the place with HAS WORDS (had no idea about Sword being a Normandy landing-place until coming here), REINED IN and the unknown ROESTI the last in.

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