Financial Times 15,601 by GOZO

If you knew your way around France and its history, you would have found this FT challenge from Gozo easy. Unfortunately, I didnt. 26ac needs work as well.I needed help to get through the grid.

FF:7 DD:9

Across
1 ANNECY Queen goes to outskirts of city – one in France (6)
ANNE (queen) CY (outskirts of CitY)
4 A LA CARTE A trolley porter brought round with various dishes in 11 (1,2,5)
[A CART (trolley) ] with ALE (porter) around
10 METROLAND Urban area with underground lake, as well (9)
METRO (underground) L (lake) AND (as well)
11 REIMS Poor miser in French city (5)
MISER*
12 RUES Regrets ways in 11 (4)
double def, french for streets
13  QUAI DORSAY Queen’s radio broadcast, for example, not far from 2 (4,6)
 QU (queen) RADIO* followed by  SAY (for example)
15 CHAMOIS Mountain animal taking tea for a month in 11 (7)
CHA (tea) MOIS (french for month)
16 SABOTS Footwear of French peasants, small monks but no bishop (6)
S (small) ABbOTS (monks, without ‘B’ – bishop)
19 CELTIC Like 21 across, Scottish football champions 2016-17 (6)
21 ac refers to natives of brittany; this clue refers to natives of scotland.
21 BRETONS No. 27 confused 27’s residents (7)
NO BREST* (answer to 27ac)
23 DESHABILLE Drunk beside hall, looking unkempt (10)
BESIDE HALL*
25 SALE Bargain time that’s dirty in 11 (4)
cryptic clue; SALE is french for dirty
27 BREST Leading battleships remain at French port (5)
B (leading Battleships) REST (remain)
28 ANGOULEME Capital of Charente, one right away from minor league revision (9)
MiNOr LEAGUE* (without I – one, R- right)
29 ENTREPOT Warehouse Parisian’s in, little one containing cloth (8)
EN (french for in) [ TOT (little one) containing REP (cloth) ]
30 SALONS Lass troubled working at spa centres or lounges in 11 (6)
LASS* around ON (working) – slightly imperfect parsing I think
Down
1 ARMORICA Cor! Maria is off to old Brittany (8)
COR MARIA*
2 NOTRE DAME Cathedral’s title includes radical books first (5,4)
NAME (title) containing [ OT (books) RED (radical) ]
3 COOT Waterbird on edge of the Camargue also turned up (4)
C (edge of Camargue) OOT (also = TOO, reversed)
5 LADDIES Badly demoralised – no more little boys (7)
DemorALISED* (without letters of ‘MORE’)
6 CORDON BLEU Chef’s unusual blunder – cook finally ousted (6,4)
BLUNDER COOk*
7  RUINS Bears losing capital? Remains to be seen at Pont du Gard (5)
 bRUINS (bears, without starting letter)
8 ESSAYS Tries art in 11 and declares (6)
ES (art in france) SAYS (declares)
9  MAQUIS WW2 resistance forces run away from noble (6)
 MArQUIS (noble, without R for run)
14 MONTMARTRE Frenchman not upset about going round market in part of Paris . . . . (10)
M ( frenchman, monsieur) [ NOT* RE (about) around MART (market) ]
17 TROCADERO . . . . decorator working in another part (9)
DECORATOR* – another part of paris, france
18 AS LEVELS Exams even grasped by fool (2- 6)
LEVEL (even) in ASS (fool)
20 CHICAGO US city, fashionable in 11, in the past (7)
CHIC (fashionable, french) AGO (in the past)
21 BELUGA Swimmer turns blue, then turns silver (6)
BLUE* with GA (silver = AG, reversed)
22 EDIBLE Little Edith cut French corn that’s fit to eat (6)
EDI (edith, cut) BLE (french for corn) – something is not right as I havent usde ‘little’ in the parsing. Needs to be improved upon.
24 SCENT Fragrance of early stocks – one hundred in 11 (5)
S (early Stocks) CENT ( french for 100)
26 JURA Island mountain range (4)
double def / see comments

*anagram

14 comments on “Financial Times 15,601 by GOZO”

  1. I had the required knowledge and so really enjoyed solving this one. Thank you very much to our birthday setter and to Turbolegs

    Someone on Big Dave’s blog was yesterday moaning about setters using foreign words in their crosswords – I’m having to try really hard not to highly recommend he has a go at this one 🙂

  2. Yes, this was a very enjoyable puzzle, especially for those of us who live in France where today is a public holiday, but, more importantly, today is Gozo’s 70th birthday.

    Thank you GOZO and Turbolegs.

  3. Definitely easier than his other incarnation as Maskarade, but just as enjoyable.

    Thanks to Gozo and Turbolegs

  4. Not sure what you mean by “cryptic clue” for 25a (aren’t they all?) – it’s a double definition.

    22d – little Edith is Edie, which is then truncated to EDI.

  5. Thanks Gozo and Turbolegs

    In 19, the Bretons are also a Celtic race (I’m not sure whether you were implying this or not).

  6. I’ve just had a quick look at the blog, and would like to share the thought that fish dishes “a l’americaine” (lobster, monkfish etc.) should be “a l’amoricaine” – i.e. from Brittany.

  7. It’s the other way around, the dish originated in a restaurant called l’Américain but someone later changed the name to make it sound more French.

  8. Thanks Gozo and Turbolegs

    This was quite tough, not only with the plethora of French words (in celebration of Bastille Day), but with some pretty testing word plays to be unravelled as well. Got the parsing of both NOTRE DAME and EDIBLE (not knowing or looking up the French word for corn) wrong.

    Am sure that I’ve seen that exact clue for JURA used by either Gozo or his alter ego Maskarade (in the Guardian) once before – and having to swing my thinking from an unparsed CUBA to the correct answer.

    Having said all that – the unlikely RUINS was my last clue in.

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