Financial Times 17,433 by Leonidas

Weekend puzzle from the FT of June 3, 2023

My first-in was 7 (EEL) and I quickly worked through the right side, including 5 (MEPHISTOPHELIAN), but then had a bit of a struggle to get the left half going.

My favourites are 13 (TAGLIATELLE), 24 (GLADIOLI) and the devilish 26 (DELISH).  Thank you, Leonidas.

ACROSS
1 PLATINUM
Element of choice covering a container (8)
TIN (container) in (covering) A (a) + PLUM (choice)
6 BRETON
Language centre for Hebrew school (6)
[he]BR[ew] + ETON (school)
9 OIL RIG
Platform 10 recalled by backward youth (3,3)
IO (10) backwards (recalled) + GIRL (youth) backwards
10 PENELOPE
Hero’s wife and writer do a bunk (8)
PEN (writer) + ELOPE (do a bunk) with the definition referring to Odysseus in Greek mythology
11 SEMI
Whale bites male in half (4)
M (male) in (bites) SEI (whale). Sei is a type of whale.
12 TRIMESTERS
Crops enclosing compound for quarterly periods (10)
ESTER (compound) in (enclosing) TRIMS (crops)
14 ADVOCAAT
Liqueur’ changed to ‘Cava’ on promotion (8)
AD (promotion) + anagram (changed) of TO CAVA
16 GLUT
Excess cheek parents essentially ignored (4)
GLUT[e] (cheek, [par]E[nts] ignored)
18 UGLI
Fruit from the East one regularly flags up (4)
[f]L[a]G[s] U[p] (regularly flags up) backwards (from the East) + I (one)
19 PRALINES
Idiot endlessly ranks confectionery (8)
PRA[t] (idiot endlessly) + LINES (ranks)
21 CONSISTENT
Happy to hold relative steady (10)
SIS (relative) in (to hold) CONTENT (happy)
22 TOMB
Doctor following to resting place (4)
TO (to) + MB (doctor)
24 GLADIOLI
Pleased with exposure of Fiddle and Flowers (8)
GLAD (pleased) + [v]IOLI[n] (exposure of fiddle)
26 DELISH
Tasty 6 extracted from 5 (6)
VI (6) removed from DEVILISH (5)
27 PROMPT
Help given with a line dance by trainer (6)
PROM (dance) + PT (trainer, as in personal)
28 NONSENSE
Foolish son seen eating new rhubarb (8)
N (new) in (eating) anagram (foolish) of SON SEEN
DOWN
2 LOIRE
What flows from below via arterioles (5)
Reverse (from below) hidden (from) word
3 TERRITORIES
Lands finally at the other far island with some MPs (11)
[a]T [th]E [othe]R [fa]R + I (island) + TORIES (some MPs)
4 NIGHTJAR
King leaving piece on grate for bird (8)
[k]NIGHT (king leaving piece) + JAR (grate)
5 MEPHISTOPHELIAN
Fiendish Bard character loading shipment at sea (15)
OPHELIA (Bard character) in (loading) anagram (at sea) of SHIPMENT
6 BONNET
Aristocrat upset over profit cap (6)
NOB (aristocrat) backwards (upset) + NET (profit)
7 EEL
Uses fingers to investigate skinned fish (3)
[f]EEL[s] (uses fingers to investigate, skinned)
8 OPPORTUNE
Suitable work on harbour, one in Marseille (9)
OP (work) + PORT (harbour) + UNE (one in Marseille)
13 TAGLIATELLE
Food Day in Berlin? Follow up on magazine (11)
TAG (day in Berlin) + TAIL (follow) backwards (up) + ELLE (magazine)
15 DOG COLLAR
Dean’s band perhaps in gold playing with Carol (3,6)
Anagram (playing with) GOLD CAROL
17 MASTODON
Old fellow south of pole to see ancient beast (8)
MAST (pole) + O (old) + DON (fellow)
20 ESCORT
Part of prince’s cortege paid for accompaniment (6)
Hidden word (part of)
23 MOSES
One with tablets treating some symptoms at last (5)
Anagram (treating) of SOME + [symptom]S
25 DIM
Thick mass beneath surfaces of drains inspected (3)
D[rains] I[nspected] + M (mass)

13 comments on “Financial Times 17,433 by Leonidas”

  1. KVa

    Thanks, Leonidas and Pete Maclean!
    Liked NIGHTJAR, EEL and MOSES.

    PROMPT
    ‘Help with a line’ must be the def (as in ‘When the actor forgot his lines, I gave him a prompt’).

  2. KVa

    Help given with a line*

  3. Martyn

    Thanks Pete

    I had the opposite experience to you – I got most of the left side out, including 5d, before I make any real progress on the right. I never quite felt on the same wave length as Leonidas. Although I finished the puzzle on Saturday, I still had three clues unparsed, and it took a couple of days to fully solve them.

    I interpreted PROMPT the same way as KVa above.

    I agree with the favourites mentioned so far, and add OIL RIG and PROMPT to the list. While I enjoy the variety of setters on a Saturday, I am beginning to miss the puzzles with a hint of the ridiculous that we used to often enjoy.

    Thanks Pete as always and thanks Leonidas

    PS Pete, you have a typo in 1a – it should be PLUM containing A + TIN (container)

  4. Roz

    Thanks for the blog, very good puzzle , I really like the construction of MEPHISTOPHELIAN and then the use of it for DELISH. GLUT had a very cheeky use of cheek.
    A couple of queries , does a Dean wear a DOG COLLAR ? Are TRIMESTERS quarterly periods ? In education they are one third of the academic year, in pregnancy also one third of full term, typically three months so one quarter of a year ?

  5. Martyn

    I asked the same question to myself about TRIMESTER, Roz. My dictionary says it is a 3-month period, so I guess that makes it quarterly.

    I solved GLUT from the definition and the crossers, then I parsed it, but I did not believe my parsing. It took much longer for me to make the connection between a glute and a cheek – as you wrote, quite a cheeky use of the word

  6. Roz

    Thanks Martyn, three months it is. I find it strange that the only two uses I know of the word apply to a third of something.

  7. Shanne

    Glad Martyn@5 looked TRIMESTERS up as I wondered but was solving on the tube. I guess the etymology is from three months rather than a third of a year. That means semester must come from six months, which makes sense.

    I don’t remember spotting Ophelia in MEPHISTOPHELIAN last week, but I suspect Hamlet is the only well-known Shakespearean play, I haven’t seen, after several seasons as a groundling at The Globe (plus quite a few minor plays).

    Thank you to Pete Maclean and Leonidas.

  8. Eileen

    I’m always pleased to see Leonidas’ name on a puzzle and this one was well up to scratch.

    I won’t list all of my many ticks but will just highlight MEPHISTOPHELIAN (I enjoyed OPHELIA’s intervention) and its exploitation in DELISH, PENELOPE (I’ve seen it before but I liked the definition), DOG COLLAR (for the surface – here’s our former Dean, https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leicestershire-63215054 – actually ‘in gold’! + dog collar) and MOSES, also for the surface.

    Many thanks to Leonidas for the fun and Pete for the blog.


  9. Oh dear, I wrote this blog very hurriedly and it showed. Sorry. I have corrected a few things.

  10. paul b

    A fine puzzle. I really like the Ophelia shipment.

    TRIMESTER is from trimestris, itself from mensis, according to Biggus Dickus.

  11. Leonidas

    Eileen@8 I think the gold definitely suits your ex-Dean, very natty.

    Thanks all for contributing and thanks again to Pete for the blog.

  12. Tony Santucci

    Thanks Leonidas. I can always expect a good set of clues from a Leonidas crossword. My top picks were GLUT, GLADIOLI, PROMPT, NONSENSE, and DIM. I couldn’t parse EEL and I too questioned TRIMESTERS as “quarterly periods.” In trying to understand DOG COLLAR I thought “Dean” might be a typo with “Dane” (as in Great Dane) being the intended word. Thanks Pete for the blog.

  13. Peter Groves

    My favourite was 26, Pete.

Comments are closed.