Independent 12,217 by Skinny

Skinny provides our Thursday challenge this week.

A mixed bag today: I thought both 13a and 8d were a bit weak because the definition and wordplay are too similar, and there are a few loose definitions as noted below. But some really good clues too, especially where the anagram indicators look as though they belong with the fodder: muesli mostly nuts, camera shot, and vampire bats. Thanks Skinny for the fun.

Definitions are underlined; BOLD UPPERCASE indicates letters used in the wordplay; square brackets [ ] indicate omitted letters.

ACROSS
1 FAJITA
Healthy American eating a Japanese dish (6)
FIT (healthy) + A (abbreviation for American), containing A + J (abbreviation for Japanese).

Dish as in prepared food – grilled meat and/or vegetables rolled in a tortilla.

4 JETSAM
Beginning to justify mate’s untidy stuff getting washed up (6)
Beginning letter of J[ustify] + anagram (untidy) of MATE’S.

Goods jettisoned from a ship to lighten its load in dangerous conditions, which may get washed up on shore.

9 PLAN
Work out half of 4? Not quite (4)
A rather devious wordplay: the first half of 4a is JET[sam], so we’re looking for PLAN[e] (as in jet plane) without the last letter (not quite).
10 PROVENANCE
Established champion claims northern origin (10)
PROVEN (established) + ACE (slang for someone expert or very successful = champion), around N (abbreviation for northern).
11 TOMATO
Fruit characterised by overly dull jams (6)
TOO (as in “too long” = overly), with MAT (alternative spelling of matt = dull rather than shiny) inserted into it (jamming).

Botanically a fruit, but usually eaten as a vegetable.

12 PRIMEVAL
Ancient vampire bats fly without wings (8)
Anagram (bats = crazy) of VAMPIRE, then [f]L[y] without the outer letters (wings).
13 DEMANDING
Insisting on something being difficult (9)
I think these are two different shades of the same basic meaning, rather than a true double definition. Asking forcefully for something; or descriptive of a task that requires (demands) a lot of skill, effort and/or concentration.
15 CEDE
Abandon children, so it’s said (4)
Sound-alike (so it’s said) of SEED = descendants.
16 PUSH
Discharge with hard shove (4)
PUS (a discharge from an infection) + H (abbreviation for hard).
17 DONCASTER
Complete housing project by centre of picturesque UK city (9)
DONE (complete), containing (housing) CAST (project, as a verb, as in casting a silhouette on a wall), then the centre letter of [pictu]R[esque].

City in South Yorkshire.

21 ARIDNESS
Lack of moisture in canned sardines (8)
Anagram (canned = slang for drunk) of SARDINES.
22 OLD AGE
Good lord! See, on retiring, one’s second childhood (3,3)
EGAD (an archaic expression of surprise, equivalent to “good lord!”) + LO (lo! = see!), all reversed (on retiring).

Old age may be a second childhood for some people, but I think many would object to the characterisation.

24 OUT ON A LIMB
Forbidden city in Italy (in Italy!), overthrown, initially being isolated (3,2,1,4)
OUT (forbidden), then MILANO (Italian name for the city known in English as Milan, so “a city in Italy as it is called in Italy”) reversed (overthrown), then the initial letter of B[eing].
25 WHAM
London team, not established club (4)
W[est] HAM (London football team) without EST (abbreviation for established).

Club, as a verb = wham = to hit hard.

26 BISTRO
Pen 40% of story inside restaurant (6)
BIRO (the original brand name for a ballpoint pen, named after its Hungarian-born inventor László Bíró) with the first 40% of ST[ory] inside it.

By the rules of Crosswordland, if a restaurant isn’t TRAT (short for trattoria) then it’s probably BISTRO.

27 FRIEND
Familiar way to have eggs – including a dash of nutmeg (6)
FRIED (a way to eat eggs), containing the first letter (a dash) of N[utmeg].

Familiar, as a noun = a close friend.

DOWN
1 FULSOME
Over the top of muesli, mostly nuts (7)
Anagram (nuts = crazy) of OF MUESL[i] without the last letter (mostly).

Fulsome, as in “fulsome praise” = exaggerated = over the top.

2 JUNTA
Trip one’s taken to the south exposing dictatorship (5)
JAUNT (trip = a journey for pleasure), with the A (one) moved to the end (south, in a down clue).

Spanish word for a government or administrative body, but in English it almost always refers to a military dictatorship.

3 TYPHOID
Mistake on documents masks hospital’s condition (7)
TYPO (abbreviation for typographical error = a mistake in text) + ID (abbreviation for identity documents), containing (masking) H (abbreviation for hospital).

Condition as in medical condition: typhoid = a bacterial disease causing fever.

5 EMETIC
Refer to Skinny being upset? It makes you sick! (6)
CITE (refer to = quote) + ME (Skinny, our crossword setter), all reversed (upset = upwards in a down clue).
6 SHAPELESS
Out of form son unlucky to take English (9)
S (abbreviation for son) + HAPLESS (unlucky), containing E (abbreviation for English).
7 MACRAME
Camera shot captures front of military craft … (7)
Anagram (shot = wrecked) of CAMERA, containing the first letter (front) of M[ilitary].

Handicraft using knotted cord.

8 COMPANIONSHIP
support vessel in one’s flotilla? (13)
Flotilla = a group of watercraft sailing together, so another one in the same flotilla of ships might be considered a COMPANION SHIP.
14 ASSIDUOUS
Like I said regularly – two people, you and I – hard-working (9)
AS (like) + alternate letters (regularly) from [i] S[a]I[d] + DUO (two people) + US (you and I). (Though the grammar isn’t quite right: we = you and I, us = you and me).
16 PERTURB
Worry as forward with United starts to run backwards (7)
PERT (forward = cheeky) + U (abbreviation for United) + starting letters of R[un] B[ackwards].
18 CLOBBER
25‘s clothes (7)
Double definition. Reference to 25a WHAM = to hit hard; or clobber = slang for clothes.
19 ENGLAND
Country‘s aim – installing good network (7)
END (as in “to that end” = aim = target), containing G (abbreviation for good) + LAN (abbreviation for local area network).
20 REPAIR
Marry after extremely regrettable service (6)
PAIR (as a verb = join together = marry) after the end letters (extremes) of R[egrettabl]E.

A slightly loose definition: I’d think of “service” (as in a car’s annual service) as making sure it continues to work correctly, and “repair” as fixing it when it doesn’t. But there’s some overlap between the two I suppose.

23 DOWSE
With spades gathered, should you and I look for water? (5)
DO WE (do we . . .? = should you and I?), containing S (abbreviation for spades in card games).

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.