Enigmatic Variations No. 1537 Additive by Kcit

It’s May and Kcit (aka Phi) provides the EV entertainment. A blank bottom row, an unclued middle row comprising 4 components and an unclued bottom row – making new words in the grid.  Sounds good to me.

An absolutely marvellous puzzle ensued.

A slow reveal, even though 1ac effectively identified all the missing letters  NACHO or actually Na, C, H and O. The 4 elements visible in the middle row needed adding to the wordplay of several clues (see below). The numbers of each being removed being Na3 C6 H5 O7 or the formula for Sodium Citrate to be entered along the bottom row.

And the extra letters spelled out ‘MAKES CHEESE INTO NACHO SAUCE’ which is exactly what Sodium Citrate does (apparently).

Many thanks Kcit – I’ve been doing you puzzles for, I suspect upwards of 30 years, and this must be one of your best. Quite a feat of construction too. It took me quite some time to finally balance the chemistry with the parsing.

Key * anagram; Rev reverse; underline definition; DD Double definition

ACROSS

Lost To add 2 Wrong to return in power – not the appropriate time for this? (11)
Na, C, H, O Rev. Sin (wrong) in arm (power) = ANACHRONISM
12 Hot wind? I’m about to hide in Indian tree (7)
H Im + a (about) in Sal (Indian Tree) SHIMAAL
13 Scots refusal to get chap bread (4)
M Na (Scot’s refusal) + man (chap) = NAAN
14 Car acceptable in opera, on reflection (4)
A U (acceptable) in Rev. Aida (opera) = AUDI
16 Elderly coward getting shiner, belted by thump from local (7)
Dad (thump) around star (shiner) = DASTARD
17 Motorcyclist crossing river for prickly shrub (5)
K Biker (motorcyclist) around r (river) = BRIER
18 Scots deny regret when holding degree back (8)
Rue (regret) around Rev. grade (degree) = REDARGUE
19 Girl’s name encountered in Hellene areas (4)
E Hidden helLENE Areas =  LENA
22 Previous East German space station revolving (4)
O Rev. ISS (space station) = OSSI
23 It magnifies completely, filling half of lens (5)
O Up (completely) in Le (half of lens) = LOUPE
25 Former European bank on good terms with French (5, two words)
Na EMI (Former European bank) = EN AMI
26 Lumbered with no date to claim seat (6)
S Saddle (seat) in sd (no date) = SADDLED
32 American activated what alert in the past? (6)
C A (American) + (what)* = AWATCH
34 Smuggle radish (though not from Wales?) (5)
C, H Run (smuggle) = RUNCH
36 Reject pancake line (5)
C Crepe (pancake) + l (line) = REPEL
39 Some virtuoso rather taken aback with the bow (4)
C Rev. Hidden virtuosO RAther = ARCO
40 One in Scotland: Macbeth, say (4)
H Thane (Macbeth possibly) = TANE
41 Old name of city OK for Australia – local plan accommodating that area (8)
E Jake (OK for australia) in Dart (Plan) + a (area) = DJAKARTA
43 Roman helmet recalled historical period – mostly metal (5)
E Rev. age (historical period) + lead (metal) – d = GALEA
46 Sibling upset back – abnormal stretching? (7)
C Rev. sis (sibling) + ate (upset) = ECTASIS
47 Sailor’s slack, always, after start of voyage (4)
Eer (always) after v (start of voyage) = VEER
48 Appear to be pursuing Northern source of oil (4)
S Seem after n (Northern) = NEEM
49 Dashboard components, very secret, reversed aboard ship (7)
O Rev. deep (very secretive) in SS ship = SPEEDOS
DOWN
1 Agent of destruction, wrapped in rubber, ready for deployment (6)
Sab (agentof destruction) in ule(rubber) = USABLE
3 Nests elevated in pass (4)
E Rev. in + die(pass) = NIDI
4 Friend in Paris getting end of game after Level 1 (4)
I Aim (Level) I (1) + e (end of game)  = AMIE
5 Better source of research mostly suspended regarding fatty acids (7)
N Cap (better) + r (source of research) + on ice (suspended) – e = CAPROIC
6 Character no longer stumped in competitive Scottish field (6)
Hair (character no longer) + st (stumped) = HAIRST
7 Book on cotton fabric picked up – it’s a short book (7)
O, H B (book) on Rev. aida (cotton fabric) = COBADIAH
8 After upset, continue with a new part of helmet (5)
T Rev. last (continue) + a + n(new) = NASAL
9 Contents of cashpoint ransacked for a start (5)
O cashpoINT Ransacked = INTRO
10 Article found in cereal is spinach (4)
O A (article) in sago (cereal) = SAAG
11 Certainly American island’s wanting to bring in Democrat (7)
I (island) + needy (wanting) around d (democrat) = INDEEDY
15 Impulse to eradicate good mallow plant (5)
Na Urge (Impulse) – g (good) = URENA
16 Emphasise conclusion when taking up courses (8)
N Rev. stress (emphasise) + end = DESSERTS
20 Note Nationalist amongst Australians? Head for Australia (4)
N (note) plus n (nationalist) in aa (australians) = NANA
21 No longer daunt a mother with what mother supplies? (5)
A A + ma (mother) + tea (what a mother supplies) = AMATE
24 Swinging some Indian clubs will do for this bone (4)
C Rev. hidden indiAN CLUbs = ULNA
27 Form of sea-anchor unreliable below limited depth (6)
Rogue (unreliable) after d (depth) = DROGUE
28 Tax cut – put out? (4)
O Duty (tax) – y = DOUT
29 Good set for home cultivation (6)
H G(good) + harden (set) = GARDEN
30 Grace has to tour Indonesia (6)
C Has around RI (Indonesia) = CHARIS
31 Spots a diverting item on the street (4)
O A + cone (diverting item on street) = ACNE
33 Rascal swindles priest (5)
S Scams (swindles) + p (priest) = SCAMP
35 Picks up English and Latin art (5)
H E (English) + ars (latin art) = HEARS
37 Head size not small (4)
Paste (size) – s = PATE
38 Girl, after despairing cry, succeeded (4)
A Alas (despairing cry) + s (succeeded) + LASS
42 Openings for King Uther, Arthur and Merlin out of place in Coriolanus (3)
U Kuam (Openings for King Uther, Arthur and Merlin) = KAM
44 Be happy? Take care at school (3)
C Cave (be happy?) = AVE
45 Perhaps was Lord Mayor of city in Yorkshire? Not quite (3)
E Leeds (city in Yorkshire) – s = LED

 

9 comments on “Enigmatic Variations No. 1537 Additive by Kcit”

  1. Enigmatic Variations 1537
    Additive by Kcit

    I enjoyed solving the clues, but, unusually, there were some which I could not fully parse, leaving me unsure of what letter, if any, to omit or add in those five cases. Because of that, I just had to hope that progress could still be made if, say, a couple of my letter counts turned out to be wrong.

    The phrase I obtained from the 25 clues was MAKE?? CHEESE IN ? NACHO SAUCE, which I hoped would be good enough for use later. (twencelas, it makes nacho sauce, not cheese!)

    The endgame was tricky at first. I could not identify the additive – not because of my dodgy letter counts in the middle but because I couldn’t connect the strange-looking middle row and the 25-letter phrase. Eventually, though, it dawned on me that I should read the middle row as a chemical formula for an unknown organic compound. Ignoring the numbers, ‘Na’ confirmed SODIUM, and the rest of the formula looked a bit like citric acid. SODIUM CITRATE then came to me without difficulty, and it turned out that my ‘Na’ count was the only correct one!

    (It occurred to me how difficult this could have been if I lacked my school knowledge of chemistry – ‘sodium’ and ‘citrate’ are in the dictionaries, but, rather surprisingly, sodium citrate is not. I found the precise formula by looking up sodium citrate online.)

    After my earlier difficulties, it was satisfying in the end to fill the grid and fully resolve the endgame, and I thought the whole thematic design was very well executed.

    In the instructions I appreciated being told (1) the number of extra letters to find (25) and (2) the true answer lengths rather than the number of spaces in the grid.

    Thanks to Kcit for an original and clever puzzle, and to twencelas for the blog and for clearing up my parsing difficulties.

  2. twencelas
    My comment @1 looks terribly formal with the ‘heading’ that was not meant to be there. I draft my (informal) comments for blogs soon after solving, and the heading can be useful for me because I am often working on more than one puzzle. I obviously meant to remove it.

  3. Thanks Kcit for another wonderful EV. {This is marred by the news that the puzzle is a goner in 2 1/2 months. The excuse seems lame to me. Like Phi/Kcit, I almost never solve a puzzle online. I wonder if the paper knows its solving audience?}

  4. A nice construction on a theme that certainly wasn’t obvious. Having multiple letters missing from some clues’ wordplay added to the challenge, which I enjoyed. When finished, I wondered if the “nacho” reading of the formula inspired the idea and/or whether it was finding anachronism contained all the elements: I see from Kcit’s blog it was the former. Thanks to him and to twencelas.

  5. I believe that some interactive puzzles will also have print options, so solvers of the back-page puzzle or Toughie, for instance, will probably be able to print those. However, only puzzles which are interactive will be available online.

  6. This was a tasty puzzle! Thanks to Kcit/Phi, and twencelas

    ub at #5 – your ‘news’ is new to me…and proXimal seems to confirm ‘something’ at #7. Is the news that there will only be a dead tree version of EV, or no EV at all? At the moment, I download a PDF from the Telegraph website, for which I pay an annual subscription. So is the value of my subscription about to be downgraded?…

  7. mc_rapper67 @8: Someone sent me the note from the EV editor that apparently went out to setters and was posted on a solvers forum. It announced the end of the EV series with 31 July as the last puzzle. It’s a shame that all the setting talent that goes into this series will not have that outlet, but here’s hoping the setters can find somewhere else for puzzles they may have already compiled. Phi makes mention of this news on his setter’s blog.

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