This seems to be the second Saturday in a row that I’ve drawn an Anax, and no complaints from me there.
This one was a lovely themed puzzle where the theme, based around some of the countless varieties of 2dn, was familiar territory for anyone who, like your blogger, is a keen gourmet. Well, gourmand, at least.
I hadn’t heard of the variety at 23ac, and I had a question mark over 25dn, but otherwise everything fell into place rather smoothly. So thanks once again to Anax for a top quality puzzle.
Across | ||
1 | RAPID | A first for Rainbow – Bungle paid Zippy (5) |
R[ainbow] + PAID* | ||
4 | AUTOSOMES | For a few in Australia these are paired in cells (9) |
TO SOME in AUStralia | ||
9 | FUSILLI | 2 from America in short supply (7) |
United States in FILL I[n] | ||
10 | GNOCCHI | 2 inch cog that’s come loose (7) |
(INCH COG)* | ||
11 | SPAGHETTI | 2 single races what opportunities to make comeback (9) |
(I + Tourist Trophy + EH + GAPS)< | ||
13 | ZITI | 2 one put on the spot (4) |
ZIT + I | ||
15 | HOAX | Trick gives prostitute a kiss (4) |
HO + A X | ||
17 | LEE TREVINO | Man driving it never crashes into house (3,7) |
(IT NEVER)* in LEO | ||
19 | ADRIAN MOLE | Promotion put out about a new, flash diarist (6,4) |
ADvert + ((A + New) in RILE) | ||
20 | BLOC | Group taking horse back across lake (4) |
Lake in COB< | ||
22 | PROA | Sailing boat for one (4) |
PRO + A | ||
23 | CRESCIONI | 2‘s child into wild rice (9) |
SCION in RICE* | ||
26 | RAVIOLI | 2 against 2, they squeeze over line. Gunners ahead! (7) |
Royal Artillery + (Line in (Versus + II)) | ||
27 | BRISTOL | City street covered by zip code for Luxembourg (7) |
STreet in (BRIO + Luxembourg) | ||
28 | MILLINERY | Remarkable urban queen in fancy hat shop (9) |
(ILLIN‘ + Elizabeth Regina) in MY | ||
29 | PENNE | 2 could only be written in presence of daughter (5) |
PENNE[d] | ||
Down | ||
1 | REFUSE HEAP | What opens up as free recycling dump? (6,4) |
EH in (AS FREE)* | ||
2 | PASTA | Basis for serving in Dad’s Army? (5) |
PA‘S + Territorial Army | ||
3 | DELPHI | Old programming language used in place of Oracle (6) |
Double definition. Working, as I do, at the cutting edge of modern technology, I’ve worked with COBOL and Fortran programmers, but never even met anyone who has used Delphi for anything | ||
4 | ALI | Clay, that material in pots (3) |
[materi]AL I[n]. The definition is well hidden here | ||
5 | TAGLIATELLE | 2 reared dog featured in dog magazine (11) |
TAIL< in (TAG + ELLE) | ||
6 | SNOOZIER | Put up controls to keep unruly gathering less lively? (8) |
(ZOO in REINS)< | ||
7 | MOCK TRIAL | Time to enter Kim & Carol for dancing showcase? (4,5) |
Time in (KIM + CAROL)* | ||
8 | SKIP | Leave out / rubbish to go in it (4) |
double definition, also quite plausibly &lit | ||
12 | THERMOCLINE | Temperature in loch/mere fluctuates here (11) |
Temperature + (IN LOCH MERE)* and &lit | ||
14 | CONCHIGLIE | 2 10’s awkward position (10) |
GNOCCHI* + LIE | ||
16 | AIR TRAVEL | Following Scottish guide, composer trips up? (3,6) |
AIRT + RAVEL. I might have struggled to find “airt” had it not cropped up recently, perhaps in a Beelzebub | ||
18 | MACARONI | 2 in a vehicle about to block motorway (8) |
(A CAR + ON) in M1 | ||
21 | SCRIMP | Save Viz – ring head of publishing (6) |
SC (silicit) + RIM + P[ublishing] | ||
24 | OFTEN | A lot lower when summit’s been abandoned (5) |
[s]OFTEN | ||
25 | DRUM | Shape of protractor seen on weird house (4) |
D + RUM. I’m not sure I can think of a sentence in which “drum” = “house”, but I’m sure there is one. Fortunately the wordplay was entirely unambiguous | ||
27 | BUY | Get through to auditor (3) |
homophone of “by” |
* = anagram; < = reversed; [] = removed; underlined = definition
Thanks, Simon – I’d not heard of DRUM = house but dicts give it as a slang usage. I wonder in FUSILLI if it’s ‘fill-in’ rather than ‘fillip’ that is being used.
Rhyming slang: Drum and bass = place
Many thanks, Simon, for blogging one of Anax’s mildest crosswords ever.
But then, pasta isn’t particularly famous for being spicy.
PASTA (2d) was actually my first one in.
Although I made no mistakes, I needed your help for 28ac and 25d.
Nice puzzle but a bit unusual to see Anax using ‘eh’ for ‘what’ twice (11ac, 1d).
19A MO (eg “in a flash/mo”) has been omitted from the wordplay. 1D is EH in UP AS FREE*. 16D am only aware of AIRT as direction, quarter, seems a rather tenuous connection to “guide”.
28A what is “illin'”?
Thanks to Anax and Simon Harris.
Thanks Simon for the blog. There were a few I couldn’t parse and like gwep@4 I still don’t understand 28A.
I think you omitted “O” for “over” in 26A and “UP” in the anagram for 1D.
Thanks Anax, you have extended my range of pasta to try
Hi gwep & Howard L
From the on-line Urban Dictionary under ‘illin’: “A word used to describe something that is both “sick” (amazing) and “chilling” (relaxed). Synonomous with “epic” and “legendary” although with a somewhat more relaxed connotaion.”
See the following for an example of usage and other meanings of the word:
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=illin
Thanks Gaufrid, I wasn’t aware of the Urban Dictionary. Generally I haven’t a clue (pun intended)if a word isn’t in Chambers or Collins.
@6Gaufrid No doubt much favoured by people who finish their sentences with “innit”.
Thanks, everyone. I’ve now modified the post to take NMS’s correction into account.
I too was stumped by 23A but once the penny had dropped I remembered that I’d eaten one of these earlier this summer in Gubbio, Perugia.
My description of it would be more of a toastie than pasta, which is probably why I was held up here, and the web page suggests bread dough as the major ingredient.
Crescione/i seem to be related to piadine/a
http://www.manusmenu.com/piadina-and-crescione-marcos-recipe
calzone and panzerotti
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calzone
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panzarotti
although the generic root would appear to be from crescia
http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crescia
which is a type of focaccia named after croissant from the crescent shape of the bread
Another meaning of crescione in Italian is apparently, rather confusingly, cresson or watercress.
Thanks to Anax for instigating this culinary miscellany, and
if there are any Italian food specialists out there, maybe they can throw more light on crescioni and its complex collection of edible associates!
Many thanks for your comments everyone, and to Simon for the triff blog.
CRESCIONI was a query before publication, which really puzzled me as Chambers has it listed under its ‘pasta types’. Not at all convinced they’d have found something comparatively obscure and wrongly listed it, I did some rummaging. Crescioni is mostly bread-based but, to my relief, it turns out there are several regional variations which use pasta instead.
Gaff or drum used to be more common in London than now. I’ve had numerous folks go “Eh?” when I’ve suggested we “head back to my drum”. Agree on Delphi – it looked obvious as the answer but could not say I’ve seen any code in over 30 years in IT :0)