Roaring Twenties wrap / TUE 2-14-23 / Fitness weight with a handle / Corn dough used for tortillas / bass percussive technique in jazz / Shade of unbleached linen / Psychoactive component of marijuana for short / Fabled tortoise competitor / Secluded place in a chapel

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

Constructor: Ella Dershowitz

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: SQUARE MEAL (62A: Nutritiously balanced plateful ... or a what 17-, 24-, 40- and 51-Across may constitute?) — square foods

Theme answers:
  • STARBURSTS (17A: Colorful chewable candies)
  • KRAFT SINGLES (24A: Individually wrapped sandwich slices)
  • SALTINE CRACKERS (40A: Snacks packed in stacks)
  • KLONDIKE BARS (51A: Chocolate-coated ice cream treats)
Word of the Day: DASHI (9D: Umami broth, in Japanese cuisine) —
Dashi (, だし) is a family of stocks used in Japanese cuisineDashi forms the base for miso soup, clear broth soup, noodle broth soup, and many simmering liquids to accentuate the savory flavor known as umami. Dashi is also mixed into the flour base of some grilled foods like okonomiyaki and takoyaki. // The most common form of dashi is a simple broth made by heating water containing kombu (edible kelp) and kezurikatsuo(shavings of katsuobushi – preserved, fermented skipjack tuna or bonito) to near-boiling, then straining the resultant liquid; dried anchovies or sardines may be substituted. The element of umami, one of the five basic tastes, is introduced into dashi from the use of katsuobushi and kombu. Katsuobushi is especially high in sodium inosinate and kombu is especially high in glutamic acids; both combined create a synergy of umami.  // Granulated or liquid instant dashi largely replaced the homemade product in the second half of the 20th century. Homemade dashi is less popular today, even in Japan. (wikipedia)
• • •

Well, if you missed how dull yesterday's puzzle was, I give you ... today's puzzle. Ta da. Sigh. I can't believe the Monday and Tuesday constructor got together and planned a two-day food-shape extravaganza, so this must be the editor's idea of cleverness. This feels like a cutesy attempt to burn off two so-so puzzles in a manner that looks intentional and clever. But it's just round foods (Monday) ... followed by square foods (today). All this puzzle does is highlight how (slightly) off both yesterday's and today's revealers feel. I don't think I've heard the term SQUARE MEAL much on its own. I see that it has singular origins in the 19th century, but I know it as part of the phrase "three SQUARE MEALs"—if you're getting three square meals a day as part of your room and board, well, you're gonna be well fed. It's got an olde-timey vibe to it, which is fine, but I think the Platonic ideal of this theme would have THREE SQUARE MEALS (16) as a revealer and would feature, as its theme answers, well, three "SQUARE MEALs." As for yesterday's "WELL-ROUNDED DIET," well, see, with regard to "diet," the term is "well-balanced." "Well-rounded" is for ... other things. Here, let me prove it. "Hey google! ... google something for me!"
[googling "well balanced"...]

[... and googling "well rounded"]

People are well-rounded. Education is well-rounded. Meals? Only if you're trying to force a "joke" into your crossword. Sorry to talk about yesterday's puzzle today, but today kind of asked for it. Anyway, it's a semi-corny joke made fully corny today by repetition. You've got the continuing irony that *none* of the actual answers would be anyone's idea of a well-balanced diet ... and that is probably the only thing I actually kind of like about the theme—the absolute inaptness of the food. Otherwise, this is just an exercise of running a joke into the ground, a joke that was only mediocre to begin with. We needed a better twist than "the shape is different!" There's just not enough happening here.


Further, STARBURSTS with an S-plural feels odd to me. The product is in the singular, and I assure you that you definitely "eat some Starburst"—it's a non-"S" plural. It's not that you can't put an "S" on the end, or that people never do, it's that Starburst serves just fine as the name for *multiple* pieces of the individually-wrapped candy. The pluraling here feels gratuitous, and of course ... it is. You gotta arrange those theme answers symmetrically, so in order to complement its symmetrical counterpart (SQUARE MEAL) ... on with the "S"! Bah. 


This puzzle offered no resistance except a single name I didn't know (6D: Tony-winning actress Benanti => LAURA) and a food term I knew but kinda sorta half-forgot (DASHI). I also wasn't sure if it was ERIC or ERIK (41D: "Black Panther" supervillain), and I (weirdly?) needed a bunch of crosses to get WOODS (13D: Grove). I go to the WOODS all the time—they are nothing like a "Grove," which I think of as more finite and ... orderly? Cultivated? The WOODS laugh at a mere grove, is what I'm saying. Loved seeing THE CURE (25D: "Friday I'm in Love" band, 1992), and KETTLEBELL is a snazzy long answer (I'm guessing most MALE MODELS know their way around a KETTLEBELL—they're a gym staple). The fill today is actually quite solid overall—much nicer than yesterday's, and so it's a shame this puzzle had to come second in the shape sequence. It's got the better revealer and its more polished overall. But it's still just a slight variation on a dad-joke theme that's already been done. Literally, yesterday, done. See you tomorrow, where, maybe, we will finally get a "well-balanced" meal ... though I confess I don't know what that would look like, crossword-wise. Someone else figure it out and get back to me. Happy Valentine's!

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

83 comments:

Joaquin 5:56 AM  

I can't wait for Saturday when the puzzle is based on rhombus-shaped foods.

Conrad 6:01 AM  


I don't know how I came up with DASHI but I remembered enough of it that the letters I didn't know filled themselves in from crosses. Other overwrites include warp before SKEW at 10A, KETTLEBaLL before KETTLEBELL (if my name ever appears in a crossword the clue will be "Hardly a gym rat") at 11D, and Idling before IN IDLE at 47D.

Anonymous 6:07 AM  

I can’t wait for tomorrow’s “food pyramid” puzzle, with Doritos or a pizza slice…

Lewis 6:33 AM  

Possible theme idea for tomorrow:
Theme answers – BUCKET, CANTEEN, TEAPOT, BALLOON

REVEAL: [2017 Best Picture, and, at times, what the theme answers describe]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
THE SHAPE OF WATER

Wanderlust 6:40 AM  

My ESP is giving me a clue for tomorrow’s revealer … it’s a bit hazy … coming into view … there it is! TRIANGLED MEAL! The themes will be DORITOS, PIZZA SLICES, SAMOSAS and FOLDED CREPES!

My least favorite type of crossword answers are commercial products, so these two were not my favorite themes. Today you had the themers plus AMSTEL and NESTEA to start and finish the puzzle. All that food and drink (throw in a MASA DASHI) can be delivered by MALE MODELS driving Uber EATS to make a few bucks between shoots.

I skipped over the “fitness weight” and put in KETTLE for the “water heater.” I was kinda befuddled when I went back to the top and saw that it had to be KETTLE BELL for the gym (actually, I had BaLL first). I don’t think I’ve ever used one, which probably explains my SPONGY physique.

Agree with Rex about THE CURE. “Friday I’m in Love” makes me deliriously happy. With that song in my head, I start the day happy.



SouthsideJohnny 6:42 AM  

Yuk, felt like an over-gimmicky Thursday, with a PPP theme and a grid overweighted with trivia like AMSTEL, LAURA, MIMI, ALMALFI, ERIC, IRA, THECURE, AARON, REESE, KEN, ELSA, NESTEA and of course KLONDIKE, KRAFTS, SALTINE and STARBURSTS. Another dud. Hopefully WaPo won’t disappoint.

Anonymous 6:47 AM  

Excited for the Saturday tori/doughnuts/bagels puzzle!

Evan 6:48 AM  

Ending with the exact same solve time for both puzzles for the two puzzles was a nice added touch for me. I contemplated if I had squared the circle.

Anonymous 6:51 AM  

Hand up for all of Conrad’s overwrites. Ditto for Rex’s objection to STARBURSTS. What next? Popcorns? Cracker Jacks?

Tom T 6:53 AM  

MALE MODELS takes me back to 1984, working in midtown NYC and playing in a softball league in Central Park after work. The guys we never managed to beat were the Ford MALE MODELS. But I maintain they might have been cheating--they all looked so much alike that any one of them could have batted 2 or 3 times through the order and you'd never know.

Softball in Central Park, one of my fondest NY memories.

Pulled a Lewis today with this easy puzzle and filled in everything but the revealer; tried to guess it from the clue, but had to get two or three letters before the lightbulb flashed.

Very fond of KLONDIKEBARS, and my mom always had STARBURST candy out for the grandkids. My favorite (not square) stackable snack which I only allow myself to eat on long car trips is Pringles.

Paul Holt 7:13 AM  

Anyone else see 70A and immediately assume RIC?

Alice Pollard 7:20 AM  

Easiest Tuesday on record. I didn't even know what the theme was. 2 sips of my coffee and I was done. An ex of mine was infatuated with The Cure - I just sent him a pic of the completed puzzle. had Idling before INIDLE and the MIMI/MASA cross I hesitated for a nanosecond, but what else could it be? This should have been a Monday, or was it a partner of WELLROUNDEDDIET? If so, good one-two punch. Happy Valentines day to all you lovers out there. I know what I'll be doing later on.... :)

Lewis 7:21 AM  

Hah! Glad I didn’t work too hard to try to guess the reveal before uncovering it (Hi, @Tom T!), as – though I’ve heard of them – I don’t know what a STARBURST or KLONDIKE BAR looks like, and I confused SALTINE CRACKERS with round Ritzes.

BAM is a good description of my brisk solve, and because I hate to leave a NYT puzzle quickly, I lingered over the grid, and am glad I did:

• Four palindromes (OTTO, EYE, ESSE, ABBA).
• Echoes – DOT, from yesterday’s DIPPIN DOTS, and SEAT, from Sunday’s “making ends meet” component.
• Mini-story in the cross of KISS and SLAP.
• A man (KEN), a canal (PANAMA), but alas, no plan.
• AMALFI! As if it were yesterday, I remember the feel of breakfasting outdoors every morning at our villa in Ravello, up on a mountain, overlooking the Mediterranean. A breathtaking, nourishing, life-affirming feel that my memory allows me to return to at any time. What a gift!
• Lovely to see BAE and KISS on Valentine’s Day.

A junk-lite, fun-to-traverse grid, with a lovely aftertaste, for me. Thank you for this Ella!

Phillyrad1999 7:22 AM  

Maybe it’s a regional thing or a generational thing (and I cover multiple generations) but have never heard anyone use the expression IN IDLE. \

Son Volt 7:38 AM  

I think the big guy covered everything. I wouldn’t have run these back to back - like Groundhog Day all over again. Slightly cleaner grid and smoother solve today - but I could easily reuse my review from yesterday today.

Love is like a dying EMBER

The only time we ate SALTINES was coming out of a stomach virus with ginger ale - not a good association for me. KETTLEBELL was nice and love the AMALFI coast. No idea on LAURA or ERIK.

MIMI

Maybe a major food group theme tomorrow?

MALE MODEL will always be The Undertones

K 7:39 AM  

Six Ks in the puzzle.

It is 22 in the English Letter Frequency list.

Z is dead last.

Texting just "K" is considered rude. OK is fine.

Anonymous 7:50 AM  

That’s because no one ever has. “Idle” isn’t a gear, so you can’t be “in idle”. You can be “idling”, or maybe “in park” (that would be a loooong red light), but NOT “in idle”.

Camilita 7:58 AM  

Loved seeing that photo of the Square Deal Gate, entering Johnson City NY. I lived there for a year in 1983 and it was a sad place. The factories were all abandoned with broken windows. Maybe it's nicer now. I lived on Main St. Across from the Red Robin Diner, which I believed was featured in a Twilight Zone episode. My housemate had binoculars, he used to watch the characters in the Red Robin. Yup, that was his hobby. Rod Sterling was from that area and it all started to make sense.

mmorgan 8:06 AM  

@Wanderlust — you beat me to the Triangle Meal, nice! All I had, at least so far, was the Doritos and the pizza.

Ted 8:08 AM  

... but why male models?

Anonymous 8:20 AM  

Surgical evisceration of a couple of nausea-inducing puzzles. One of the Big Guy’s best.

Mr. Cheese 8:35 AM  

@Lewis - ah! The Amalfi Coast. Positsano and Ravello. Take me there, NOW!

This 'n' That 8:40 AM  

Isn't a MALE MODEL just a MODEL?

Grove/WOODS. Plenty close enough.

A very disappointing MON-TUES combo. FYI, yesterday's LAT Xword, free online, was Erik Agard.

_____BURR would have been better for AARON. What's "Hamilton" got to do with it?

G. Weissman 8:41 AM  

When the expectation is this low, is it worth pointing out that neither candy nor American cheese nor crackers nor ice cream bars, nor the combination of these things, constitute a meal?

Anonymous 8:49 AM  

How is (are) Starburst(s) even remotely part of a square meal?

Barbara S. 8:51 AM  

I have a much lighter-hearted attitude toward yesterday’s and today’s puzzles than Rex. OK, maybe not the most profound and intricate themes or the sparkliest fill, but I liked both puzzles and like them even better as a pair. Rex has a point about WELL ROUNDED DIET being an outlier next to WELL balanced DIET, but I see the ROUNDED version as usable in that context, just not so frequently seen. But, to me, there’s nothing even remotely wrong with a single SQUARE MEAL. I hear it all the time in these parts. Oh, and btw, regarding the themers, I’m very familiar with KRAFT SINGLES and SALTINEs, but I’ve never had either STARBURST(S) or KLONDIKE BARS. Am I missing a treat? Should I go out and buy some right away?

I made the Idling/IN IDLE mistake and also, thinking I was so very clever, put in “don” for ADD [Opposite of take off]. An odder mistake was SmOoth for SPONGY [Like moss, to the touch]. I had the S and the first O in place and it seemed reasonable. I guess I just don’t go around feeling up moss all that much. I also called THE CURE THE CUlt, because I got IRA Glass mixed up with the Canadian Eli Glasner, a culture reporter with the CBC. Things I’ve learned from crosswords that seem to have stuck: OTTO the bus driver; BAE as a term of endearment; various aspects of Hamilton, including AARON Burr; ELSA in Arendelle; and the lack of C in REESE (Witherspoon). Now I just have to learn MASA, ERIK Killmonger and DASHI (all gettable today with crosses).

I feel nitpickish about the clue for APSE. The APSE can refer to a large portion of the east end of a church, including the high altar, so not necessarily secluded. Wikipedia: “In Byzantine, Romanesque, and Gothic Christian church (including cathedral and abbey) architecture, the term is applied to a semi-circular or polygonal termination of the main building at the liturgical east end (where the altar is)…” I think the secluded bits are the apsidal chapels, which radiate off the apse and are accessible via the ambulatory. Scroll down to “The typical Gothic church plan.” I also thought that was an unusual clue for KRAFT SINGLES, [Individually wrapped sandwich slices], which gave me the image of a sliced-up sandwich. I see that googling “sandwich slices,” mostly gives you pickles, with some meat and cheese thrown in. I guess the point is that all these foods are pre-sliced for use in sandwich-making which, I admit, thoroughly justifies the clue.

[SB: Sunday, -3, yd, -2. On Monday I missed these two. The shorter word I learned from crosswords. I’m sure I've tried it in SB in the past and it hasn’t been accepted, but I’m glad they’ve brought it into the fold. I got the very close relation to the longer word, but I just wasn’t aware of this seeming variation, although I guess it means something quite different.]

HAPPY HEARTS DAY, Everybody!

Anonymous 8:54 AM  

I totally agree - idling is what people say.

Liveprof 8:55 AM  

A lumberjack's quota to fill
Left him achy and feeling quite ill
But on Valentine's Day
Lady Luck came his way
In the guise of a cute lumberjill.

Anonymous 9:00 AM  

So STARBURSTS, which seems fair enough, gets a rant, but LEGOS - which the company themselves have said is incorrect - appears all the time and gets a pass?

Liveprof 9:07 AM  

Pringles? (Hi @Tom T)

Per the late Mitch Hedberg:

Pringles' initial intention was to make tennis balls.

But on the day the rubber was supposed to show up, a big truckload of potatoes arrived.

And Pringles was a laid-back company: They said f**kit, cut 'em up.

pabloinnh 9:08 AM  

Was trying to come up with a theme but couldn't, and the reason, I discovered, is that I didn't know what shape a STARBURST is. I'll pass on trying to guess the next shape in this series, thank you. It's being well-covered already.

Pretty smooth fill. My favorite was seeing DASHI. I didn't know it as an "umanmi broth" but as the first name of a longtime friend and singing companion. His last name is Hu, and he's a doctor, so Dr. Hu. There's a town in NH called Weare, pronounced "where", and if he would just move there he could be Dr. Hu? From Weare?

Hello to LAURA as clued and ERIK as clued. Nice to meet you both.

Nice Tuesdecito, ED. Essentially Duplicated yesterday's, but I'm not blaming you for the timing of its publication. Thanks for a fair amount of fun.

Happy Valentine's Day to all who celebrate. If my math is right it's the 57th year I've given my significant other a valentine, but she never seems to get tired of it.

Barbara S. 9:10 AM  

UNICLUES:

1. Central American currency featuring a big, scary snake.
2. Lana Turner quits Anatomy of a Murder in a rage due to a fight with director Preminger.
3. My barenaked lady.
4. What results when kids garnish supper with chocolate frosting.
5. Whip wet towels around the men’s dressing room during Fashion Week.
6. Aftermath of Smaug’s wrath.
7. Wedding reception hosts you avoid like the plague.
8. The most horribly uncomfortable perch in the gym.

1. PANAMA BOA PESO
2. STAR BURSTS OTTO
3. NUDIST BAE, SHE
4. ICED SQUARE MEAL
5. SNAP MALE MODELS
6. EMBER FIELDS
7. SPONGY-KISS MCS
8. KETTLE BELL SEAT

RooMonster 9:12 AM  

Hey All !
Dang, @Lewis, go get some KLONDIKE BARS! You're missing out on a great life treat.

Maybe this whole week is a meta-puzzle that'll end in a Rex-favorite FriThemedPuz, with the Revealer, THE SHAPE OF THINGS.

Speaking of Shape of Things, I read today the reason "we" keep finding all these floating objects lately, is our scanners were only set to detect large objects, not smaller ones, like those balloons. So, you mean to tell me, in the Year of OUR Lord 2023, all this time we never "saw" smaller objects floating about the skies? Holy cow, how many has there been we don't know about? It boggles the mind in more ways than one. Military Intelligence, as they say.

Anyway, double dip of food shapes. Round, SQUARE. Hey, it's only a crossword. A five to thirty minute diversion (roughly, depending on your knowledge, solvability, experience, etc) that shouldn't ruin your day. Just sayin'.

Clue for NUDIST deserves a spot in @Lewis' top five.

Long time since seeing ECRU. Welcome back.

If the 1920's were the Roaring Twenties, are the 2020's the Meowing Twenties?

Three F's
RooMonster
DarrinV

Anonymous 9:13 AM  

Amy: the NYT article I read just before turning to the puzzle concerned the impact of Inflation on Seniors' food budgets. Perhaps that is why this one landed wrong for me.
Happy ❤ Day. Really like this blog and all the posters.

Nancy 9:16 AM  

I haven't read the comments yet, but I couldn't miss yours at the top of the column, @Joaquin, and all I can say is: so hilariously funny and so wonderfully apt! It will be hard to top -- and I doubt anyone will.

My own thoughts on the last two days are: Eight product placements in two days. Let's suppose each of the eight companies give the NYT $10 for each product placement, multiplied by the number of total NYT subscribers both in print and online -- why the NYT will have enough revenue to survive for the next 700 years without one additional nickel from me. Fabulous news!

Once was enough, WS! Once was MORE than enough!

Agent K 9:20 AM  

Ok, ok.

Blue Stater 9:25 AM  

Whatever else this mess was, it wasn't "Easy" for me. Sheesh. Due west was just a shambles: MASA, IMAX, KILT (as clued; I'm married to a Scotswoman and have been to many Scottish weddings; at none of them did the groom wear a KILT). These just have to get better, but I'm not optimistic.

mathgent 9:45 AM  

Explain to me why we like to say "I'm not a big fan of X" instead of "I don't like X." More polite? Cute?

Rod Serling 9:55 AM  

@Carmelita:
No T in my name.

The diner episode in TZ took place in Ridgeview, Ohio. The Diner's name was The Busy Bee Cafe. The episode's title was Nick of Time. Starred William Shatner,Patricia Breslin, and The Mystic Seer.

Nancy 9:58 AM  

I had KI?S for the "post-nuptial response to glass-clicking" and came perilously close to writing in KIDS.

jberg 10:00 AM  

Never had a KLONDIKE BAR, and just assumed that it was shaped like, you know, an ice-cream bar. So there's no way I could guess the revealer, at least not until I got the Q. I do hope we go on, though. I mean, in addition to the torus and the triangle, there are spirals, line segments... So the theme was fun, except that I'm feeling sad about all that plastic brought into the world just so that we don't have to slice our own cheese.

But I'm having trouble with yoga MAT rentals. Really? I've taken plenty of yoga classes, and they always supplied the mats free. I haven't gone since the pandemic, though -- did they start charging rent once they had to sanitize them between users? I guess I should start again.

@Roo, what they said was that they adjusted their filters after they saw the big balloon from China. It could have been size, but possibly velocity -- planes go a lot faster. I don't know how that jibes with the story (possibly apocryphal) that we almost went to war over a flock of Canada geese, though.

Jack Elam 10:05 AM  

Will the Real Martian Please Stand Up? Another TZ diner episode, That Diner was The Hi-Way Cafe.

J.W. 10:24 AM  

I would use STARBURST in the collective singular if I was referring to the long pack of 12 they sell them in. "Hey, grab me a Starburst while you're at the store, please." But if someone had a bowl of them out, I'd probably say, "Do you mind if I grab a few Starbursts?" It's weirdly mutable for a brand name. There are probably people out there who have apoplectic fits if you call them Starbursts, akin to the Lego diehards. I'm not one of them.

Surprised not to see any commentary on "lumberjill". It gave me a chuckle.

This blog's stubborn insistence on brooking no flexibility on word definitions or refusing to have any fun with wordplay for its own sake is quite disheartening sometimes. I'm very much against what I call "toxic positivity," but surely we don't have to be so relentlessly peevish about something that's supposed to be lighthearted and fun.

Gary Jugert 10:37 AM  

@Lewis 6:33 AM
This is a good idea.

Joseph Michael 10:38 AM  

What’s with all the product placement lately in the NYT puzzle? It feels like I’m trapped in an endless supermarket aisle. And all I really wanted was a few parallelogram-shaped snacks.

Alternative Clues:

*Alternative to a teapot whistle
*Operating system vehicles
*Criticize a woman’s parenting skills

*KETTLE BELL
*OS CARS
*PAN A MA

andrew 10:40 AM  

Great to hear from Rod Serling, correcting a few minor points including his name (Carmelita must have been thinking of Jerry Steinfeld).

Speaking of which, we live in Twilight Zone times (maybe there’s a TZT Xword!) where you can’t believe anything you hear and most of what you see (thanks Deep Fakes!)

Here’s the one where George’s girlfriend really DOES look just like Jerry…

https://youtu.be/paKOBT4dv1I

Nick 10:42 AM  

Really wanted the answer to ‘water heater’ to be squirt gun.

jae 10:46 AM  

Easy-medium. Me too for KETTLEBaLL and Idling at first. LAURA Benanti I knew from her Melania impression on Colbert. I did not know DASHI.

Pretty smooth and a cute follow up to yesterday’s, liked it a bit more than @Rex did.

Joe Dipinto 10:53 AM  

Let's construct tomorrow's puzzle now.

Theme answers (to be clued later):
20a: MOIST TORTILLA CHIP
34a: SOGGY PIZZA SLICE
42a: STALE HAMANTASCHEN

Revealer clue:
55a: 2022 Oscar-nominated film, or what each of 20a, 34a and 42a represents?

Revealer answer:
TRIANGLE OF SADNESS

egsforbreakfast 10:56 AM  



Trying to combine yesterday’s puzzle with today’s would be like trying to square the circle. After two days of eating a crap-ton of puzzle junk food, I’m ready to recompense Decaprio for his weight-loss methodology (I.e. go on the Pay Leo Diet). Of course, if you really want to feel like candy, ice cream, fake cheese and crackers is a SQUAREMEAL, try THC as a regular part of your EATS.

I suppose there must be a Yukon lesbian dive called the KLONDIKEBAR.

Interesting that Rex devoted more of today’s blog to critiquing yesterday’s puzzle than he did yesterday. Also, this confident assurance about STARBURSTS:

“Further, STARBURSTS with an S-plural feels odd to me. The product is in the singular, and I assure you that you definitely "eat some Starburst"—it's a non-"S" plural. It's not that you can't put an "S" on the end, or that people never do, it's that Starburst serves just fine as the name for *multiple* pieces of the individually-wrapped candy. The pluraling here feels gratuitous, and of course ... it is.”

I assure you, Rex, that you do not “eat some Starburst”. I’ll trade you two cherry Starbursts for a KLONDIKEBAR.

I tried to guess the revealer once I had the themers and couldn’t suss it out. Really nice, clean job, Ella Dershowitz.

Whatsername 10:57 AM  

While I had no problems filling in the blanks, had to come here to figure out what the revealer meant. Maybe I’m still hung over from Super Bowl celebrations or just plain dense but I HUNTED in vain for some way to make a MEAL out of those four items before giving up. Then felt a little CRACKERS when I learned it’s a simple as those four items being SQUARE shaped. Well SLAP me in the EYE with a KRAFT SINGLE and bless my heart.

47D was a WOE? moment. If I’m sitting at a red light, say, I’d be IDLING or - if it’s a really long red light - perhaps even IN PARK but I don’t believe I ever knew of a vehicle which had a gear called IDLE.

ABBA made some fine music but Mamma Mia would be at the top of my short list of movies I hated. Enough to make me lose my appetite for anything square or round either one, except for KLONDIKE BARS which I would never turn down and which I’m not ashamed to say I have actually eaten for breakfast. And the S is not a POV, we’re talking multiple servings. True story. Gulp.

Nancy 11:03 AM  

Uniclues:

1) "Damn. I knew we should have bought a dedicated trophy cabinet."

2) Maybe you can't put lipstick on a pig, but this other mammal really, really loves it!

3. Nothing but stainless steel for my appliances!










1) FALL OUR OSCARS

2) ESTEE AREA HARE

3) AXE ECRU BOILER

Gary Jugert 11:13 AM  

@Barbara S. 9:10 AM
Snapping the male models! So good. The whole scene leapt into my noggin. Epic story telling in 11 words.

bocamp 11:22 AM  

Thx, Ella, for this chewy MEAL! :)

Med (felt a bit tougher).

Lots of holdups, unknowns and hazies: LAURA; DASHI; KETTLE BELL; STARBURSTS; AMALFI (used to sell their shoes at Nordstrom ('66-'67); MIMI; MASA; THC; THE CURE; SLAP; KLONDIKE BARS; MSRP; ELSA.

Wanted cRAFT SliceS. D-oh!

Idling before IN IDLE.

Had toque before KNIFE (read 'Chef toppers') another d-oh!

Stand before WOODs.

Knew AMSTEL, having lived in Holland ('68-'69). Drank my fair share. :( Been alcohol free for 52 yrs. :)

So many business kea/loas, e.g., INC, LTD, LLC, etc.

Fave ABBA song: 'I Have a Dream'.

"I believe in angels
Something good in everything I see
I believe in angels
When I know the time is right for me
I'll cross the stream, I Have a Dream"

Very enjoyable solve! :)
___

Croce's Freestyle 784 was a pb (45 mins.) No major hold-ups. Dropped 20D right in; met her at a conference in Vancouver ('90s).

On to Brooke Husic's Mon. New Yorker. 🤞
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏

GILL I. 11:31 AM  

Mas comida.....No story to be found. I really want someone to come up with a filet/mignon/tartare/caper theme. I'd call it Manna From Heaven.
I did know KRAFT SLICES only because my grandson likes it and I make him quesadillas. That's about all.
Oh...I also knew SALTINE CRACKERS because my doctor told me to eat them whenever I'd get nauseous from my pregnancy. They worked. To this day, I won't eat even one for fear that I'd become pregnant.
The theme was cutesy Tuesday. I wanted the reveal to be a SQUASH .
@Whatsername 10:57. Mamma Mia from ABBA was about as bad as it gets. Here I am adoring Meryl Streep because everyone does, and she sings in this crazy movie. Someone said that she is very good at singing very badly. I tend to agree. Ay, Dios mio.

I'm off to Charleston for a wedding and shrimp and grits....even gumbo. Now we're talking food!
Hasta la vista!

Masked and Anonymous 11:44 AM  

Kinda neat, actually. Two different constructioneers, separately comin up with somewhat similar "shapely" food themes. Cleverly brought together by the Shortzmeister, to get a rise out of us. Like.

staff weeject pick: THC. Nuthin square about that "meal".
some faves: AMALFI. SPONGY. NUDIST.

Happy Valentine's Day, y'all.

Thanx for the fun, Ms. Dershowitz darlin. Well-Krafted.

Masked & Anonymo6Us


**gruntz**

Smith 11:45 AM  

Easy. Forgot to do downs only. We were at 4D just yd! Didn't look at the revealer and tried to guess the theme ... nope. Found myself wondering if they were all owned by Unilever or something.


Carola 11:58 AM  

I thought this was a fine puzzle and am sorry that it's appearing right after yesterday's shape-related DIET took some of the shine off it. My favorite entry was SALTINE CRACKERS, both because I love them, especially the ones with the slightly too-brown edges, and because for me they can actually constitute a MEAL. Thanks to the puzzle, I can now tell myself it's a SQAURE one. I also liked REESE aka Elle WOODS, in Legally Blonde.

Do-over: KEgeL before KETTLE....wrong body part!

@Anonymous 6:51 - I got a laugh out of your question. Back in the '50s, we neighborhood kids definitely sang "Buy me some peanuts and Cracker Jacks" - who'd eat only one piece? :) It won't surprise you to know that my own kids ate STARBURSTS and played with Legos.

C.W. Post 12:09 PM  

Hmmm, Now I'm thinking that Alpha-Bits breakfast cereal (sadly discontinued) has been the meta for crosswords all along. Like forever. Who'da thunk it?

The Joker 12:10 PM  

I collect Serling Silver figurines.

Smith 12:46 PM  

@JW 10:24

I have a red/black checked puffer vest and my DH calls me Lumberjill whenever I wear it

(not frequently anymore, kinda put all red clothing aside these last 7 years, ya know. Got tricky when I was still teaching, because we were s'posed to "wear red for ed" on certain days ... and I refused. Made the district look like a MAGA convention)

Anonymous 12:52 PM  

Because they are square. Welcome to the land of the Phantom Tollbooth

Anonymous 12:54 PM  

A Klondike is a square ice cream party dipped in chocolate. A portable Dairy Queen dip. Or an inferior Its-Its.

Teedmn 1:04 PM  

These early week puzzles present their own challenges - 7A, AD_ in place and I couldn't come up with an opposite to "Take off" when "Take off" meant "leave". For good reason, obviously. But I do know what DASHI is so I got it eventually, but what a silly hang-up.

I tried SALT water something for 40A and I was idling at 47D yet I was still able to complete the puzzle in average Tuesday time.

Love the clue for NUDIST, "One who's barely existing?"

Thanks, Ella Dershowitz!

okanaganer 1:27 PM  

The 80s are my musical sweet spot, so for the prominent central down answer, without hesitation I put in THE CARS. Quite embarrassed to realize it was wrong, and as soon as I saw THE CURE I replayed the chorus in my head and no, that was not Ric Ocasek's voice! Bad brain.

[Spelling Bee: Mon 0, QB 4 day streak! @Barbara S 8:51 am, I think you're right about your shorter word being a new one. I'm also pretty sure this 6er was previously ineligible.]

Gabriel Mann 1:57 PM  

Seemed like a great pair of puzzles for my kid's 5th grade class.

dgd 2:02 PM  

FWIW Burr is a major character in the musical. Maybe they thought your clue was too easy. The one in the puzzle is a valid clue.

Lyn 2:06 PM  

Agree.The answer to Burr in "Hamilton" should be role or part or rival or duelist in Weehawken or almost anything else. If you just want a first name, _____Burr is the clue.

Anonymous 2:08 PM  

Yes because Legos is very commonly said. Manufacturers do no control language, people do.

Anoa Bob 2:52 PM  

Well, I'll be hornswoggled! I didn't even blink an eye at STARBURSTS, mainly because all the other SQUARE MEAL entrees (ha!) also have appended Ss. I would call it a plural of consistency (poc), not to be confused with the plural of convenience (POC) such as happens when 29D MALE MODEL needs some help to fill its slot. No consistency excuse there as its symmetrical counterpart, KETTLE BELL, needed no such gratuitous letter count boost.

I was gnashing my teeth trying to figure out how WOODS could be the answer to 13D "Groove". Oh, it's "Grove". I agree with OFL's assessment that WOODS would laugh at a mere "Grove". Maybe that's why the clue seems to have been changed somewhere along the way. On xwordinfo.com, the clue for WOODS is "Teak and mahogany".

51 and 55 Down reminded of a groaner that was pulled on me the other night at the poker table. During a lull in the action, the guy next to me leaned over and asked excitedly "Did you hear about the actress who was stabbed on stage last night? It was REESE...., uh REESE, um..." I helpfully reply "Witherspoon?". He knew he had me set up and he replied in mock disbelief that I would have suggested such a dumbass thing. "No. With a KNIFE." (I know all yous out there in Commentaristan have way too much class and good taste to ever pull that one on your friends.)

@GILL I. ¡Aviso! Enjoy your Charleston trip but be aware that gumbo, especially seafood gumbo, often has okra in it.

Kyle V 2:53 PM  

Yup, agree with other commenters, Pyramid Puzzle Wednesday. I have lost my appetite, ugh.

Anonymous 3:51 PM  

You mean Legolas, right? 😉

Anonymous 5:20 PM  

I heard a lecture by an English historian who said “3 squares a day” comes from the movement of the court of Henry VIII from the summer stench of London environs .to an area northward. This required a great deal of labor and all the laborers received three good meals a day served on something square.They got there 3 squares a day but when you get 3 of something you get one of that. In Texas, where I used to live before I moved to the unforgiving North, it was common to say something like “That guy needs a square meal.” So,the term is used in the singular.


I don’t quite get that okra alert by Anoa Bob. True Cajun seafood gumbo has okra in it. If there is no okra, it isn’t the true stuff. Okra, prepared properly, is delicious. Full of vitamins , too.

Yesterday’s comment by Anon. at 9:47am: I agree that the answer to 21 Down makes no sense and am surprised that no one else said anything. Perhaps people are more concerned with the mechanics of working downward than substance.

Anonymous 5:42 PM  

I know what you did for a KLONDIKE BAR

Michael Field 7:05 PM  

I strongly disagree that Starburst is the plural of Starburst or that almost any individually wrapped candy would use the singular form as a plural with taffy being the exception that proves the rule. You not say 'have some Hershey Kiss' or 'five Tootsie Roll cost me a buck'! If you want to refer to the plural as a singular entity, one says 'have some Starburst candy'.

Anoa Bob 8:06 PM  

Anon @5:20, as a long-time resident of deep south coastal Texas, accept my condolences on having had to move north.

When I was growing up in Tennessee, okra was one of the staple veggies that we grew in our garden. We had it several times a week during growing season and enough was canned to last us through most of the winter. My favorite version was okra cut into half inch or so sections, dipped in egg wash, rolled in seasoned corn meal and fried in about a quarter inch of lard in a cast iron skillet. Way better that any food-like substances in puzzles today and yesterday.

OKRA frequently appears in crossword grids and some regular commenters have described it as being "disgusting" or "awful" and something they would never eat. (Maybe because of its mucilaginous nature?) So when @GILL said she was going to visit Charlestown and might eat some gumbo, I was teasing a bit about gumbo having okra.

Amy 3:22 PM  

“Starbursts” is definitely the correct plural.

kitshef 11:21 AM  

Solved Downs only. Doomed by DASHI, which is completely unfamiliar and both 7A and 15A had a lot of reasonable options (I submitted with sASHI).

More surprising was my error in the South, where instead of ITS OK, I went with IM SET, yielding the reasonable NUDISm, eUR, tEN.

Burma Shave 10:16 AM  

MODEL’S BAR TAB

IN THE KLONDIKE just one PESO
won’t get OUR SQUARE LAURA very far,
SHE had THECURE, they say so:
Be a NUDIST IN a SINGLES BAR.

--- MIMI AMALFI

spacecraft 3:58 PM  

EASY???? With DASHI and MASA? This was one of the toughest Tuesdays in my memory. Most definitely not on my wavelength.

Wow, I'm stuffed! Two days of food themes, enough already. Yeah, I get it, SQUAREMEALs. They're all...square. Ha ha.

Fighting through allergen-laden air isn't helping. Damn those developers who planted mulberry trees for the shade! That's now illegal, but the damage was done beforehand. Lest I let my lousy mood affect the score, I'll leave it at a par.

Par also for Wordle.

Diana, LIW 6:16 PM  

Another puzzle leading to a SQUAREMEAL. Must want to eat these days - eh? Guess we need to be reminded to get ROUND to it.

Argh. Sorry.

Are those things really foods?

Diana, LIW

rondo 8:17 PM  

Maybe we get triangular food tomorrow.
Wordle par.

Anonymous 11:04 PM  

One of my easiest Tuesdays ever. The themers were almost gimmes. I even knew the song was by The Cure instantly, and I don't even know why. The only real hold-ups were the proper names, but everything was fairly crossed.

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