Monday, March 20, 2023

Big name in dry-erase markers / MON 3-20-23 / Peeper that makes no sound / What the fish said when it swam into a concrete wall, per an old joke / Quintessential Route 66 lodging / Vegan version of a classic brunch dish / Euphemism for an expletive with the / Citrusy cocktail garnish

Constructor: Adam Vincent

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: DINE AND DASH (55A: Not pay for a meal at a restaurant ... or a hint to each half of 16-, 19-, 34- and 50-Across) — familiar foodstuffs (i.e. things you might DINE on) where the last word can also be a synonym for DASH:

Theme answers:
  • BANANA SPLIT (16A: Ice cream dessert served in a boat)
  • TOFU SCRAMBLE (19A: Vegan version of a classic brunch dish)
  • LEMON PEEL (34A: Citrusy cocktail garnish)
  • CINNAMON ROLL (50A: Sweet spiral pastry topped with icing)
Word of the Day: ESPO (27D: Bruins legend Phil, to fans) —
Philip Anthony Esposito OC (/ˌɛspəˈzt/ ESP-ə-ZEE-toh, Italian: [eˈspɔːzito]; born February 20, 1942) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player, coach and executive, and current broadcaster for the Tampa Bay Lightning. A member of the Hockey Hall of Fame, he played 18 seasons in the National Hockey League for the Chicago Black HawksBoston Bruins, and New York Rangers, winning two Stanley Cups with Boston. // He is considered one of the greatest players of all time, and is the older brother of fellow Hall-of-Famer Tony Esposito, a goaltender. He became the first player to score more than 100 points in a season, with 126 in 1968-69, a feat he would later achieve a further 5 times, also becoming the first player to score 50 goals in a season 5 times in a row, including the then record of 76 goals in 1970-71 to go with the then record 152 points the same year. Altogether, he won the Art Ross Trophy as the leading point scorer five times, lead the league in goals six times, was voted the MVP by winning the Hart Trophy twice, and was named as a first team All-Star centre six times. (wikipedia)
• • •

"Kinda ... clever? Yeah, I think that's kinda clever." That was my first reaction upon going back over the puzzle and discovering what the hell was going on with the theme. I don't know that alllll of those second words are really truly synonymous with DASH, but, you know, ballpark. And the fact that you can get so many (interesting) answers to follow this "food + 'dash' synonym" pattern ... I dunno, I think that's a pretty good hook. Monday puzzles have been on fire lately, relative to other days of the week. Simple, clever, clean. It's not easy to do, actually, but the Mondays have definitely been delivering the goods in March so far. By the way, happy first day of spring. Or is that tomorrow? I know new seasons always start on the 20th or 21st of whatever month seasons start in. Anyway, it's close, so ... happy spring, whether it's officially begun or not. Back to the question of DASH. If you DINE AND DASH, you definitely SPLIT (w/o paying the check, don't do this unless you are somehow also tipping generously, which would make the whole endeavor weirdly purposeless). I can see how "mad SCRAMBLE" and "mad DASH" are kinda the same, though "SCRAMBLE" really implies a level of disorganization that "DASH" does not (necessarily). You "PEEL out" more than you (simply) "PEEL," but yes, that means to depart quickly, okay. "ROLL" is maybe the weakest synonym of the bunch. It just means "go" or "leave," and has none of the urgency or implied speed that "DASH" does. But again, I can accept this as a loose grouping because the theme brings with it an entirely different grouping (the foods). If the entire theme were just "synonyms for DASH" I'd be lukewarm or worse on this thing. But the added element of the foods makes it special. You wouldn't really "DINE" on a LEMON PEEL, but again, the doubleness of the theme makes a certain amount of looseness tolerable. Good good.


GAS UP, READ UP, man the puzzle loves its UP answers. I noticed the UPs today more than I normally might have because, as usual, I solved the Monday puzzle Downs-only, and so saw both UP answers but only half of all answers, making the UP answers seem, uh, more dense than they really were. The grid is nice and clean, with no "yeesh, what?" moments whatsoever. Predictably, the NE and SW corners were the hardest from a Downs-only perspective, but I didn't get truly hung up with either. I had to abandon the NE corner at first, when DARLING (11D: "Honey" or "sugar" alternative) and APLENTY (12D: Galore) wouldn't come (I had only the "L" and the "E" in place, respectively); but once I worked out the center of the grid, I put MESS TENT in, and that gave me the letters I needed to see DARLING and APLENTY, no problem. The SW was easier, as TRACHEA came immediately (36D: Windpipe), and then REPARTEE was undeniable, and with the obvious RE- from what would eventually turn out to be REDIALS, I got TREE and EPONYMS, and once CINNAMON ROLL went in, REDIALS shortly followed. I had ENGULF before ENFOLD (35D: Surround completely), which was my one and only wrong answer and hangup, but with DINEAN- in place, it had to be DINE AND DASH, so out with ENGULF, in with ENFOLD, and then a short dash to the end. OBOISTS was easy to get from just the front end, F-WORD same, and that was that. 


Solving Downs-only spared me from being confused by some of the Acrosses, like EXPO (61A: Big name in dry-erase markers). That's probably the brand that is in my backpack *right now* and yet I can't say I've ever noticed the brand name ... [checks backpack] ... yup, here they are:


Weird how you can have something in front of your nose all the time and never actually *notice* it. I am grateful to have missed the corny fish joke ("DAM!") (40A: What the fish said when it swam into a concrete wall, per an old joke). When I looked just now to see what the answer to that clue was, I thought that answer was "I'M DOWN" and thought "... where's the joke? Somebody help the fish! He's down!" I kinda love that "DAM!" is right above "F-WORD," which is probably what the fish would actually say. But again, no joke there. Oh, forgot, I wrote in TERRE before MONDE (26D: World, in French). So, along with ENGULF, that's one more Downs-only mistake I made. TERRE is earth (and Earth), so ... close, but wrong. If I could change one thing about this grid, it would be to make it so ESPO and EXPO were not both in attendance. Which is to say, I would shoot ESPO into the sun (27D: Bruins legend Phil, to fans). It's the crosswordesiest thing in the grid (I know, I know, he's a legend, but I grow weary). And yet, with a tight, smart theme and an overwhelmingly polished grid, I can't be sincerely mad. Hope you also had a good (if brief time). See you tomorrow.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]

72 comments:

  1. Medium. ENcase before ENFOLD was it for erasures, which kinda worked with 45a. Clever, smooth and amusing, liked it.

    Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #794 was on the easy side with a couple of exceptions. The SW corner took quite a bit of effort, plus I had a one square DNF in the NW. Good luck!

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  2. This fell pretty easily, solving down clues only. The theme answers were a big help, except for TOFU SCRAMBLE which was a total unknown to me. I didn't right away realize that DINE AND DASH was the revealer rather than just one of the themes.

    Hands up for "Surround completely" being something other than ENFOLD; I had ENCASE. But easily fixed... while C WORD seemed plausible, CINNAMON ROLL could not be ignored.

    [Spelling Bee: Sun currently -1, missing a 6er.
    Sat missed these 3 mostly should'ves!]

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  3. Robin3:59 AM

    DINE AND DASH. Whoever does that, you are thieves. I don't what your excuse is, but you are thieves.

    Seriously, so many businesses trying to stay alive these days, and they have to these thieving F-heads.

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  4. Great idea! And I agree that the reveal works. You DINE on the first parts and then DASH off to pick up the dry cleaning. And Adam managed two themer stacks. Bravo!

    F WORD. Fudge. Frickin’ ASShole. They freakin’ FLUBBED that. M&A effin’ ADOREs CINNAMON ROLLs. I love all the ways we PEARL clutchers sidestep bad words.

    “Fine” before MINE. Ya know – your life is crumbling around you but you insist it’s fine, all fine. Kinda the sister of it’s all good. When people say this, you know everything is actually F WORDed up.

    Loved the fish joke. I’m reminded of playing Kick the Can as a kid, where we would run around in everyone’s yard. And everyone had a dog (ours was Corvette, a bossy little dachshund who was always game to participate). So what did you say when you stepped in something squishy?

    “Cohort” before COHOST. But I hadn’t read the clue. Still, it works.

    I used to run around whining that it was dumb that our TRACHEA was right next to our esophagus, making it really easy to choke. But then I was reminded that the whole situation was the result of our larynx dropping eleventy million years ago, paving the way for human speech. The details are fuzzy, but, well, just slow down when you’re biting off the end of a bratwurst.

    I kept staring off and thinking of APLENTY and its clue, galore. They both go after the noun, fairly unusual for English. Then I remembered that some adjectives can go either before or after the noun, but the meaning changes:

    Bring me the responsible student. (I need someone I can count on.)
    Bring me the student responsible. (I need to suspend them for ripping the sink off the wall.)

    The present politicians (currently in office)
    The politicians present (were at the State of the Union address)

    Anyhoo - I guess this is all just proof positive of our language’s nuances extraordinaire.

    As Rex said, Happy first day of spring! See you next Tuesday!

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  5. Bob Mills5:55 AM

    Well constructed puzzle. But I'm not sure it's appropriate to highlight an act of thievery as a theme, as if there were something clever about stiffing a restaurant.

    If you DINEANDDASH, do you still leave a tip?

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  6. Weezie6:38 AM

    I think we can all agree that DINing AND DASHing is an objectively Very Bad Thing to do, particularly for the folks depending on those tips. And, I don’t think anyone doing the puzzle is going to discover the concept for the first time and then do it, so since it’s a clever concept for the theme, I’m fine with it.

    This puzzle was lovely. It would have been easyish, except I got very gunked up with overwrites in the center south and southeast. Sometimes on Mondays I try and do as many down-only’s as I can/remember not to check the crosses for, and that really threw me in that section until I relented. It all started with ENcase instead of ENFOLD, sigh. So, easy-medium.

    So the reason we don’t know whether the start of Spring (aka the vernal equinox) is today or tomorrow is that it’s today *and* tomorrow. It starts in the early evening tonight and continues into tomorrow and the new moon. I have a donor briefing tomorrow that I’ve been organizing for many months now, so it feels like good timing to kick off something new and fresh.

    Happy spring, y’all, even if my last frost date is 9 weeks away. Who are my fellow gardeners? This weekend I’ll be direct sowing peas (fingers crossed the snow melts!) and starting some flowers indoors. I’m excited!!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My wife and I met on the first day of spring 16 years ago, but I can never remember if it was March 20 or 21.

      Delete
    2. Fella (trying to make "fellow" feminine!) gardener here! Soil chez moi is still too saturated and cold for planting - so contenting myself with pulling baby weeds on my daily stroll through the garden, hoping to espy any green shoots of emerging perennials 🌱🤗

      Delete
    3. CAK - how 'bout "felle?"

      Delete
  7. Alice Pollard6:42 AM

    easy. finished in like 5 minutes hard copy. didnt even know what the theme was until I read rex. I had the same ENcase before ENFOLD. Does anyone really REDIAL anymore? or dial for that matter

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  8. Rex was unusually forgiving of the theme’s (minimal) shortcomings today. He usually goes on and on about every little inconsistency resulting in a mini diatribe. Just seems a little out of character, no ?

    We’re back to ASS today, but hey - options are limited on a Monday, and not every day’s infantile humor entry can be as stellar as yesterday’s CORNHOLE/GROPE exacta.

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  9. Yup it's a Monday, yup I'm posting, yup I'm home taking an extended weekend off. I enjoyed this puzzle and agree the theme was very clever - clever to see the relationship between the two words!

    I solved this around 6 pm last night (Eastern time)! I was late in solving the Sunday (hence my appearance today), and then the Monday popped up online! Hey, the Monday came early - did this happen with anyone else?

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  10. Fine puzzle overall, but some minor nits today:

    Not one of my dictionaries (all 1986 or earlier) include this definition of SCRAMBLE, so I'm not sure how 'classic' that dish might be.

    I’ve had a lot of cinnamon rolls (well, maybe ten or so), and none had icing on them. Sounds wonderful, though.

    I know it as ‘hop, step and jump’, although the internet seems to like ‘hop, skip and jump’ just fine.

    “Tries to call again” is needlessly wordy; “Calls again” would have been fine.

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    Replies
    1. Weezie8:37 AM

      It’s certainly a classic in the vegetarian cooking sense of the term, though I did just look at my vintage veggie cookbooks and the Vegetarian Epicure (first published in 1972!) doesn’t even have *any* dishes with tofu, let alone tofu scramble. But considering that vegetarian cooking in the west is a relatively new cultural phenomenon, I think a dish that’s been around for at least 25 years, and is still *the* staple for a hearty vegan breakfast at most veggie and veggie-inclusive restaurants, counts as a classic.

      Delete
    2. Maybe hop, step & jump is English. I always heard and said skip. Never heard or read your version in the US anyway.

      Delete
  11. Croce 794 - easy-medium. The 44 square was a bit of a guess.

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  12. My five favorite clues from last week
    (in order of appearance):

    1. Beef that's aged? (4)
    2. Pivotal part of a revolution (3)
    3. Join in a boxer rebellion? (2)(8)
    4. It's a mouthful, frankly (3)(3)(3)
    5. Extra crisp, informally (2)(3)


    FEUD
    HUB
    GO COMMANDO
    HOT DOG BUN
    HI DEF

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  13. Anonymous7:30 AM

    The last time I dialed a number was about 30 years ago. Haven’t REDIALed since.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:26 AM

      However, your cell phone has a redial feature so you may have redialed a few times!

      Delete
  14. Harmless theme - not a lot of nuance but fine early week. Overall fill a little disjoint and odd. My days of eating cured meats are over but I’ll still take that over BANANA SPLITs or whatever TOFU SCRAMBLE is. Liked GATES up top.

    Aztec TWO STEP

    Actually liked the THE ONE combo and as Rex mentions REPARTEE and EPONYMS were gimmes but nice to see. Not much splash beyond that - maybe WILDER x F WORD?

    REAP the Wild Wind

    Enjoyable Monday solve.

    DARLING Be Home Soon

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  15. Wanderlust7:43 AM

    I had a downs-only Natick as I forgot the Bruins player and COHOrT looked good and ErPY - why not? That was the obvious place to look for my error, and I remembered ESPOsito and saw that COHOST was as good as my answer.

    There is a less larcenous meaning of DINE AND DASH, I think - a synonym for “eat and run.” It’s rude to eat a meal that someone has cooked for you then immediately leave but it’s not illegal. And as an introvert, I have been tempted.

    @LMS - I know, I know! The s-WORD. We have a lot of euphemisms for that one too.

    @Weezie, I’ll be planting lettuce, kale, chard and spinach seedlings next weekend if all looks good.

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  16. BlueStater7:54 AM

    I found this very hard for a Monday -- about Wednesday-Thursday level (8:48).

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  17. Hidden behind the clever wow-how-did-he-think-of-that theme is the skilled construction, where two pairs of theme answers abut for eight letters without forming clunky entries, which is rare and wonderful. Adam is both artist and architect.

    I liked EDGY touching the border, the lovely answers FLUBBED and REPARTEE, and the fact that READ UP actually reads down. And I love the range of the word UNTOLD, which, meaning “innumerable”, can be so expansive, and which, meaning “suppressed”, can be so contractive.

    Adam, this puzzle sparkled, with its witty entertaining theme and shiny answer set. Always sweet to start the day and week by experiencing beauty. Thank you so much for this!

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  18. yeah, “Legends” only make it into a puzzle if they have a cute crosswordese type of name or nickname. I see Cher a lot more than Barbara Streisand. And Bobby Orr more than any other hockey player that ever lived. I only know most of the sports “legends” from the puzzle. I see Ashe, but never McEnroe (although that may be for other reasons) and ELO way more than The Grateful Dead. LOL. Just sayin, if they have a cute four letter name, they’re in.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous3:44 PM

      @Dr.A 8:00am:
      Barbra Streisand=Babs

      Delete
  19. I’m much more familiar with the phrase “Eat and run” than I am with DINE AND DASH (not sure I’ve ever heard it before) but of course eat and run does not imply leaving without paying. Nice coherent and fun puzzle, which, as Rex says, is hard to do well on a Monday. I’m getting a little better at doing them downs-only but I can only get so far… and using AcrossLite on my iPad, it’s really hard to avoid seeing the across clues. I had the same response to ROLL but I agree with Rex that it’s all close enough. Nice!

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  20. Eater of Sole8:32 AM

    Almost got it downs-only but had to look at a couple of across clues in the NE before I could see APLENTY (I had EDGe at 33A). Oh well. I think that a highly recognizable set of themers like this might be essential for me to succeed at downs-only; this is as close as I've gotten.

    A nit about one of Rex's nits. 'You wouldn't really "DINE" on a LEMON PEEL...' Of course it's the LEMON that the theme expects us to dine on, not the PEEL.

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:32 AM

      Then is CINNAMON a stand-alone food?

      Delete
  21. Hey All !
    Tasty puz for @M&A today, I'm sure! (*Waves*)

    Apart from TOFU SCRAMBLE (which should be outlawed, recipe burned, buried, and TOFU factories closed down)(😁), the others were easy and known.

    F WORD. Har. Nice WORD with an F!

    MESShall before MESSTENT. Spelled TReCHEA thusly first. Only writeovers I had.

    If you wear bright colors as a lowly worker, are you NEON PEONS?
    If you jump onto your queen size and fall off, is it a FLUB BED?
    If you order your drink neat, it is NOT ICE.

    Tough to overlap (stack) Themers like Adam did here, and still get clean (real things) fill, not made up gibberish. The bottom two had double-L's over double-D's (double -D's! Har ) to word around. Plus nice wide NE/SW corners.

    Nice one, Adam. Let's hope this MonPuz bodes well for the rest of the week!

    Happy Spring, but it's still Monday, so it's a wash. 😁

    Three F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

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  22. Flew through this one and then went back to look for what I thought was the hardest clue and or answer and really couldn't find one. I suppose the most unfamiliar answer, and to me an outlier, was TOFUSCRAMBLE, because it doesn't sound like anything I would eat.

    ESPO was a gimme. Back when he was famous around here, the saying was "Jesus saves. And Espo scores on the rebound.".

    I have to say I never thought I'd see the FWORD in a NYT xword, but there it is.

    Nice Mondecito, AV. Average Velocity for a Monday for me, and thanks for all the fun.

    On to the Croce and the New Yorker (challenging) Monday. Good news was I finally finished the Saturday Stumper. Last night. Sheesh.

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  23. Anonymous9:09 AM

    As someone who’s been vegetarian for decades it is hilarious that there is a contingent on a crossword blog doing the proud equivalent of that commercial where nobody knows how to pronounce the word quinoa because they’re too busy grilling and eating meat or that salsa commercial where the cowboys find out it’s made in NYC and have never not eaten around a campfire.

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  24. Haha, downs only natick so tech dnf. No idea on Bruins Phil guy and pretty sure COHOrT was correct. ESPO doesn't sound any more likely than ErPO, to me.

    Also, NYT may not know this, but DINEANDDASH has (or had) the seriously negative meaning of skipping out on the check.

    Re yesterday, it's @Rex's blog and he can say what he likes. We're here by choice (see what I did there?).

    Happy Spring (or Fall to my brother in Bariloche)!

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  25. Trina9:28 AM

    I was a little worried when I was left filling in the _ word ….

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  26. Beezer9:29 AM

    Cute puzzle with clever concept!

    @mmorgan, DINEANDDASH is eating at a restaurant and skipping out on the bill, so a little different than the “Well folks, I hate to eat and run, but….”

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  27. A good Monday overall but I felt kinda lukewarm on the theme. I get that the idea was to use food related phrases to make DINE work in the revealer but except for SPLIT, the other words struck me as odd synonyms for DASH. To eat and leave without paying might be to BOLT or SPRINT, RUN out or SKIP out on the bill - but SCRAMBLE, PEEL, ROLL? Even when I ignored the reveal and thought, okay then they’re just common synonyms for DASH but no, not really much better. Aside from that though, excellent puzzle and I had a good time solving.

    Like Rex, had ENGULF before ENFOLD and briefly wondered what the GWORD was supposed to mean. My most commonly used euphemisms would be “crap“ for the S word. I suppose because my mother-in-law always said it and she was pretty much a saint.

    @Colin: FYI, the Monday puzzle is always available at 6 PM Eastern time.

    @Weezie: I’ll be starting tomato seeds in pots this week but no planting yet. My brother who lives further north already has spinach, lettuce and radishes in the ground. It’s risky this early though.

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  28. Eater of Sole9:34 AM

    Well it's the SCRAMBLE that the puzzle claims is "classic." The TOFU SCRAMBLE is the vegan version of the classic. I expect that SCRAMBLEs (as nouns that one can dine on) have been around roughly as long as brunches, so in that context maybe "classic" is appropriate?

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    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:40 AM

      Yeah, and SCRAMBLEs look like the S-word on the buffet line...

      Delete
    2. Anonymous7:11 PM

      I had fudge first for F word!!

      Delete
  29. Marissa9:51 AM

    Came to share one of my oddest wrong answers in a while. I looked at the clue for 45- Across and based on I already had filled in the first thing that came to mind was, “the FjORD? I never knew that was a euphemism for an expletive, but you learn something new every day!” LOL

    No idea why it took me until the very end of the puzzle to realize, duh, it’s FWORD. But now when I hear someone say “FWORD” I’ll have a little inner chuckle and think, “did you mean the FjORD?”

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. @Marissa 9:51 AM
      I'm stealing this. FJORD.

      Delete
  30. Lots of nice longer stuff on a Monday. Solved as a themeless and it was a fun romp.

    I checked to see if SITAR tablature is a thing... and it looks like it's maybe a little but not really. However I found lots of Indian music tabbed for guitar.

    I think technically the PEARLY GATES keep you out of heaven. Ya gotta be in line after they open for business, then they stamp your papers, and then they open the gates to let you go inside. You don't put up a gate on an entrance unless you plan to use it. And why heaven is a walled community is beyond me. Let the bad guys in and let them see what they're missing with the harps and virgins and all.

    Oh, AHA and UH OH tryin' to obfuscate my grievances here: Use OHO.

    TEE-HEEs: F-WORD & ASS. Ain't the NYTXW team bringing the edge back in edgy?

    Uniclues:

    1 Exclamation when your hero explodes.
    2 Quip by beaver's victim.
    3 Bovine lunch plans.
    4 Sign on the library front door.
    5 Gene's resting place.
    6 Cute place for painting in the buff.

    1 UH OH, SALAMI LAP
    2 TREE: I'M DOWN, DAM
    3 HAY! DINE AND DASH!
    4 NOTICE: READ UP!
    5 MOTEL WILDER
    6 DARLING ART SPA

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  31. This is the second time DINE AND DASH has been used in a puzzle in less than a month -- and once again I thought it was synonymous with EAT AND RUN. But no. The displeasure voiced on the blog over the immorality of DINE AND DASH made me realize that they're very different: one is to dine at a restaurant without paying; the other is to be a guest for dinner and then not hang around for the after-dinner chitchat.

    Anyway, the theme is cute and well-executed and the grid is very, very clean and junk-free. Sure wish I'd noticed the theme during the solve -- but being me, I didn't. And therefore this cute, well-executed and junk-free puzzle was less than a thrilling experience for me. But it's a good job nonetheless.

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  32. Apparently I had a deprived childhood. What is the kid's rhyme about KISSING and tree?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. (Girl's name) and (boy's name) sitting in a tree k-i-s-s
      -i-n-g. First comes love, then comes marriage, then comes (girl's name) with a baby carriage. ( Not necessarily in that order uthese days!)

      Delete
  33. Funniest bumper sticker I saw as a kid. Maybe 1972 in Boston. “Jesus Saves . . . But Esposito scores on the rebound”

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  34. Thx, Adam; fun food adventure, for the most part! :)

    Med.

    Very quick thru the top half; slowed considerably as I moved DOWN.

    True story: in college, out for sweets with the gang after an evening of bowling; ordered a BANANA SPLIT, and something was just not right about it. After investigation, it was soon apparent: they forgot to include the BANANA. 🤣

    Enjoyed the solve, per se; but, DINE AND DASH is a discomforting idea (I know, it's just a puzzle), but maybe the revealer could have been clued more along the lines of an 'eat and run' situation, e.g. late to a performance, etc. 🤔 NOTE: read @Nancy (10:34 AM) before posting, but after writing my take, so will leave as is.

    Nevertheless, an enjoyable solve; up to … :(
    ___
    Thx @jae; on it! :)
    ___
    Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness to all 🙏

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  35. Joseph Michael11:04 AM

    I guess I’m in the minority, but the theme didn’t work for me because the themer parts aren’t parallel, as the revealer suggests. SCRAMBLE, PEEL, and ROLL are (loosely) synonyms for DASH. But BANANA, LEMON, and CINNAMON are not synonyms for DINE.

    That’s my two cents for the morning. Getting hungry, so I’m going to go BANANA some breakfast.

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  36. Beezer11:06 AM

    @Weezie, I haven’t had enough space for a vegetable garden for 8 years now since we moved to a “condo” 8 years ago but I DO have room for some flowers in my front and back yard. I usually have to replace a perennial or two every year but pretty much have to wait until mid-April to that. Then annuals around Mother’s Day. I ALWAYS get itchy to start planting but now at age 68, I’ve finally learned my lesson, and manage to rein myself in on the beautiful days except for “clean up” duties (the not-so-fun part). For those of you on the East coast, Midwest condos are more like little town houses and even if attached have a VERY small front and back “yard.” My sister lives on East coast and she says you just don’t see this type of “condo” around her.

    Good one @Marissa!

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  37. I’m chipping in from Punta Arenas, Chile today. I did this solving acrosses and downs only. This TWOSTEP process seemed to go pretty smoothly and quickly.

    One year during college, my brother worked as a short order cook at the Duck In drive in, as did Steve Prefontaine. For those not in the know, Pre was one of the premier middle distance runners in the country and, eventually, internationally. One day a guy did the DINEANDDASH thing, so Pre took off after him and ran him down. To this day I chuckle when I think of that hard-luck, would-be thief looking back and seeing the hopelessness of outrunning his pursuer.

    Today’s clue for NEON could be De’s above it. But that would be incomprehensible, so probably best avoided.

    Did you know that your LAP is also a semordni-lap? I’ll bet @Lewis did.

    Really sweet theme and enjoyable fill today. Thanks, Adam Vincent.



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  38. DINE AND DASH alert...Here's my story:
    I did it once.
    Right after graduating high school from the American School of Madrid, my two girlfriends and I decided we'd go on a southern trip to Gibraltar and a little boat ride HOP to Tangier.
    We were dirt poor and relied on some hitchhiking to get us to our destination. Although you didn't see many "Americanas" standing on "out-of-the-way" roads, trying to hitch a free ride, we always got some sweet farmer to give us a lift. We'd flip a peseta to see who'd get the back of the truck usually filled with a goat or two. Those were the days, my friend.
    Anyway, by the time we got to Granada, we were dirty and hungry. We found a cheap little pension in the center of the city that had a shower (shared by about 20 other men) and two small beds. It was clean and it had the view of the town square so we were content. But we were also hungry.
    After getting cleaned up we headed to a local tapas bar to nibble on bread and mejillones and maybe a little tortilla. Four (ahem) older men came up to the bar and started flirting with us. They insisted on paying for our tapas and then insisted we have dinner with them in a restaurant near the Alhambra. I guess you could say we were desperate because we accepted.
    Up, up, and up we went through charming cobblestone paths, passing Gypsy flamingo dances enticing us to enter their caves and watch. Only vente duros they would shout... but we were on another quest.
    We got to the restaurant and the ordering began. I even remember what we ate this long time ago. Pheasant!
    Our "dates" were becoming drunker and more (shall I say) aggressive. We were young but not yet stupid. The bill arrived and my TWO girlfriends and I told them we needed to use el WC. They politely got up from their seats to let us go. Once alone, we decided to DASH. We actually SPLIT. We left around the back and started running down the cobblestone street. The men decided to run after us shouting much worse than any F WORD you've ever heard. I remember laughing so hard that I probably soiled myself. The gypsies were standing outside their caves clapping, dogs were barking, My friend Robyn lost her shoe and a dog bit Erica's dress and ripped some of her skirt off. The men were still shouting at us but we were younger and sprier.
    We finally made it to our pension. We just stood there in a daze then began laughing madly We actually laughed for days after our ne'er do well soiree.
    I've told this story a thousand times because recalling that night brings me nothing but joy. I have never done another DINE and DASH since; it would never be the same but hot damn it was fun.
    And that's a true story.!

    I liked the puzzle but I'm an honest person when I tell you I will never eat a TOFU SCRAMBLE.

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    Replies
    1. @GILL I. 11:32 AM
      You are brilliant, entertaining, and it turns out, felonious. Those fellahs needed an education education, and you helped them by not paying their tuition.

      Delete
  39. Clever MonPuz theme, with yer double themer elements.
    fave themer: CINNAMONROLL (yo, @Muse & @Roo -- and [fword here] yeah, M&A sure do luv em).
    least fave themer: TOFUSCRAMBLE. M&A does tend to wanna dash off, when served tofu.

    staff weeject picks: THE & ONE. Weeject cross-wefs. Nice. And nice weeject stacks in the NW & SE, btw. And stack on other bonus stacks, right below them corner stacks. purrrr.
    fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {Quintessential Route 66 lodging} = MOTEL.

    other cool stuff: FWORD [debut]. FLUBBED. APLENTY. THATSO.

    Thanx for the fun, Mr. Vincent dude. Pretty good f-in stuff.

    Masked & Anonymo4Us


    kinda different:
    **gruntz**

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  40. Anonymous12:15 PM

    @LMS “See you next Tuesday!”
    Nice finishing touch! 😂

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  41. old timer12:18 PM

    A very fast and easy Monday, and I liked it. And thanks, OFL, for that Banana Split toon from Hanna/Barbera. It was silly! And sometimes a little silly hits the spot! Thanks too for whoever posted Darling Be Home Soon, from John Sebastian and the Loving Spoonful. It really aged well, and as several commentators on the song mentioned, is all the more important if you are three score and ten (in my case and eighteen) and still in love with THE ONE you first saw so many decades ago.

    SCRAMBLE seemed odd to me. Then I remembered that in a crisis, the first thing the Air Force does is SCRAMBLE the jets, meaning to send them all up stat. If I had an OED handy I probably would LEARN how that meaning of SCRAMBLE came into being.

    Congrats to Adam for a perfect Monday submission.

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  42. To me this theme is D.O.A. As @Joseph Michael points out, while the second words are ostensibly synonyms for "dash" the first words are *not* synonyms for "dine"; neither are they all things you dine on – lemon? cinnamon? But in any case, since you can eat the whole answer (except lemon peel), the "dine" and "dash" aspects are not cleanly distinct. A total mess. What the fjord?

    Time for the Melodica Men to usher us into spring.

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  43. SharonAK12:40 PM

    Lewis, Thaks for the reminder of all those clever clues. Agree they were the best. Except"Extra Crisp" I didn't much like that on. Maybe just being pouty because I totally didn't get it until the crosses filled it in.

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  44. @Marissa (9:51) Thanks for sharing that this morning. I’m gonna try it out next time I get annoyed. “Oh FJORD it!” 😂

    @John (10:58) Here’s the rhyme I remember from my deprived childhood:
    Johnny and Susie sitting in a TREE, K-I-S-S-I-N-G.
    First comes love, then comes marriage, then comes Susie with a baby carriage
    .
    Of course these days it’s not necessarily done in that order any more.

    @GILL (11:32) I laughed out loud at your DINE AND DASH tale. And I’ll join you in eschewing that TOFU SCRAMBLE - just as soon as I finish my SALAMI and BANANA sammich.

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  45. WooHOO! a pretty normal Monday for me at last. And I truly enjoyed this solve. I can hear people who ate just getting into crosswords and the NYT in particular doing a happy dance or gesture or whatever as they complete this entire puzzle no cheats. I still remember my own first time no cheats solve. Great day.

    This was pretty much the perfect Monday offering. Sure, two “UP” answers-a small foul, but such a clever, tight theme with a great reveal. Very classy. And I was stumped to the very end. I love that!

    REPARTEE is such a lovely word and in the same neighborhood with a soft, gooey, warm CINNAMON ROLL? I ADORE that. Excellent Monday. Thank you Adam!

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  46. What a perfect Monday! That’s all I can say.

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  47. Love that Liz Phair x Material Issue cover! Some cute stuff on that record. The Mary Lou Lord song is great. I miss those (Hal Wilner and Red Hot) influenced cover compilations. And usually for a good cause!

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  48. It is always a banner day when we get a Gill I childhood story.

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  49. Doing Wordle yesterday, I got five yellows on my third try and then solved it. The word was CREDO and my attempt was DECOR. That has to be a rare pair of words. Not only is each an anagram of the other but a special kind of anagram, where each letter is in a different position.

    I wonder if there's a term for these word pairs.

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  50. LenFuego2:23 PM

    When I saw that one of the songs linked by Mr. Sharpe was by Liz Phair, I felt sure it was going to be the iconic feminist anthem "F*** and Run", which would have incorporated not only FWORD, but sorta kinda the puzzle theme too, with Run invoking the Dash half. Sure, the Dine half would have to have been invoked by F***, which is a little awkward to say the least, but I mean, the puzzle did include ORALS too *wink* *wink*.

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  51. Beezer3:01 PM

    @GILL I…LOVED your story today!

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  52. Cute theme and other fine entries APLENTY: DARLING, FLUBBED, and a special tip of the hat for REPARTEE on a Monday. A mostly easy cruise through the Acrosses, with a pause at TWO crossing THE ONE (nice!). TRACHEA crossing the squishy CINNAMON ROLL gave me a different sort of pause (hi, @Loren).

    Do-over: ENcase. Help from previous puzzles: DINE AND DASH, a phrase I'd never encountered until it appeared in a recent puzzle here.

    @Weezie et. al - I'm a fellow gardener (Zone 5), in so far as I tend a perennial bed established by a previous owner of our home, a botany professor, which is an example of a priceless treasure that "came with the house," 33 years now, and still going strong. The L-shaped bed borders our yard, the east side having an array of lilies, tulips, iris, peonies, and phlox, and the shaded north side an abundance of native plants. Soon I'll be looking there for the first signs of spring ephemera, like my DARLING trout lilies and wonderful trillium and unfurlings of snakeroot. My tending amounts to weeding and offering encouragement: "You guys are doing great!" I'm a much tidier and more enthusiastic gardener than housekeeper.

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  53. @GILL I, wonderful story.

    Here's a less hilarious but fond memory: in about 1971 my Dad and I flew to Vancouver just to see the Canucks play the Bruins. Just before the first period ended, he led me down to the ground floor where we joined a handful of other people just standing around. "What's going on?" I asked. "Just wait!" he said. Soon a door swung open and along came the Bruins on their way to the dressing room. ORR, ESPO, the whole gang only 2 feet away. What a great surprise! We flew home right after the game and my younger brother was verrry jealous.

    [Spelling Bee update: I kept yd open, and I just got this word to get to 0. Now on to today!!]

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  54. @Whtsername, @kitschef, @Beezer, @Gary J and @okanaganer...Gracias amigas/amigos.
    I'm full of stories (usually not so felonious...Hi @Gary J) but my family is sick of hearing about them....[sigh]
    By the way...it was Flamenco dancers not Flamingo dances. Autocorrect and I have a hate relationship.

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  55. Anonymous9:21 PM

    In New England Chew and Screw = Dine and Dash. Michael H Kane Rhode Island.

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  56. DINEANDDASH reminds me of Abbie Hoffman's "Steal This Book" (I didn't do it, officer!). In it he describes a dodge where two guys go into an eatery (separately), one ordering just a coffee and the other a full meal. They switch checks, the one who ate big pays the coffee check while the other says "Hey, this isn't MINE! You can see all I had was coffee!" Then they go to another place and switch roles. Did I ever try it? I plead the fifth.

    I pretty much agree with OFF's comments. You can allow a little leeWAY when the theme is a TWOSTEP. With the fill, things start to get EDGY when you include the FWORD; I don't like it for the letter add-on but also the content. DAM is corny but OK, though its position directly above the other makes for a concentrated cuss.

    I ADORE those NE/SW 7-stacks; nicely done. Pretty well-made puzzle, all in all. Birdie.

    Wordle birdie.

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  57. Anonymous12:14 PM

    Pretty good but uneven in spots. ROLL is kind of weak - although “Let’s ROLL” can sometimes fit in with the theme.

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  58. Burma Shave3:00 PM

    DAM SAFE ROLL

    If you FLUBBED UP AND used THE FWORD,
    READUP AND LEARN THE WAY,
    folks NOTICE EDGY ORALS heard,
    SO use TACT in REPARTEE.

    --- ROBIN GATES

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  59. Diana, LIW9:02 PM

    By at first putting an extra N into that a-peeling fruit, I thought we were going to be tortured by a rebus on a Monday.

    But no - merely my bad spelling error.

    OTOH - this was a tad crunchier that the typical Monday. And I never thought I'd see the F WORD in a NYTX.

    Now, back to Girl Scout Cookies - only one week left!

    Diana, Lady-in-Waiting for S'Mores

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