Relative difficulty: Pretty hard, solving Downs-only
Theme answers:
- BEER BRAT (18A: Ale-simmered German sausage, informally)
- BEAN BURRITO (24A: Vegetarian dish on a Mexican menu)
- BEEF BOURGUIGNON (39A: French meat stew for which Julia Child penned a popular recipe)
- BANANA BREAD (49A: Loaf often made with walnuts)
v.intr.1.a. To lurch or swerve while in motion: "The Tasmanian boat was a wreck... the stove had broken free of its mounting and was careening about with every wave" (Bryan Burrough).b. To move forward rapidly, especially with a swaying motion or with minimal control; career: "I saw my life as a car with no brakes careening down a dangerous mountain road" (Tom Perotta). (thefreedictionary.com) (my emph.)
• • •
Downs-only solving was enormously challenging today, for a variety of reasons. The first very bad trap I fell in was MEDLEY for 22D: Song created from multiple songs (MASH-UP). That's ... pretty much the definition of a MEDLEY: "a song created from multiple songs." And the "M" was right, and the "E" in the second position gave me a BEEF BURRITO! The problem then was figuring out what the hell kind of [Woodsy home] I was dealing with at 7D. I was like "NEST? DEN? LAIR" As you can see, I thought I was looking for an animal's home. Oh, and earlier, I had another wrong answer, right alongside (missing) CABIN: POUND. I had POUND for 8D: Equivalent of 16 oz. (ugh, ONELB). Which, again, is technically correct. Perfect for the clue. Just ... not perfect for this puzzle. Sigh. Between POUND and MEDLEY and BEEF BURRITO, I was gummed up there for a while. But not nearly as gummed as I was in the SW, all around the revealer, which I didn't know was a revealer (this is what happens when you don't read the Acrosses), and which I couldn't make into anything. The problem of parsing "TO BE FAIR..." was seriously exacerbated by three (3) different crosses. First, and worst, was AHOOT. Oof. Just ... the worst fill in the whole grid. Couldn't do anything with it. Thought it was ARIOT for a bit. Also had the cross at 54A as AGORA for a while, figuring "no other letters but 'G' work there" (wrong!). So I kept looking at AG--- and wondering how to get to 50D: Something hilarious. It was not ... hilarious. Then there was IN A FEW (46D: "Soon"), pfft, which I had as IN A SEC, and but thought might be IN A BIT (Wrong and wrong!). IN A FEW ... did not cross my mind for ages. Then there's the worst of the problematic revealer crosses: RARES (53D: Some hard-to-find collectibles). Plural. RARES ... RARES ... Did I say AHOOT was the worst thing in the grid? I take it back.
[Woodsy the Owl! Did he live in a CABIN (7D: Woodsy home)? I forget]
Had HERE for 56D: Present (GIFT) and had to hold off on the last letter in CAREEN because I can never tell the difference between CAREEN and CAREER (turns out—there isn't one; see "Word of the Day," above). But those were minor issues. Nothing like the MEDLEY/POUND fiasco, or to the trainwreck caused by RARES & Friends. Maybe if the revealer had snapped into place more cleanly, I would've appreciated its punniness more. It's a longshot, but ... it couldn't have hurt. Look, I see the pun, there it is, it does what it does. But considering how much I had to work for that revealer, the payoff was not nearly sufficient.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on Twitter and Facebook]
Well … my interpretation of the theme was completely different (and wrong). I though the pun was on tube-y fare.
ReplyDeleteTube-y as in long cylinders.
BRATs are long cylinders.
BURRITOS are rolled up like a tube.
BANANAs are long cylinders.
And I don’t have a clue what BEEF BOURGUIGNON looks like, so I assumed that it, or some ingredient in it, was tubular.
Based on that interpretation, I was prepared to pronounce this as the worst theme ever. I am very pleased to know that I was wrong.
Nits:
- I’m not sold on Zodiac being an astrology chart.
- Also not sold on the slangy ‘noggin’ as a clue for the standard ‘HEAD’. ‘Noggin’ would be a good clue for ‘bean’ or ‘melon’.
Also solving down clues only, hands up for trying pretty much every wrong answer Rex had: POUND, A RIOT, AGORA, IN A SEC / IN A BIT. However I didn't even think of MEDLEY and put MASHUP in right quick, fortunately.
ReplyDeleteBut I still finished with an error having I SEE for 27 down "Yeah, okay...". SEAT was okay for 42 across, but 31 across ASHOR would have to be some totally unknown name or foreign word. (In my defence, AHORA turned out to be correct even though I didn't have a clue what it could be; I thought maybe some Egyptian thing.)
[Spelling Bee: Sun currently -1 missing a 10er(!!). Will try again in the am.]
Easy-medium except for tracking down a typo. Some fun theme entries with a cute reveal. Liked it except for a few jarring plurals….RARES… Nice debut.
ReplyDeleteCroce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle # 862 was on the easy side for a Croce. The SE corner required some staring to convince myself that I hadn’t made an error and the 9a clue/answer in the NE corner was a major WOE. Good luck!
ReplyDeleteI thought I'd impress my wife and order a nice SATURN with our BEEFBOURGUIGNON. All I got from her was a bored "oh."
A BEANBURRITO may be Two B Fair, but it's also Tooty Fair.
Research suggests that malaria might be controlled by lightly stimulating the gonads of the male carrier flies. To evaluate this, the Gates foundation (which is headed by AGATES) funded a group from Johns Hopkins to test tease the testes of TSETSES. In the end it just made the testees testy.
A Mennonite and a sodomite got into a BARFIGHT in the Dolomites. Guess who won?
Surprised that I did this so much easier as downs only than @Rex did. TOBEFAIR, maybe it was just a wheelhouse thing. Thanks for some fun, Ricky J. Sirois.
Thank you for your ever so clever comments. Look forward to them everyday!
DeleteThe correct term is BOEUF BOURGUIGNON. What a missed opportunity to have all answers be a different BE-ginning.
ReplyDeleteWhat about banana bread?
DeleteThe French term is boeuf bourguignon but in English beef is also used. I see nothing wrong with that. Just because I prefer the French word doesn’t make the other incorrect. Cultures around the world when borrowing another culture’s dishes translate , partially translate as here, or import the name as written. In this case the French version is hard to spell and pronounce ( as the vowel sound does not exist in English) so the variation in the puzzle was inevitable.
DeleteMy five favorite original clues from last week
ReplyDelete(in order of appearance):
1. Progressive rock? (6)(4)
2. Flick of a flicker? (3)
3. Double deal (6)
4. Present-day vehicle? (6)
5. Says who? (5)
MOLTEN LAVA
ASH
TWOFER
SLEIGH
SIMON
Got stuck on raggedy ANNe crossing TSETSEE. So many plurals…
ReplyDeleteWhat - no baked Brie or beef bulgogi? I think I’ve eaten far too much these last few days - no more.
ReplyDeleteFlip your WIG
A lot of the usual suspects joined for a not a-typical NYT early week grid - actors and actresses of questionable renown (ZACH somebody), for example, foreign entries (we even flirted with the “guess what language” genre with URDU), and of course RARES - what the hell are RARES? Are they available on line, or do you have to venture out to a brick and mortar RARE store for those?
ReplyDeleteToo lazy to look it up, but my guess is that “rares” is used by people in the business of selling or buying these items. A kind of shorthand. Odd on a Monday.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteCroce Freestyle 862 was easyish, for a Croce. Steady progress with no major holdups.
ReplyDeleteI got .. KEOLEOA’ed? In the east doing downs only with either IOWA or IOTA both working and reasonable ..
ReplyDeletePicking up the theme of double-B foods helped with the downs-only solve but not enough, alas, to avoid having to look at a couple of across clues in the SW. I made some of the same mistakes as Rex down there, plus some others besides. Brown before BEIGE and Retro before RARES (agree that that was awful) gave me reST instead of EAST. Then add in Rex’s INAbit instead of INAFEW and AriOt instead of AHOOT and my revealer was TiBErAot. Okaaaay. No way to puzzle my way out of that mess, so I had to do a downs-only cheat.
ReplyDeleteWhen I did finally get the revealer, it was a nice aha, so I liked it more than Rex. Plus all the foods are delicious, though I would never put walnuts in BANANA BREAD. Chocolate chips, yes.
Thx, Ricky; a FAIRly chewy puz! 😊
ReplyDeleteMed-hard.
A downs-only that needed a goodly dose of @Lewis's faith solve to bring to fruition. 🙏
Seeing the double Bees start to appear was a life saver, esp given that I didn't know the center grid-spanner.
Ironically, my desert every eve is BANANA BREAD; that is, a piece of bread (warmed in the microwave), and a chilled banana.
A muchly enjoyed workout! :)
Thx, @jae; on it! :)
___
Lester Ruff's Sat. Stumper was another beast, but only 12x NYT Sat., compared to 13x last week. Again, a most exhilarating and satisfying battle, with fair crosses making it possible! :) Thx for the encouragement @pabloinnh (5:46 PM yd); needed it for sure! 🌟
Miriam Estrin and John Ewbank's NYT cryptic was very easy…except for the two gaffs I made. Oops! :(
On to Croce's 862 🤞, with K.A.C.'s Mon. New Yorker in the wings for tm.
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
Bada Bing! I got a Big Bang out of this. A Black Belt to Ricky, who pulled off a NYT debut with nary a Boo Boo.
ReplyDeleteSome memorable moments:
• Having the CAR of CAREEN filled in and being briefly confused because “car” is in the clue, and the deep aha when the answer filled in..
• Filling in BANANA bread, and actually being able to smell the aroma as if it were in front of me. Then taking a pause to savor it.
• Double imaginary fist pump when I had GNON only, then the answer popped into my head and I actually spelled it right.
• Leaving the revealer blank, trying to guess it, having seen the BBs in the theme answers, thinking it had to do with “to be or not to be”, rejecting that, then, after reading the clue, and with an explosion of joy, figuring it out. Joy, because I’m weak at this skill and working on it.
• Pleasure at uncovering words I liked: TACIT, CHURN, CAREEN, and MASHUP.
Ricky, seeing “two-B fare” out of “to be fair” – that’s primo crossword constructor thinking and makes me eager to see more from you. Congratulations on your debut, and thank you for an outing sparked by such lovely moments!
To be fair, is it fair to judge a puzzle by words you didn't know?
DeleteA rare day, or one of the RARES (ugh) when I knew all the proper names, except for you ZACH someone. My bad, and I'll start watching "Scrubs", probably tomorrow. Yeah, that's right.
ReplyDeleteBEEFBOURGUIGNON turned into a real spelling test. Thank you crosses.
SHEA as clued is still unfamiliar, as it should be ____Stadium, and old friend TSETSE showed up with at least one friend. How ya been?
I liked the triple pun aspect of two B fare. It reminded me of the man who called his family ranch "Focus", as it's the place where the sons raise meet.
Congrats on the debut, RS. Rather Sticky for a Monday but I like that, and thanks for all the fun.
Haha, this puzzle was full of favorite things; banana bread, beer brats, even Saturns and after 4 days of turkey, i am definitely in the mood for some beef bourguignon! Oh, and butter, glorious butter! Happy Monday!
ReplyDeleteI also had "In a bit," then "in a sec," finally INAFEW. AHOOT is weak, but "A riot" would be equally so. The puzzle was on the hard side for a Monday, I thought.
ReplyDeleteTWO-B-FARE is a good pun, but I had finished the puzzle before I noticed it.
I was thinking that I’m getting worse and worse at solving Downs-Only, so it’s mildly gratifying to know that Rex also struggled with it that way (and we had some of the same Downs-Only hangups).
ReplyDeleteGood puzzle to start week with. More challenging than usual even for us mortals using across clues as well!
ReplyDeleteMASHUP slowed me a bit
More from
More from this guy
Absolutely appreciate everyone's thoughts and comments. I've been reading here for a while and am delighted to have Rex pan my debut. I'd like to think you'll enjoy the next one a little more, but who knows?
ReplyDeleteFor those curious, this was constructed a while back and I certainly would have at least attempted to make a few different choices in the fill if I were redoing it (RARES being the most obvious example). But I still like it as is and it's very cool to see it published.
Be well!
Congrats on your debut! I enjoyed your puzzle!
DeleteI don’t get the criticism of solving this as a downs only. I’d think that only a small percent of people who read this blog solve or attempt to solve as such. Also, and more important, this puzzle was not intended to be solved as downs-only. Second thing I don’t see is why the “fill” or “crosswordeze”is always trotted out in the critique. The blogger could just say that there is a lot of it. Readers would understand.
ReplyDeleteThis was a perfect Monday NYT xword.
I don’t get the “downs only” criticism either. I thought it was a usual easy Monday puzzle that was quite enjoyable. But then I solved like most people, doing both the acrosses and downs.
DeleteHey All !
ReplyDeleteTWO B OR NOT TWO B... that is the gastronomical question.
Nice little MonPuz. Had a bit of a bite to it, or just the ole brain is going away faster than I think. (Probably) That BEEFthing, holy moly, what a word.
Speaking of words, if anyone says they got a 0 on the SB Yesterday, I'm going call Shenanigans! C'mon, Ezersky. One of the Pangrams, really? And the congratulatory thing? But you still don't accept AROAR.
Closed off NW/SE, surprised Rex didn't mention that. Nice fill, though. If you're gonna close your corners, at least put in neat words.
TSETSE fly, although I never want to meet you in real life, nice to see you again here.
Another Monday. Thanksgiving weekend hangover. Har. BYE.
Four F's
RooMonster
DarrinV
Complete easy breezy going across first. I do not understand Rex system of rating a puzzle. Yesterday was not easy, not even easy medium. It was medium hard. I go by time and brain strain. Over half an hour is not easy medium. There were two good answers for half the puzzle yesterday.
ReplyDeleteAnd today was a normal Monday. Ten minutes.
I found it to be quite easy for a downs-only. Not because the answers were easy (I'd call them medium), but the crosses were all obvious enough to fill in whatever I missed on the downs.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the punny reveal, which appeared in a different fashion than usual because I was doing downs only. I had to parse the answer without a clue, revealing it in a sort of "what the- ohhh... clever" sort of way.
Agree with many of Rex's other complaints about the fill: too many awful plurals, and medley should absolutely be the answer instead of MASHUP. My Internet lore is a bit dusty, but I believe MASHUP was originally just two songs played at the same time, or one song played with an unrelated video. Not quite fitting the idea suggested in the clue.
RARES is terrible.
If you go to a Mexican restaurant, a bean burrito has a good chance of not being vegetarian, unless lard is part of a vegetarian diet.
ReplyDelete@Ricky J. Sirois, Loved it! Beef Bourguignon on a Monday was real treat. More Mondays like this.
ReplyDeleteHappy Birthday Rex! Hope you enjoy a little more of that cake your wife baked for you! It always makes a birthday super special if you have a homemade treat!
ReplyDeleteHail and good morn ye slayers of squares. Welcome to the Bee Faire Squared where a paltry 50 percent of our noble theme involves the murder of innocents. Thine pig, thine cow, they taste like thine factory assassinated their precious souls and wrapped them in wee plastic trays and trucked their mangled carcasses to Costco. Bean burritos and banana bread are real winners though, don't ya think?
ReplyDeleteA delightful way to start our week. Anytime I can be reminded of Sarte and his approach to writing, it's a good day.
Uniclues:
1 What they'll serve a tourist at the Sea of Tranquility.
2 Why the drag queen is asleep.
3 Hit another clod.
4 Why your grandchild won't go outside.
5 A Realtor's color palette.
6 Fat lip.
1 CRATER BEER BRAT
2 WIG TSETSES
3 HOE EDGE REFUEL
4 INTO SOFTWARE
5 BEIGE MASHUP (~)
6 BAR FIGHT GIFT
My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Apparatus largely eliminated by battery powered alternatives. PELVIS-BIZ WIND-UP TOY.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@Ricky J Sirois 8:34
ReplyDeleteCongrats on your debut! Thought 2B Fare was a more-than-fair revealer. It’s RARES when this medium (Monday crosswords) is well done!
I had a hard time with this puzzle with more 10-12 cross outs. Looks ugly in pen. Same complaints that Rex had. I had MASHUP right away because I just guessed right. I couldn't think of anything but POUND. I've never heard RARES in collectible slang. That's awful.
ReplyDeleteI don't recall Julia Child ever writing a recipe for "beef bourguignon." Perhaps the constructor meant "boeuf bourguignon?"
ReplyDeleteYes!!!
DeleteWhat does "downs only" mean? Aren't there multiple possibilities for many clues? For "compass direction" would you put NNE, NNW, SSE, SSW, ESE, ENE, WNW or WSW?
ReplyDeleteYou would either have to keep guessing or use the acrosses... right? Or am I missing something.
Try it! You’ll see! You can infer so much. I haven’t failed a Downs-only solve in a while. Sometimes you get unlucky, but on Mondays it’s mostly doable ~RP
DeletePlenty of crunch for a Monday. I liked it a lot. The toughest entry for me, as always, were the cars. Or the ???CARS, as I thought they were. I'll explain.
ReplyDeleteI've always considered CAREER/CAREEN (6D)to be a kealoa. I liked CAREEN better in the case of this clue, so I wrote down the "N" in very pale ink. But then I saw that the last 4 letters of 26A had to be cArS, so I changed the N to an R in CAREEr. And there's an N to start. Could the Altimas and Pathfinders be NaScArS? (I had been thinking SUV CARS, but that didn't fit with what I had.
And what was cOFTWARE? So, yes, NISSANS, I figured you out eventually.
All that was left was to remember how to spell BOURGUIGNON. Oh how I love that dish!!!!
(There's French cuisine, and then there's everyone else's.)
I tried to guess the revealer, but couldn't. TO BE SURE made no sense. TO BE OR NOT TO BE made no sense. And there's no such thing as TO BE FOOD. And certainly not TWO B FOOD.
Aha! TO BE FAIR! Very nice!!! Fun puzzle and an excellent Monday.
FAIR and RARES is where I had trouble with this puzzle. Made it harder. I thought a 3 word pun was the opposite of RARE, well done. Liked it more than Rex.
Delete@Ricky J. Sirois, I thought your puzzle was a fine Monday offering, and I hope to see you again soon!
ReplyDeleteFrom what I could tell, this puzzle had a low PPP count which should please many people. I guess URDU could have messed up some folks (although to my recollection its been used in the past) if they didn’t know how to spell BEEFBOURGUIGNON (like me) but otherwise the crossings seemed very fair. I don’t think MERCI would even trip up @Southside, but AHORA is a word I hadn’t seen (or don’t remember) in a past puzzle.
I’m not sure why @Rex picked today to “pick on” AHOOT and a riot, other than the fact that “a riot” must be more common in crosswords. Also, I have NEVER confused CAREEN with career, but I guess you learn something every day. Nevertheless, I doubt I will ever say…”They careered toward the cliff.”
Speaking of names that lend themselves to x-words, I think that ANYA Taylor-Joy will probably continue to visit us often in the future.
lol at medley vs mashup nonsense here. Clue is absolutely, perfectly fine for MASHUP. And more appropriate, imo. For someone that carps about age inclusion, or exclusion, funny to see Rex show his age here. Susanna Hoffs would call this puzzle “Just Another Mashup Monday”.
ReplyDeleteMedley v Mashup v Remix - classic Reddit threads where folks get all worked up discussing esoteric differences.
As to the puzzle. Great Monday. Perfectly wacky, clever revealer. Some unfortunate fill, yes, but overall a winner. Good job Ricky, and hope to see more from you. Wear that Rex pan proudly, I know I would.
I think your own comment might be arguing against the point you're trying to make. A remix is not at all the same as a medley or mashup, so claiming "esoterical differences" between completely different terms isn't a solid argument.
DeleteI found this harder than most Mondays which is a feature not a bug. I'm never bothered by bad puns so no problem with the theme. I had no idea what it was going to be as I was solving the problem. I wasn't particularly bothered by RARES because as a child I collected stamps. Are my first day issues from Somalia RARES? Only two names I didn't know ZACH and EMIL, both crossed fairly.
ReplyDeleteOh, should add, downs only solve, I think personal best time for that, but don’t keep logs of when I started trying. I also think critiques of a puzzle influenced by solving that way, is absurd. But it’s kinda becoming the Monday norm here. C’est la vie.
ReplyDeleteTO BE sure, the pun was pretty good, and made the theme a lot more interesting. Except it didn't work with 'sure,' so I needed a bunch of crosses to change it -- and needed the FAI before I could bring myself to accept RARES. It's in a tight space, crossing a theme answer and the revealer, so I'll cut it some slack. Maybe define it as "dorm supervisor's rm?" That's probably worse.
ReplyDeleteWhat dance did they do at that wedding? A HORA.
"The National Gallery is great! Would the Courtauld be your next recommendation?"
NO, TATE
OK, enough of that.
This was an easy, enjoyable, typical Monday.
ReplyDeleteIn all fairness to Ricky, was it fair to compare it to last Monday's puzzle constructed by our SB Sam Ezersky?
Thanks for your post, Ricky. It was good to hear from a constructor on the blog, especially on his debut! Thank you & hope to see you again soon :)
Thought there was more than enough interesting fill to make up for the gunk (although, to be fair, I missed RARES completely - that's an oof), and the theme + revealer was also more than enough to make for a fun Monday in my book. Had INABIT before INAFEW, but that sorted out quickly enough. Was extremely proud of myself for knowing BEEFBOURGUIGNON immediately, then equally ashamed of myself for not having the foggiest clue how to spell it; still, throwing down 9/15 letters without a care in the world on the first pass was a nice thing.
ReplyDeleteWelcome to the club, Mr. Sirois! Looking forward to more...
I thought the international menu of double-B foods was great and the reveal ingenious and witty. It was a fun moment when "Two-B fare" clicked into place as I was writing in TO BE FAIR. I also liked the instruction to MASH the BEAN component of the BURRITO. The cross of MERCI with the German BRAT and Mexican BURRITO reminded me of the foreign language wire-crossing that can sometimes happen, like when I greeted a taxi driver in Rome with "Guten Tag" - that was in 2012 and I'm still shaking my HEAD over it.
ReplyDelete@Ricky J. Sirois - Congratulations on the fine debut!
CAREEN/career brought this to mind:
ReplyDeleteBlack sable one day.
Next day it goes into hock,
But I'm here.
Top billing Monday,
Tuesday you're touring in stock,
But I'm here.
First you're another
Sloe-eyed vamp,
Then someone's mother,
Then you're camp.
Then you CAREEr from career
To career.
I'm almost through my memoirs.
And I'm here.
Stephen Sondheim
"I'm Still Here"
Follies
BANANABREAD! M&A's PuzEatinSpouse just yesterday held a bake-a-thon, which included cookies, pineapple upside-down cake, and banana (yum) bread. They were all mighty good bakes, btw.
ReplyDeleteCool find of all them BB-foods. Great revealer, to sum em all up.
staff weeject pick: REF. Had a rare MonPuz ?-marker clue.
Pretty easy puz overall, but some occasional names chewed on my nanoseconds. ANYA/SARTRE slowed m&e down a bite. ZACH & SHEA butter each also RARES up in my memories, but they had 2-B-fair crossers.
fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {First word of many a letter} = DEAR.
other fave stuff: BARFIGHT. CAREEN. SOFTWARE. MASHUP. UNIQUE. ZODIAC. SATURN.
Thanx for the fun and congratz on yer debut, Mr. Sirois dude. Now, better go easy playin with them BB-foods … yoU'll put yer eye out!
Masked & Anonym007Us
@Ben at 9:49, if you check the beef recipes at JuliaChild.com you'll find her recipe for "Julia Child's BEEF Bourguignon."
ReplyDeleteBorrowed spellings from other languages can be inconsistent, to say the least, but the use of the English "beef" in this context is well-established.
I, of course, failed miserably this time at Downs only. But at least I didn't spend a lot of time griping about how bad the puzzle was. 😁 (Although, RARES is certainly worth complaining about)
ReplyDeleteThe man in the moon's features are MARIA, not CRATERs. Craters would be just little zits on the face.
ReplyDeleteRe solving "down clues only": as I've said several times, I do it simply because on a Monday it is WAY more challenging and fun compared to reading all clues. And notice that the things Rex criticizes are valid no matter what solving method you use.
ReplyDeleteBasically, on Monday I can get enough of the down answers correct to guess the theme across answers without the clues. And here, the theme was obvious enough that i could guess the revealer as well. And once I get enough of the acrosses, I can get the downs that I missed at first.
@okanaganer (1:10 PM)
ReplyDeleteWell said! :)
___
Peace 🕊 🇺🇦 ~ Compassion ~ Tolerance ~ Kindness ~ Freudenfreude & a DAP to all 👊 🙏
@Bruce R 9:03 beat me to it. One of the reasons that the 24A "Vegetarian dish on a Mexican menu" BEAN BURRITO tastes so good is that the refried BEANs in the BURRITO are cooked using lard, bacon grease (same thing I guess) or butter or a combination of those. So it's not really a vegetarian dish but compared to eating, say, a BEER BRAT, it's close enough.
ReplyDelete1A ZODIAC brought back fond memories of watching "The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau" back in the 60s-70s. He invented the "aqua lung", that became known as SCUBA*, in the 40s which revolutionized underwater exploration. On his show they would leave the mother ship Calypso and use a brand of inflatable boat called a ZODIAC to go exploring.
*Self Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus
Hmm, just learned that downs-only Monday was a thing. OK.
ReplyDeleteActually, this was one of the few Mondays where I actually was thinking of how much fun I was having as I went along. So, as always, one's mileage may vary.
Yes, it's a Monday, so that's a fare reason for less-than-fair theme, clues and fill? What a Blithering Bucket of Bone Broth!
ReplyDeleteZODIAC is not a chart; it's a band of constellations.
Man in the Moon features are not CRATERS; they're maria, or "seas".
A REFEREE keeps order on the court. REF is a short, informal name for one.
RARES is not a word. Rare is not a noun.
The name Edson Arantes do Nascimento consists of 4 (four) words. The soccer icon by that name is known by his nickname, PELÉ.
PELE is standard crosswordese.
DeleteMost solvers knew what was meant. Most people do not know the name he was born with. That would be for a Saturday. Clues are not definitions but hints.
Nothing wrong here.
Ref also standard crosswordese It is so commonly used now that it is beginning to be its own word. Also, I don’t think there is any rule that requires “for short “ Again a clue is a hint not a definition. This caused no one any problems.
RARES is an outlier answer for a Monday. It is used by collectors and sellers of say stamps and coins. It is a plural noun as used.
As confirmed by a post above.
The constructor did say he regretted the choice. But I see nothing wrong with it later in the week
Need a way to distinguish between crossword criticisms based on structural deficiencies (unfair crosses, awkward plurals, etc.) vs. a solver’s subjective experience. Sometimes I read a review and think, “sounds like a you problem.”
ReplyDeleteLiked this puzzle! It was like a good Thanksgiving stuffing — lots to bite into but without a ton of resistance*.
*For those of us who were solving without a hand tied behind the back.
Are there no Letterkenny fans here?!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G19B7lTgwCE
@jberg 10:28 -- RARES
ReplyDeleteAnother possibility:
In certain regions of England, and parts of the American South and Midwest, rear is pronounced and spelled rare. While a horse “rears up” on its hind legs in standard English, it “rares up” in these dialects.
A tad on the BEIGE side. The theme is just not that exciting.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year! We have a pretty sticky Monday to kick things off. First: song created from multiple songs is a perfect description of a Medley, and with that M in place...um, no. It's a--a MASHUP. Fool me once.
ReplyDeleteThen, soon = INA...with all those Bs flying around, naturally I went with INAbit. No. Fool me twice. Then I tried INAsEc. ARGH! Strike three! Creating a massive inkblot, I finally wrote INAFEW. What a mess!
At the very end, I picked up on that FAIR/fare pun and put it all together. But it was more of a groan moment than an aha one. I didn't like a lot of the fill; it was not AHOOT. Par.
Wordle par.
AWAIT AFEW, AHORA ADO
ReplyDeleteTOBEFAIR, on her AGENDA,
ANN'S not ONE for BEER with HEAD,
IN A BARFIGHT I'd defend her,
end the BEEF, and then GET BREAD.
--- EMIL NOBEL
Fairly easy Monday, the hardest thing being needing almost all the crossing letters to spell bourgignon correctly . Rares is a word in the collecting world, especially the coin and stamp collecting world. My father and sister were collectors of both. Plus, as a side job, my sister worked in a coin and stamp shop. Wow, you learned something on a Monday, I thought there was a crossword rule against that.
ReplyDeleteHard to miss the 2B-something-to-eat theme. After the second one appeared I almost went for the Betty Crocker cookbook index to see how many I could find.
ReplyDeleteWordle birdie.