Tuesday, September 16, 2025

A shopper, not a buyer, informally / TUE 9-16-25 / Fashion house named for its founder, Signor Garavani / Miss Havisham's ward in "Great Expectations" / Licorice-flavored spice / Cable inits. for cinephiles / High-status American Express offering / Motion of receding waves

Constructor: Jonathan Daly

Relative difficulty: Easy


THEME: ALL ABOARD (63A: Train conductor's cry ... or a hint to each word in the answers to the starred clues) — each part of the two-part theme answers is a type of "board" (and can precede "board" in a familiar phrase):

Theme answers:
  • BLACK CARD (17A: *High-status American Express offering)
  • KEY-CUTTING (25A: *Task for a locksmith)
  • BACKWASH (31A: *Motion of receding waves)
  • SEA FLOOR (45A: *Bottom of the ocean)
  • HEADCHEESE (52A: *Product of meat scraps that, despite its name, is dairy-free)
Word of the Day: TMC (27D: Cable inits. for cinephiles) —
The Movie Channel
 (often abbreviated as TMC) is an American premium television network owned by Showtime Networks, a division of Paramount Skydance Corporation operated through its Paramount Media Networks division. Not including CBS, it is the oldest network owned by Paramount. The Movie Channel's programming mainly features first-run theatrically released and independently produced motion pictures, and during promotional breaks between films, special behind-the-scenes features and movie trivia. Originally operated and sold as a standalone service (launching as Star Channel in April 1973), at present, The Movie Channel is receivable to pay television subscribers primarily as part of the multiplex tier of parent network Showtime. The channel, along with its parent network Showtime and sister network Flix, is headquartered at Paramount Plaza on the northern end of New York City's Broadway district. (wikipedia)
• • •

Wow, I guess we're really bringing this theme type back. It's been just one week since the last time we've seen a "both-words"-type puzzle. Last week I said that it was a type of theme you used to see from time to time, but that it seemed to have fallen out of fashion, or wasn't being used as much. I was surprised to see the theme type last week. I'm even more surprised to see it again this week. I figured it would drift back to the bottom of the theme-type box, but I guess it's endlessly renewable, in theory, so why not. I'm not usually a huge fan of these puzzle types unless the resulting themers are actually cool phrases *and* there's a decent revealer. Today's revealer does alright—a repurposed train phrase? That's pretty clever. On a literal level, grammatically, it's a teeny bit wonky (all the answer parts are boards, plural; each is A BOARD), but it's close enough for crosswords (i.e. you gotta give a revealer some wackiness slack, or wackyslack, as I'm now, as of this second, calling it). And the themers themselves are all solid phrases. Nothing iffy foisted upon us solely because it fits the theme. But then, on the other other hand, two of those answers are BACKWASH and HEADCHEESE, which are about as unappetizing a pair of themers as you're going to find. If I may paraphrase completely rewrite the old Folgers commercial: "The worst part of waking up / Is HEADCHEESE (and/or BACKWASH) in your puzz!" 


I know that they've got BACKWASH clued as some kind of wave phenomenon here, but come on, BACKWASH is the return of drink+saliva into a cup or can. BACKWASH is why you don't want to drink someone else's drink when the drink's almost gone. Mostly BACKWASH by then. I've never heard BACKWASH used in reference to wave motion. Nice try, puzzle, but this answer remains inherently gross. But vivid. All the themers were vivid, and that's probably what counts most in an easy early-week puzzle. I do wish the rest of the grid had been at least a little bit interesting. Felt like I was running into repeaters way too often. ENYA LEIA KIEAS EWE OUI UNA ONO POR ETTA SERTA ... and EKING! The whole EKE family is very prominent in CrossWorld, but EKING is the patriarch. The king, really. If you thought you never saw "EKE" anywhere but crosswords, true, but especially true of EKING, who will roam the halls of crosswords for eternity despite not having seen or heard in regular conversation, outside a crossword grid, since 1931. After the inevitable A.I. takeover, all countries will be run by E-KINGs. Can't wait.


ANISESEED has to be the weakest 9 there is (32D: Licorice-flavored spice). All 1-pt Scrabble tiles. Just blah. Waste of a nice big answer. I want to like LOOKIE-LOO, but I am not sure about the spelling there (11D: A shopper, not a buyer, informally). I would've spelled it LOOKY-LOO. To be clear, I wouldn't use it at all unless I was being ironically whimsical, but if forced to spell it, I'd've gone "Y." Looks like different dictionaries make different choices. I think OED has it as "looky" but merriam-webster.com has it "lookie." Both seem reasonable. So that was the one longer non-theme answer I enjoyed. After the unsavoriness of BACKWASH and HEADCHEESE, you'd think the puzzle would steer clear of any other answers with a high ick factor, but then—emanating straight out of HEADCHEESE—comes the SEWAGE. Yeah, that tracks with the E-COLI I saw earlier in the grid. 

More more more:
  • 15A: ___ Dictionary (crowdsourced online reference) (URBAN) — not very useful because so often illiterate, but it can be entertaining if you're trying to find out about slang terms and what the majority of people think they mean. Someone once sent me an URBAN Dictionary mug with the term "Natick" on it. The definition could probably be better written, but I still love it.

  • 38A: Miss Havisham's ward in "Great Expectations" (ESTELLA) — like ANISESEED, another long name filled with all boring letters. ESTELLA ANISESEED is what you would call a fictional character who was really into crosswords. 
  • 44D: Chicago airport code (ORD) / 55D: Chicago airport (O'HARE) — what are we doing here? Besides clogging the grid with even more crosswordese. Unless you do some kind of clever crossreference, this is just a sad dupe.
  • 27D: Cable inits. for cinephiles (TMC) — As I will apparently never tire of saying, "cinephiles" watch TCM (not TMC). I got so tired of seeing TMC clued as a station for "cinephiles" that I finally just looked it up to see exactly what it was (see "Word of the Day," above). Far as I can tell, it's one of countless movie options in your premium cable package. No idea what makes it distinct from any other. It's not a station "for cinephiles." It's a station for people who are scanning the infinite list of channels and finally just get bored and settle for that just-OK movie that was really popular once. You know ... that one. Actually, The Firm is on TMC right now. Yes, that seems right. (Actually, Alan J. Pakula's The Parallax View (a '70s paranoia thriller starring Warren Beatty) is on at 9:35am EDT, Hitchcock's To Catch a Thief at 1pm, and Sofia Coppola's The Virgin Suicides at 2:50—those are great movies. TCM-worthy, for sure)

That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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66 comments:


  1. Easy. No overwrites, one (maybe) WOE, ESTELLA at 38A. I had all the letters before I read the clue, so I'm not sure if I would have pulled it out of the synapses or not.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Bob Mills5:56 AM

    Mostly easy for me, albeit I never caught on to the theme until reading Rex' column. One nit...I spent a career with Wall St. firms without having an MBA (did OK) and most stockbrokers then had a bachelor's degree at most. Very misleading clue, and overly flattering to Wall St. firms.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:38 PM

      Maybe they should have clued it as Investment Bankers instead

      Delete
  3. Anonymous6:00 AM

    Agree about anise seed!!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Rex nailed it this morning - strained theme and marginal fill. The BACKWASH - HEADCHEESE combo is rough and the revealer is open ended.

    Miserlou

    The TCM ruse has been going on far too long. Likes ANISE SEED more than Rex and SEA FLOOR and VALENTINO were solid. Our old rivals SERTA and Sealy together today @Z would have loved it.

    Brian Fallon

    I’ll take a pass on this one.

    I’m Always Touched By Your Presence Dear

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous6:20 AM

    How are ORD and OHARE allowed in the same crossword? Two references to the same freaking airport?

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous6:42 AM

    I'm very upset that you did not take the opportunity to post a picture of a beagle with floppy ears.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Paolo Pasco Jeopardy watch, day four.

    The top-tier crossword constructor/solver entered Final Jeopardy down nearly $11,000. The question was, “Today it’s used as a verb in social media; in previous centuries its meaning included an enemy and not a Quaker.”

    Pasco was the only contestant to get it right (the answer is below, in a reply). He wagered $1 more than the opponent who led, pulling out the victory. His four-day winnings now stand at $107,342.

    Go Paolo!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:09 AM

      Are you related to this person? Curious about these random daily updates. Good for him tho!

      Delete
    2. Thank you Lewis for the update. In NYC, Jeopardy was pre-empted by Monday Night Football & I didn't feel like staying up until 2 am to watch it & couldn't record it b/c it wasn't on the schedule. Excited about Paolo, thanks again :)

      Delete
    3. @anon 8:09 -- Paolo Paco is a top tier crossword constructor; he's also won the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament twice. Many solvers know his name. Many solvers are also Jeopardy fans. Thus these updates.

      Delete
    4. To stand looking in the face of doom, and still be so cool headed as to figure your wager exactly to the dollar? And then answer the question correctly! Beyond impressive .

      Delete
  8. Andy Freude6:52 AM

    Agreed. That really stuck out for me. On the other hand, the Sealy/Serta kealoa was nicely averted.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Andy Freude10:54 AM

      The above in response to Anonymous 6:42 re ORD and OHARE in the same puzzle.

      Delete
  9. Final Jeopardy answer: UNFRIEND.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymous6:56 AM

    Ewww, I have never in my life heard Rex's description of BACKWASH. I knew only the wave-action version. Certainly spices up the pairing with HEADCHEESE.

    ReplyDelete
  11. EasyEd7:09 AM

    Eew! Was not familiar with Rex’s extended definition of BACKWASH, so learned something this morning but somehow do not feel more educated. Overall tho kinda liked his BLACK-humorous approach to the puzzle today. Initially did not get the happy music on finishing the puzzle—problem was I had eNO where ONO should have been, but ENO is such common crosswordese that the mistake didn’t register right away as I checked the across answers. Gotta read the clues dummy!

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous7:16 AM

    I recently watched The Firm and I am here to tell you that it is both terrible and extremely long. Save yourselves.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous8:41 AM

      Gotta disagree. I'm not a die-hard Cruise fan but he was good in this, and the rest of the cast is fabulous: David Strathairn, Ed Harris, Holly Hunter, Jeanne Tripplehorn, and, especially, Gene Hackman. To me it's well paced and very engaging.

      Delete
  13. If almost every puzzle is rated easy or easy-medium, perhaps it's time to recalibrate the rating system?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Jeremy12:59 PM

      Or perhaps it's time for the NYT to stop dumbing down its crosswords. They've become FAR too easy, even late in the week.

      Delete
    2. Anonymous3:45 PM

      Speak for yourself. I can only do Mon-Wed. We aren't all crossword whizzes. Which is why I consult Rex Parker. If I ever try a late-week puzzle, it is only after seeing that Rex rated it Easy.

      Delete
  14. Hey All !
    I worked in a deli many moons ago, there's two types (imagine that) of HEAD CHEESE, both nasty. One is that gelatinous substance with bits of meat inside (shudder) that's quite difficult to slice, the other type we had was a firm meat-thing, that still had the meat pieces in it, but no gelatin. Not as nasty, easier to slice, but still, with all the deli meat choices, that's what you go for?

    Got yer ASS today. It missed a few days, amazingly enough.

    Good TuesPuz. Normal time for me today. Both words Theme. Surprised Rex didn't go off on GOP. 😁

    Welp, have a great Tuesday!

    Two F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  15. Oh, prime revealer, one that lands perfectly. Bow-down beautiful. A phrase I’ve heard all my life – ALL ABOARD – re-parsed in combination with the theme answers so I see it with fresh eyes, bringing a bow and a wow. Hall of Fame revealer.

    And it’s in the right place, down low, not in the middle where it would have given everything away too soon. Every theme answer checks out perfectly.

    A splendid theme never done before in any of the major outlets. Kudos for originality, Jonathan. Those theme answers add spark to the grid, too, with two being NYT answer debuts and the other three being once-befores.

    Beauty comes in many flavors – even in crossword themes. See also: KISMET and LITHE. And, in my case at least, such beauty makes any nits go poof.

    Congratulations on your debut, Jonathan, and thank you so much for this day brightener!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous3:47 PM

      Agreed! Loved this puzzle!

      Delete
  16. Odd puzzle in that while it was squarely a Tuesday, 80% felt like a Monday and then all the difficulty was crammed into the NE corner.

    I've never seen aniseseed; only aniseed. Not saying it's not out there, just that I don't encounter it.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Very good Tuesday. Yes, the theme is old-style, but it’s really well done.

    I think that by this point Shortz is just trolling Rex by using “cinephiles” to clue TMC. Seems to happen every week. But if it spurs Rex to link to “The Parallax View”, I’m cool, because that movie is phenomenal. Stands right next to “Bonnie and Clyde” as Beatty’s best work IMO.

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  18. I’m a reluctant pool owner. When the filter gets dirty from time to time, I have to do a BACKWASH to clean it out. So for me the word doesn’t have quite the same gross connotation it does for Rex.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Simplemente no está tan interesado en ti.

    That's a heckuva lotta theme and yet the fill holds up pretty well as long as you don't mind seeing the who's who of crosswordese people. I love the revealer.

    BACKWASH is why you don't share Cokes.

    LITHE is on my favorite word list between LOLL and TABOO.

    People: 8
    Places: 1
    Products: 6
    Partials: 6
    Foreignisms: 4
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 25 of 78 (32%)

    Funny Factor: 1 🤨

    Tee-Hee: ASS.

    Uniclues:

    1 To be the subject of some terrible biopics obsessed with her love life.
    2 Where the skillful gnats go.
    3 Your ex lunk of a boyfriend.

    1 LEIA KISMET
    2 ADEPT ENTER EAR
    3 MEATY CASTASIDE

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: After workout wear for a Svalbardian. GYM BAG PARKA.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
  20. I liked the fact that the NE put up some resistance for me, with both VALENTINO and LOOKIELOO needing help from the crosses. Also, ECOLI is so ubiquitous (at least in XWorld) that I temporarily forgot that it’s an abbreviation. I’m sure KEY CUTTING gets used in some corners, it’s just not a term or a phrase that I’ve had an opportunity to contemplate before today. It was nice to have to bob and weave my way through a section on a Tuesday.

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  21. Easy. Solved downs only. If not my first ever successful downs only Tuesday, close to.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Anonymous8:09 AM

    Personally I’ve never heard someone use anise seed when just anise will do

    ReplyDelete
  23. Ick, Rex. Kinda wishing I hadn't read your review after doing such a good Tuesday puzzle! I'm with Lewis and Sir Hillary today; this was well done and had some fine words in it, including CAMEO, CROAK, LITHE, KISMET, ESTELLA, and (love it): LOOKIELOO, which made me smile. I'm going to CAST ASIDE Rex's complaints and just enjoy the experience.

    ReplyDelete
  24. Diane Joan8:27 AM

    I loved the puzzle. I was picturing the beautiful ocean scene invoked by the clue for backwash when I came upon “HEADCHEESE” and felt nauseous for a bit relieved by the “SEAFLOOR” further on. I enjoyed your write-up, Rex, on the E-Kings. I had two experiences this week with AI trying to solve my service problems. Both were fully inadequate: one didn’t know the date and kept insisting an item was going to be delivered on a date that had long passed and the other kept sending me to a defunct site that said sorry we can’t help you. Both required real people to step in. I think it’ll be a long time before we’ll be saying “Hail to the E-King”!

    ReplyDelete
  25. Anonymous8:47 AM

    See, I've had a job where BACKWASH was used in the context they provided, so I knew the answer immediately... Still gross AF, thoigh

    ReplyDelete
  26. Anonymous8:56 AM

    RPs review today outshone the puzzle, although the theme was fine.

    That idea of Shortz trolling Rex @Sir Hillary 751: this is second time we've seen "both words" theme in a week after not having seen it for a long time? This is how paranoia begins...

    ReplyDelete
  27. My immediate reaction is that the puzzle was SO-SO. Easy to medium for a Tuesday, with the medium being partially accounted for by VALENTINO (sorry, Signor WHO?) and ESTELLA (I would not have gotten it without crosses). Easy partially accounted for by the childlike cluing for WHO (I just imagine a Wiggles sing-along about birds where Greg goes, "and the owl says hoo! and the rooster goes cockle-doodle-do!") and for the sunrise direction EAST. A familiar litany of fill that Rex capably summarized.

    LOOKIE-LOO inevitably reminds me of dear Frantic Sloth, whom I miss, and who used that phrase for the situation where one answer in the puzzle refers to another. (By the way, it was good to see Gill I. yesterday -- I was wondering where she'd been and hoping it wasn't anything bad that would explain her absence.)

    This is the first time I've seen Rex complain about certain letters being boring (the letters in ANISE SEED and in ESTELLA), "all 1-point Scrabble tiles", even though D is worth two. On other occasions he's groused about Scrabble f**kery -- was that was the term of art? -- where a puzzle has letters from high-value tiles like J, Q, X, Z. Which I can kind of get if their inclusion seems slightly gratuitous, but complaining that high-frequency letters are "boring" strikes me as strange. Those 1-point tiles are not so boring in the context of Scrabble when they are conducive to bingoes (using all seven tiles on one's rack, adding a 50-point bonus), and even more exciting is getting a 0-point tile which is even more conducive to bingoing (is "bingoing" a Scrabble word? sadly, no).

    Yes, plenty of ick to go around. On everyone's favorite topic of SEWAGE: from a Scrabble game I was watching the other day, I learned the word "fatberg". Do you know about these things? A fatberg is a sort of concretion, often starting with something non-biodegradable like flushable wipes to which other compounds like fat, oil, and grease can adhere, and snowballing from there into sometimes monstrously large objects that are hard as rock, viciously blocking sewer systems. A famous example was from Whitechapel in London, 2017, weighing in at a whopping 130 tonnes. Not exactly a good breakfast conversation -- sorry about that -- I guess I have this on the brain because we had to get our septic system fixed the other day, which occasioned a couple of weeks of water rationing.

    It seems the mind wanders when looking at a relatively blah puzzle.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I hadn't head the term "Fatberg" before, but I happen to be watching The Paper on Peacock right now, and a fatberg plays a very large role in one episode. The show is, in effect, a continuation of The Office and is cringey-amusing.

      Delete
  28. Not my fastest Tuesday solve, but it felt quick - and I filled enough in my first pass to avoid most of the annoying crosswordese. My favorite fills were CUKE, VALENTINO, and SEAFLOOR.

    ReplyDelete
  29. After finishing this I was trying to think of other apt themer possibilities and I guess I seemed preoccupied, leading to this exchange:
    Mrs. Egs: Is something wrong dear?
    Egs: No, I just can't get board out of my mind.
    Mrs. Egs: You could try thinking of our sex life over the last decade.

    I've been trying not to dwell too much on the tee-hee stuff of late, but BUM, ASS and ENTER is worth a little snippet of a snort.

    Probably shouldn't have had other board-friendly words, like CLIP and ORDER, in the grid, but a nice mass of board-certified finds. Thanks and congrats, Jonathan Daly.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Also had Behind and Rear in consecutive clues at 40D and 41D. It's a puzzle version of the Tush Push.

      Delete
  30. Discussion nobody asked for department:
    I always wonder if BACKWASH actually happens to the extent worthy of the big ick people express. Do you really lean over and allow saliva back into your drink? Usually your head is tilted back, so I can’t really fathom how this supposed plethora of backwash is supposed to accumulate. Sure, a straw allows for back flow, but do you allow it to suck saliva back out?

    It would have been nice to have a ____Jennings clue today to honor Paolo.

    ReplyDelete
  31. Ideal revealer and in the right place, and I didn't see it coming, so that's as good as it gets (hi @Lewis).

    Also hi to ESTELA and ELLEN as clued. Nice to meet you, and thanks for your obvious crosses.

    Two things that are fun to say today, LOOKIELOO, which I may or may not have heard before, and OFL's wonderful neologism "wackyslack", which I now hope appears often.

    Does anyone say BUM a cigarette any more? I used to hear it often in college, when everyone still smoked, but not in at least the forty or so years since I quit.

    I did sample HEADCHEESE in Spain without knowing what it was, probably better that way.

    Impressive debut for those of us who like this kind of stuff JD, Justly Deemed worthy of publication, congrats on the debut, and thanks for all the fun.

    ReplyDelete
  32. In defense of “Eek! It’s EKE!”, always reminds me of Randy Newman SPEAKSINGing (with the great Mark Knopfler STRUMPICKing).

    “All of these people are much brighter than I
    In any fair system they would flourish and thrive
    But they barely survive
    They EKE out a living, they barely survive…”

    It’s Money That Matters!

    ReplyDelete
  33. Cute & disgusting - BACKWASH.
    And it's TCM - not TMC!
    Congrats on your debut, Jonathan :)

    ReplyDelete
  34. Easy. No costly erasures and ESTELLA was it for WOEs.

    Classic theme and a smooth grid with some excellent long downs, liked it.

    More Emmy opinions - @Les - Hacks has some of the same likability problems that The Studio has IMHO. I highly recommend Season 4 of The Bear because of an unexpected plot twist and outstanding performances by Ayo Edebiri and Jamie Lee Curtis.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Anonymous11:16 AM

    I don't care if you can't find it in your heart to love HEAD CHEESE (unfortunately named, not that different from many other kinds of sausage); I just can't get around the idea that some people think they get more status from having the right credit card.

    I'm also wondering how the barkeep in your favorite pub would react if you asked for a "pintful" of anything. I guess an American accent would excuse it.

    ReplyDelete
  36. I've been going to delicatessens all my life. My mother used to send me there. I've always been repelled by the sight of HEADCHEESE in the display cases. I've never seen anyone order it. Is it good?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:48 PM

      The only way to overcome the revulsion is to lather it with mustard.

      Delete
  37. Nitpick alert- extra E in the writeup - KIeAS.

    ReplyDelete
  38. Jeremy12:55 PM

    I would have clued EKING as "Singer Ben" or, perhaps making it too easy, "'Stand By Me' singer Ben."

    ReplyDelete
  39. Bob Mills1:21 PM

    For Anonymous 11:16...They not only pretend that one credit card is better than another, they assume we think there's a difference, too.
    "What's in your wallet?" "None of your ----ing business."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. ChrisS2:15 PM

      Never have and never will pay for a credit card, but some of the expensive ones have some decent perks (airport lounge, elite status, early access to tickets,...)

      Delete
  40. Once again, I started doing down clues only but soon got impatient and switched to "normal" mode. Pretty straightforward, although it took a minute of thinking to get the theme, which is just fine for a Tuesday.

    Hands up for LOOKYLOO at first, but quickly fixed because too short. I can't remember any other typeovers!

    And of course I plumb forgot to watch Jeopardy last night. Maybe I'll watch it at lunch, then I can watch today's show this evening to stay up to date. Go Paolo!

    ReplyDelete
  41. Anonymous2:31 PM

    I very much enjoyed this variation the "all words in the theme answers take the revealer word", and I think it was particularly well-done for a Tuesday, with all five of the longest across answers fitting the theme. Unlike some versions of this I've seen, all of the theme answers are common phrases (less so HEADCHEESE, and BACKWASH is a disgusting word to use in a puzzle, but I'll give it a pass), *and* all ten of the answers work very well with the revealer- nobody is going to solve this and think, "What's a floorboard?!"

    ReplyDelete
  42. If you think BACKWASH is icky, you definitely don't want to look up HEAD CHEESE at URBANdictionary.com.

    ReplyDelete
  43. Anonymous3:11 PM

    I’ve only ever heard BACKWASH in the context of a receding ocean wave, perhaps a legacy of a childhood on the eastern SEABOARD being warned, “Careful, kid, don’t get sucked out to sea with the backwash!” Maybe it’s something only careless kids & surfers know. (Never actually heard the yucky mouth-germs connotation till I read the comments today!)

    Also, I could have sworn there was no such thing in the entire world as a KEY BOARD until Google reminded me of the one-word version and the existence of pianos. Funny how words can seem completely unfamiliar out of context!

    Difficulty level did seem more Monday ish than Tuesday ish. My time on this one was half my usual Tuesday time!

    ReplyDelete
  44. Anonymous3:48 PM

    After ARC and ORC I was looking for a word ladder, but nope, just boards

    ReplyDelete
  45. Anonymous4:05 PM

    TRADITIONAL HOG'S HEAD CHEESE RECIPE

    Ingredients
    1 hog's head
    4-5 bay leaves
    salt to taste
    black pepper to taste
    optional: garlic onion or leeks

    Instructions
    Place clean hog's head in pot, cut side down and snout up.
    Add water until the pig's head is covered or until water comes within 2 inches of pot's rim.
    Cover pot with a lid.
    Set pot under high heat on stove until it boils, then reduce to a simmer.
    Simmer the pig's head for 12 hours or until meat falls off the bones.
    Let cool until you can safely handle the head and broth.
    Lift the pig head out and place on a baking pan.
    Remove meat from cheeks, tongue and head.
    Roughly chop or shred, then refrigerate meat until ready to use.
    Pour the broth through a strainer to catch unwanted bits.
    Rinse the pot and pour broth back in.
    Also add bay leaf, onions, garlic, leeks or anything else you want to flavor the liquor with.
    Boil the broth until there's 2 inches or less of liquid in the pot.
    Add salt, erroring on the side of slightly over salting.
    Let broth cool until you can safely handle and strain it once again.
    If adding to your head cheese, cook onions, garlic or leeks in lard until soft.
    Layer sauteed alliums in bread pans with meat.
    Generously pour the salted liquor over the meat.
    Place bread pans in the fridge overnight for 8-10 hours or until set.
    Cut into pieces and serve cold with slices of crusty, homemade bread.
    To preserve: refrigerate up to 1 week, or wrap well and freeze for later use.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. To quote from the recipe, I think I will "error on" the side of never iever making this for any reason! ;-D

      Delete
  46. Anonymous5:38 PM

    Another nitpick - a “D” is worth 2 points in Scrabble, not one point.

    ReplyDelete
  47. I love head cheese especially the pate & head cheese banh mi from Saigon Deli. Agree with BACKWASH, tho. Blech!

    ReplyDelete
  48. Penelope7:20 PM

    Fun Tuesday thanks Jonathan D. The assassin wasn’t trans but his boyfriend was. I think I’ve found the opening sentence of my new neo noir novel. Thanks Tyler !

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  49. Had a great time with this one - loved the theme (yes, a bit old school but if it works, bring it on) and the revealer was close to perfect.
    Personally, I got a kick out of all the ick! (I just coined that phrase so it's mine, lay off.) So we have HEADCHEESE and BAKCKWASH (I've only known the latter to mean the last few drops in the bottle that you don't want to sip if it's not yours, so the clue didn't help much). I got a good chuckle out of all of it.
    This along with some rated PG13 stuff - ASS, BUM - it was almost like watching a gross-out movie that you were embarrassed to admit that you saw twice because it was so fun. Please don't judge me!
    Just a bit of somewhat stale fill but nothing too bad. Not familiar with LOOKIELOO so that took some crosses, not terribly excited with the new knowledge as I'll never use this word but it's kinda fun to say, so there's that.
    The themers all land really well and I love that both words work.
    Thanks for the great ride, Jonathan!

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  50. Anonymous9:09 PM

    Am I the only one bothered by “Levi’s alternative” = LEES? Should be LEE, unless you clue it as “alternatives”, plural

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