Beverage that was invented in a Dairy Queen / FRI 9-12-25 / Hem, but not haw? / Intoxicate, quaintly / Idea for a pair of trick-or-treaters / French for "dainty" / Accessory out West
Friday, September 12, 2025
Constructor: Joe Marquez
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
Word of the Day: ICEE (46D: Beverage that was invented in a Dairy Queen) —
The Icee Company (also known as Western Icee and Icee USA) is an American beverage company located in La Vergne, Tennessee, United States.[1] Its flagship product is the Icee (stylized as ICEE), which is a frozen carbonated beverage available in fruit and soda flavors. Icee also produces other frozen beverages and Italian ice pops under the Icee and Slush Puppie brands. ICEE Bear, an animated polar bear, is the company's mascot.
The Icee Company was founded by Omar Knedlik, the inventor of the original Icee drink. It became the foundation for the Slurpee and other frozen machine drinks after several machines made by the company were purchased by 7-Eleven in 1965. It has been a division of J & J Snack Foods since 1988 and distributes products in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Guatemala, Australia, the United Kingdom, China, and the Middle East.
The Icee was invented in 1958 by Omar Knedlik, a Dairy Queen owner in Coffeyville, Kansas. The beverage was the result of faulty equipment in the Dairy Queen owned by Knedlik. His soda machine broke and he began placing bottles of soda in the freezer to keep them cold. Knedlik began selling bottles of the soda which would instantly turn to slush once opened. The frozen soda became popular with the customers of the establishment. (wikipedia)
• • •
There are hardly any proper nouns in this puzzle, and ... no celebrity names, is that right? Yes, unless you consider SHE-RA a celebrity, that is right. Highly unusual for a modern puzzle. And since names are frequently sources of trouble for solvers, their absence is gonna make this puzzle play easier than usual. The grid has hardly anything in it that isn't widely known, totally familiar. It's the cluing that makes it difficult (in the few places that it's difficult). So it's very inviting, very non-exclusionary. It's also really smooth. The short gunk is minimal (TGI is the absolute worst, bury it in the deepest pit, please ... but nothing else is nearly so awful). Plus, marquee fill is up where it should be, in terms of both amount and quality. Not sure how I feel about ON ESTROGEN (the "ON," specifically), but "ARE YOU GOOD?" (11D: Check-in line?) and SMART MONEY (12D: Bets from the experts) are a hell of a pair, and FOOD DESERT got an actual, audible "nice" out of me. Overall, a nice way to start the weekend.
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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I had one real mistake today. By "real" I mean "consequential." Sometimes you write in the wrong thing and immediately see your error. Other times, the error sits and starts to rot your solve. One example of the former type of error today, for me, was "ALRIGHT, ALRIGHT!" instead of "ALRIGHT ALREADY!" (39A: "I get it, I get it!"). I figured the speaker's exasperation, like the clue, would take the form of repetition. The fact that the first three letters of the last word are identical to the first three of the first word helped push me into that mistake. But something (maybe CHAD? (35D: Land with two official languages—French and Arabic)) helped eliminate that mistake quickly. But one other mistake was not eliminated so quickly—namely, BASEST for RAWEST (10D: Like one's most natural emotions). "Raw" to me conveys "fresh" and "strong," not "natural." Most emotions are "natural." All emotions, actually, now that I think about it. What the hell is an unnatural emotion? Sigh. Anyway. I figured "natural" had to do with what's fundamental, which is what got me to "base," although now I'm realizing that the "base" in "base emotions" would mean "low," and that I was probably thinking "basic"??? I don't know. I just know BASEST fit and felt right, and nothing about the clue indicated "raw" to me, so BASEST sat there for a bit, messing things up. Well, messing two answers up, but they were two short answers in prime positions (i.e. crossing the fronts of two long answers in the NE). So RASP and WEAR took way longer than they should have, and "ARE YOU GOOD?" and SMART MONEY had to be built from the middle up. When the rest of the puzzle is very easy, one little mistake can have consequences that feel big, even if they ultimately aren't that big, by the timer.
Bullet points:
Bullet points:
- 23A: Intoxicate, quaintly (BESOT) — wait, this word is "quaint?" This feels like a regular old word to me. I usually hear / see / use (?) it in the adjectival form, "besotted" (the rough equivalent of "enamored" or "in love"). So OK, as a verb, I guess I'll give you "quaintly." But I got this instantly and I like it, which is not always the case with "quaint" stuff. (Didn't we have SOT just yesterday? Yes, 47-Across here. Big week for SOT)
- 52A: Deep study (OCEANOLOGY) — Had the OCEAN- part, so this answer should've gone in instantly, but all I could think was "... why won't OCEANOGRAPHY fit?" I blame the Village People.
["Where can you learn to fly / Play in sports and skin dive / Study OCEANOGRAPHY...?"]
- 10A: Ailment the morning after a loud concert, maybe (RASP) — the concert was loud, and so ... you had to shout to talk to your companions? ... I can see having a RASP the next day if you sang along, but I don't really see what the loudness of the concert per se has to do with that (except that you probably wouldn't shout-sing at the symphony, I'm guessing)
- 19A: Hem, but not haw? (SEW) — this was a gimme and really helped me get started. Sometimes the tricky little "?" clues are confusing, but this one was transparent. Cute, but transparent.
- 25A: Idea for a pair of trick-or-treaters (COUPLES COSTUME) — first, I've never really heard the term. I can imagine what it means, but it's not familiar to me. Second, "idea?" That's the word that slowed me down here. If a "trick-or-treater" gets "ideas," I assume they are already trick-or-treating, and so ... I was imagining some prank or "trick" that would require two people (?). Anything can be an "idea." The distance from "idea" to "costume" felt ... long.
- 34A: Case load? (BEER) — had to get to -EER before I understood it. Yes, BEER comes in cases. The clue is a very good misdirect because it's so succinct and so in-the-language ... for a completely different (legal) context.
- 45A: French for "dainty" (MIGNON) — another gimme for me, but seems like it could be hard for people who don't speak or never studied French. I think of MIGNON as meaning "cute." Perhaps because it does. (but "delicate" or "dainty" is also valid)
- 55A: They make a high-pitched noise when they're pretty heated (TEA KETTLES) — very easy, but boo to "pretty." I see you're trying to do some kind of misdirect, so that solvers will think of people getting angry, but TEA KETTLES don't make high-pitched noises when they're "pretty heated." They make them when they are maximally heated, i.e. boiling. "Pretty heated" would not get you a whistle.
- 48D: Accessory out West (BOLO) — the capital "W" in "West" really threw me. Assumed that "West" had to be somebody's name, so tried to think of a Mae West accessory. But the "out" made no sense if West was Mae. I don't think I knew you were supposed to capitalize the direction in "out west" (or, presumably, "back east," "up north," "down south").
- 30D: "___ dolce ___" (Italian saying) ("CASA") — so it's just a literal translation of "home sweet home." Nothing very "Italian" about it (except the language, of course).
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
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7 comments:
Easy-Medium. Would have been easy save for the overwrite at 10D.
Overwrites:
halo before VANE for the high pointer at 2D
Like OFL, I stuck with bAsEST before RAWEST at 10D for way too long.
At 30A, I thought chicken korma might be a sataY
No WOEs, but I was confused when OCEANOgraphy didn't fit at 52A. Needed crosses for the -OLOGY part
Lived in France for two years and never used "mignon" to mean "dainty" (something like "délicat" seems better). The answer is obscure enough for non-French speakers that the clue could have just used the expected "cute" instead.
Needed one cheat, for the ENTROPY/CURRY cross (I wanted "entrope"). Average Friday difficulty, largely because Mr. Marquez brought in a lot of Hispanic words (most were inferable from the crosses, fortunately).
If I'm ever served a dainty filet mignon, I'll send it back for a rare sirloin.
I’m never up early enough to be one of the first commenters but today is different as I just ran the gauntlet and managed to get Radiohead tickets! Anyone else get lucky??
“Hispanic words?!” ESOS CASA and PAPI are xword staples. Strange (and white) to assume they’re here because of the constructor’s last name.
Solid late week puzzle. No real hiccups - the big guy highlights some of the marginal stuff but overall smooth and slick.
Frank Black
COUPLES COSTUMES and ON ESTROGEN are just weird - but I liked ALRIGHT ALREADY, ARE YOU GOOD and OCEANOGRAPHY.
I don’t buy BEER by the case anymore but cute clue. Love a good CURRY as the weather cools and BOLO reminds me of my Uncle Hal. Great Charley Pride clip but Sahm’s version is the real deal.
Enjoyable Friday morning solve.
Caetano Veloso
Update on crossword colossus Paolo Pasco’s second night on Jeopardy.
Big win, coming back from being well behind in the opening half. He showed an impressive range of knowledge in the second half, and once again seemed superhuman in how quickly he saw the answers in a wordplay category.
In two games, he’s now won more than $50,000. My wife commented on how likeable he is.
He is doing crosswords proud. Go Paolo!
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