Monday, October 13, 2025

Sephora competitor / MON 10-13-25 / Microwaveable breakfast staple / Thick porridge referenced in "Yankee Doodle" / Helpful theorem, in math / Dorm room meal in a cup / Eggs that can cost $1,000 per ounce / Nintendo dinosaur / Chinese small plates

Constructor: Katherine Xiong

Relative difficulty: Easy (solved Downs-only)


THEME: FAST FOODS (63A: Fares at McDonald's and KFC ... or a literal description of 17-, 29- and 47-Across) — two-word foods where the first words can mean "fast"

Theme answers:
  • QUICK OATS (17A: Microwaveable breakfast staple)
  • INSTANT RAMEN (29A: Dorm room meal in a cup)
  • HASTY PUDDING (47A: Thick porridge referenced in "Yankee Doodle")
Word of the Day: Hernando de SOTO (22D: Explorer Hernando de ___) —

Hernando de Soto (/də ˈst/Spanish: [eɾˈnando ðe ˈsoto]c. 1497 – 21 May 1542) was a Spanish explorer and conquistador who was involved in expeditions in Nicaragua and the Yucatan Peninsula. He played an important role in Francisco Pizarro's conquest of the Inca Empire in Peru, but is best known for leading the first European expedition deep into the territory of the modern-day United States (through FloridaGeorgiaTennesseeAlabamaNorth CarolinaSouth CarolinaMississippi, and most likely Arkansas). He is the first European documented as having crossed the Mississippi River.

De Soto's North American expedition was a vast undertaking. It ranged throughout what is now the southeastern United States, searching both for gold, which had been reported by various Native American tribes and earlier coastal explorers, and for a passage to China or the Pacific coast. De Soto died in 1542 on the banks of the Mississippi River; sources disagree on the exact location, whether it was what is now Lake Village, Arkansas, or Ferriday, Louisiana. (wikipedia)

• • •

This ended better than it started. Of course it started with -ESQUE, and any time you start with a suffix, things are likely to improve. While -ESQUE was an inauspicious way to begin, it was really the string of TSK OHO and (worst of all) DO A SET that had me feeling like things were headed very much in the wrong direction. DO A SET has big EAT A SANDWICH energy. Not ... great. So I was skeptical. But then things mostly evened out, and a theme developed, and while the revealer itself is a little wonky (FAST FOODS in the plural is not nearly as elegant as FAST FOOD without the terminal "S" would've been), it does neatly encapsulate what's happening with the themers. The themer set is highly unusual (two out of three items in the general "porridge" family?!), but it's a very, very narrow category. There's not a lot of other answers that would've fit the bill. None that I can think of off the top of my head. So the puzzle gets a little leeway, I think. There are certainly no other HASTY foods I can think of. QUICK ... there's probably something besides OATS, but I can't think of it. And as for INSTANT ... there's the trickiest part. There just aren't that many synonyms for "fast" that area also the first words of foods. I just looked at a long list of synonyms for "fast" and none of them work. What's more, INSTANT isn't even on that list, possibly because it's not a great synonym for "fast." It's less "fast" as in "speedy" and more "fast" as in "immediate." It's definitely the outlier today, but again, the theme is very restrictive, so ... fine. We only get three themers, and the revealer has to have that "S" on the end to make the thematic symmetry work, but all these foods are quick to make (I assume), so I think the theme works OK, in the end. It's not the smoothest execution, but it'll do.


I don't know the "Yankee Doodle" lyrics that contain HASTY PUDDING. I know "We Wish You a Merry Christmas" lyrics that contain FIGGY PUDDING, but that's pretty much the extent of my pudding lyric knowledge. My only knowledge of HASTY PUDDING has something to do with Harvard. Something related to comedy? Hang on ... looks like there's a HASTY PUDDING club at Harvard, which is just a social club, but then there's also HASTY PUDDING Theatricals, also at Harvard, though "not to be confused" with the social club. This is the HASTY PUDDING that I've heard of:
Hasty Pudding Theatricals is a student theatrical society at Harvard University known for its annual burlesque crossdressing musicals as well as its Man and Woman of the Year awards. The Pudding is the oldest theatrical organization in the United States and the third oldest in the world. Its annual production is a musical comedy that often touches on topical social and political issues. (wikipedia)
I'm not sure I ever thought about what HASTY PUDDING actually was. I can say the same for "figgy pudding," for that matter. 

[no figgy pudding in this one, but this is called the "(Pudding Mix)" for some reason]

There were a few small challenges solving this one Downs-only. I absolutely blanked on de SOTO's name. SOTO fame for me goes in a certain order:
  • New York Mets outfielder player Juan SOTO, who late last year signed the largest contract in professional sports history
  • The automobile brand De SOTO (although it looks like that was usually written as one word, "DESOTO")
  • Pulp magazine and paperback cover artist Rafael de SOTO (though it looks like he too spelled DESOTO as one word, not two)
  • The explorer De SOTO whose first name I can't remember and whose accomplishments I'm not as familiar with as I should be
[cover by Rafael DeSoto]

[cover by Rafael DeSoto]

And all the longer Downs took a least at little thought today. Got DO A SET easily enough, though it was such a wobbly answer that I wasn't that confident about it. Definitely hesitated on 25D: All, for nothing, e.g. (ANTONYM) (my brain wanted ANAGRAM despite the complete lack of evidence). I just plugged in various music tempi until I got that one that worked at 42D: Smoothly, in music (LEGATO). Would not have gotten YOUTHFUL without help from some crosses (in this case, the "OU") (40D: Energetic, perhaps). ORDAINS also needed some helping along (28D: Decrees)—I wanted "Decrees" to be a noun. And I tried "IT'S A" before "ATTA" at 35D: "___ girl!" IT'S A had me guessing PIRATE and later Pontius PILATE at 34A (this is what happens when you don't allow yourself to look at the actual Across clues). If I hadn't been certain that SSD was not a thing (43A), I would've finished with "IT'S A" in place and failed. But SSD seemed obviously wrong, so I pulled it and put in ATTA. "IT'S A," weirdly, showed up later (51A: Baby announcement, as on some blue balloons = "IT'S A BOY!").


Lightning round:
  • 4D: Cluck of disapproval (TSK) — I think of TUT as the cluckier of the two disapprovals, but that's obviously a judgment call.
  • 20A: Sephora competitor (ULTA) — ULTA is the new ETSY. The new EBAY. The new IKEA. You have no excuse for not knowing it anymore (see also YOSHI, 54D: Nintendo dinosaur, making his fourth appearance of the year today). ULTA has solid Monday-answer status now. I would not say the same about LEMMA, but go ahead and tuck that one away as well (70A: Helpful theorem, in math). Actually, this is LEMMA's third Monday appearance, so yeah, good to know. But LEMMA hasn't appeared at all for over two and half years, whereas ULTA ... well, let's just say if you invested heavily in ULTA futures in 2020, you'd be doing pretty well right now;
  • 31D: The largest one in the U.S. is in Bloomington, Minn. (MALL) — the MALL of America. I haven't been there in many, many (30?) years. I think I saw Jackie Chan's Rumble in the Bronx there in 1995. What a weirdly specific memory. I also remember a giant Lego statue and maybe a roller coaster? Oh, looks like multiple roller coasters and rides. I haven't been to a mall in forever and kind of miss them. But apparently they still exist and I can just go. Good to know.

That's all. See you next time.

Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld

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70 comments:

  1. Anonymous6:04 AM

    MINUTE RICE

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous6:14 AM

    I'm so tired of TSK as an answer, but I wanted to see how many Scrabble words don't contain any vowels, including Y. The longest is 7 letters, and it's... TSKTSKS. I would so love to see that in a Times crossword.

    Anyway, I liked this puzzle. No harder than any other Monday, but with a cute theme and few groaners.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous7:10 AM

    "Hasty pudding" appears in the second verse of Yankee Doodle

    Father and I went down to camp
    Along with Captain Gooding
    And there we saw the men and boys
    As thick as hasty pudding.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous1:28 PM

      Thank you for that !

      Delete
  4. @Rex -- 12/4/24 LAT puzzle with a FAST FOOD revealer had MINUTE RICE, and BRISK ICED TEA.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous7:18 AM

    William Steig's mouse dentist character, Dr. De Soto.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Harmless early week puzzle. The three themers are not exactly splashy but work and we get an APT revealer.

    John Gorka

    Overall fill is hit or miss - Rex highlights most of it. The entire starting corner is off - who gets to make the determination that Stanford and Harvard are ELITE? Liked ANTONYM, ORDAINS and LEGATO. We were at a friend’s wedding in Flushing last weekend and had wonderful DIM SUM.

    PUSH

    Enjoyable Monday morning solve. Hoping the wind and rain tail off today.

    SAWN Upon Leda

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:53 PM

      @son volt amazing selections today! Thanks!!!!

      Delete
  7. Me lo agradecerás más tarde.

    Well, you could see that revealer coming early. Still a pleasant solve and who'da thunk we need that many foods with fast names. HASTY PUDDING is a pretty deep cut into Yankee Doodle as I don't think anyone has sung the verses since the colonial rebellion.

    The three people in the puzzle, HERNANDO DE SOTO, MAO-TSE TUNG, and YOSHI may be the ODDEST list of proper names in a puzzle I've seen yet.

    I think of an apron as a garment protection system and think you'd best be playing naughty chef if you're using it as the garment. Don't play it in an ALLEY (which is not a street by the way). And you probably can use the cheap CAVIAR for the event.

    When I watch the folks wandering into our local community college and realize they're walking out with an education, I can't help but wonder if Harvard and Stanford are doing the same level of "ELITE" education. I mean honestly, how hard is it to teach future Ivy League alumni?

    I've been telling you it's OHO, not AHA, and I'm so joyful to see we're finally getting it right. I also love the clue for ANTONYM.

    When I was YOUTHFUL, I was exhausted then too.

    People: 3
    Places: 4
    Products: 2
    Partials: 6
    Foreignisms: 1
    --
    Gary's Grid Gunk Gauge: 16 of 78 (21%)

    Funny Factor: 2 😕

    Uniclues:

    1 My role since 1964.
    2 Why eggs phone it in.
    3 Five words a competitor doesn't want to hear about their signature Asian dish on Beat Bobby Flay.
    4 Valencian saffron rice that can talk its way past the bouncer and into this week's most exclusive club.

    1 ELEVATE KOOL
    2 CAVIAR TENURE
    3 YES, I KNOW DIM SUM
    4 LEGATO PAELLA (~)

    My Fascinating Crossword Uniclue Keepsake from Last Year: Those unappreciative of a Christmas day hangover. EGGNOG AGONY INGRATES.

    ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:23 AM

      Haha

      Delete
    2. @GJ - as always, thank you for making me laugh several times. But you are in rare form today; the APRON paragraph is priceless!

      Delete
  8. Our hasty pudding recipe takes well over an hour to make (which is why we basically never make it).

    Rex, SSD has appeared in the NYT puzzle eleven times, although never in a Shortz puzzle. Most commonly clued as a title for the pope (short for Sanctissimus Dominus, or "most holy lord").

    I it the ATTA/ITSA KeaLoa fairly early, and just filled in the _T_A. When I hit ITSABOY, I went back and filled in the rest.

    ReplyDelete
  9. This lovely theme is not only tight, but adds two worthy answers to the NYT oeuvre, INSTANT RAMEN and QUICK OATS.

    It also echoes last Monday’s theme, in that both words of the theme answer are used in service to the theme, rather than just the first or last word. Last Monday’s theme was also food related.

    Sweet serendipities today. Five palindromes and a rare-in-crosswords five-letter semordnilap (NAÏVE). Also, YEW crossing YOU. Not to mention the DIM SUM connection, with DIM being a kinda ANTONYM of NEON, and SUM relating nicely to [Uno + dos + tres].

    Finally, my day is made because I successfully guessed the revealer that I had left blank, a skill I’m weak at and work on all the time, rarely succeeding.

    So, for me, a goody-filled box today. Congratulations on your debut, Katherine, and thank you!

    ReplyDelete
  10. Bob Mills7:34 AM

    Theme helped the solve, as it should. Good start to the week.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Interesting, now that I think about it, I don’t recall anyone ever saying OHO. Maybe some version of Uh Oh or something like that, but OHO doesn’t register with me. It’s in the dictionary, defined exactly as one would expect, so I guess it’s legit and I’m just an outlier.

    I also enjoyed seeing the math problem in Spanish, I believe, crossing the explorer so the Monday noobs don’t get a false sense of security. Evil awaits!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My favorite OHO happens when Horace Slughorn meets Harry Potter.

      Wait for Dumbledore to say, "Dragon's Blood"

      Delete
  12. INSTANT GRITS, although as we learned in "My Cousin Vinny", no self-respecting Southerner uses instant grits.

    Neat little puz. FAST FOODS. Har. Isn't there a QUICK RICE out there? There should be a Brand Name of ZOOM. They could make popcorn. ZOOM POP! The fluffiest, quickest popcorn you've ever had! Get yours today!

    Very fast for me today, I know MonPuzs are easy, but either the puzs are getting easier, or I'm getting better. Odds are on the former.

    Closed off NE/SW corners. One letter to get in. Revise puz, get rid of a Blocker in the 5th and 11th three-Blocker line, and it'll open up a bit.

    Anyway, have a great Monday!

    Three F's
    RooMonster
    DarrinV

    ReplyDelete
  13. Andy Freude7:50 AM

    Never been to the MALL of America, but I have been to the mall in Edmonton, Alberta, which is only slightly less ginormous but has even more stores—so there, Mall of America.

    ReplyDelete
  14. MaxxPuzz7:58 AM

    Second verse of Yankee Doodle:
    Father and I went down to camp
    Along with Captain Gooding
    There were all the men and boys
    As thick as HASTY PUDDING

    ReplyDelete
  15. HASTY PUDDING is the most unexpected of the theme answers. Very fun!

    A very simple puzzle that only had me thinking a couple of times. CAVIAR did not hit my radar even after CAV was in. A few things that might have held me up I never even saw the clue for, e.g. SOTO. All of the crosses there were gimmes. I've had my share of INSTANT RAMEN, though I usually add an egg and some cabbage or cauliflower and I don't use the whole flavor packet - too salty. Yum!

    This was cute, thanks, Katherine Xiong!

    ReplyDelete
  16. Anonymous8:28 AM

    Quick bread.

    ReplyDelete
  17. An OK theme, even though I cringed at putting FASTFOOD in the plural. Also had no idea on LEMMA, which seems like a toughie for a Monday but maybe I’ve just forgotten most of the math I ever learned.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Anonymous8:49 AM

    DNF on Monday. Monday!! LEMMA/DIMSUM???? WTF!

    ReplyDelete
  19. Andy Freude8:50 AM

    Snap peas.

    ReplyDelete
  20. People's brains are so different! It's interesting to me that I can consistently predict that my reaction to the crossword will be the opposite of Rex's. He scorns themes that I find light hearted, amusing and clever. He picks them apart because some little detail (an added "s") doesn't sit right with him.

    But he loved last Monday's puzzle, which both I and my dog found appalling. Let's go to a Belgian Shepherd for commentary. Jango, how did you feel about the people food puzzle?

    Jango: It was utterly senseless. What dogs want from the table is NOT a roll or beans, or or candy or a sandwich. What dogs want is meat! How about some chicken, pork, beef or fish? This theme makes no sense and is insulting to canines.

    Let's go back to some commentary from Jango's human companion.

    Me: I don't get the other half of the theme either. I don't see what a random selection of body parts has to do with people. Lots of critters have toes, knuckles, fingers and even arms. I finally understand the urge to slam an innocent puzzle that was just trying to entertain.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Doesn't anyone learn "Yankee Doodle" in elementary school any more? I did, and therefore knew HASTYPUDDING right away, even though I haven't thought of it in seventy some years. Ah, the power of lyrics
    Saw the revealer coming after two themers, thought the themers were good examples, given a limited base of possibilities
    Nice to see ATTA not be the bread and have ITSABOY to go with ATTA girl. Now that i know OPI I have to work on ULTA, and I have seen discussions of what a LEMMA is here, so thanks to our mathematicians. Otherwise no snags.

    Moo-cow nominee: "Pull's opposite".

    Nice enough Mondecito, KX. No King-sized X factors, but a fair amount of fun, for which thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Anonymous9:04 AM

    Whooshed through (for me) today! Ten minutes !! Easy-peasy!!

    ReplyDelete
  23. Happy (Canadian) Thanksgiving! Few FAST FOODS on the table tonight – more like turkey and stuffing and pumpkin pie. Yum.

    Pleasant and straightforward solve. I think my only false start was trying to fill in “Fabergé” (too long) for the pricey eggs at 18D. I guess I didn’t read the clue properly. Or maybe some Fabergé eggs are as expensive as $1000.00 per ounce – hmm. [Checks internet.] Well, the most extravagant one seems to have sold for $33 million, so – yikes – that’s considerably more.

    HASTY PUDDING – Yankee Doodle isn't HASTY PUDDING's only claim to literary fame. A few years ago, in the course of some work I was doing, I came across a mock-heroic poem with this title that dates to the late 18th century. It’s by Joel Barlow who, as well as being a poet, was an American politician, with roles in both the American and French Revolutions. The poem is monstrously long and covers a lot of ground – it praises American culture, corn (the basis of HASTY PUDDING), and the life of the common people, and it criticizes luxury in all its forms. Here’s a taste:

    Despise it not, ye bards to terror steeled,
    Who hurl your thunders round the epic field;
    Nor ye who strain your midnight throats to sing
    Joys that the vineyard and the stillhouse bring;
    Or on some distant fair your notes employ,
    And speak of raptures that you ne'er enjoy.
    I sing the sweets I know, the charms I feel,
    My morning incense, and my evening meal,
    The sweets of Hasty Pudding. Come, dear bowl,
    Glide o'er my palate, and inspire my soul.
    The milk beside thee, smoking from the kine,
    Its substance mingled, married in with thine,
    Shall cool and temper thy superior heat,
    And save the pains of blowing while I eat.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I've spent much of my adult life wondering why on earth the arbiters of fashion in the world of poetry would have decreed that the magnificent poetic sonority of Tennyson, Blake, Coleridge, Kipling, Burns, Byron and Browning needed to be replaced by modern "poems" that don't rhyme, don't scan, and generally read like arbitrarily broken up prose.

      But now I know why. It was really bad, horribly bad traditional poems like the one by Joel Barlow that Barbara S. cites above. The "o'er"s and the "ne'er"s and the "ye"s and the plethora of highly awkward inversions of sentence structure. No, strike that! It wasn't poems "like" this one. It obviously was this one! This very one!

      (Note to Barbara: Please understand that I'm not in any way making fun of you. After all, you didn't write the wretched thing!)

      Delete
    2. @Barbara, what a treat! Mock-heroic indeed! I love the paean to HASTY PUDDING and will recall it when tucking into my breakfast hot cereal (non-quick oats, in my case) now that cold weather is upon us. The difference will be that my milk will not be smoking from the kine but rather slightly warm from the microwave. Also, to save the pains of blowing - I learned from my dad to make channels in the oatmeal to allow the milk to temper it more effectively. Thanks - this made my morning.

      Delete
    3. Am I missing something here? Are Barlow's cows (kine) on fire. Why is the milk smoking?

      Delete
    4. Anonymous3:59 PM

      Les s more - if you’ve ever seen a cow milked in a cold morning the milk kind of steams up because it’s coming out of a warm cow (kine) that’s my interpretation and I’m sticking with it unless someone else has a better idea.

      Delete
    5. Anonymous4:36 PM

      Congrats Barbara, you've solved one of the big mysteries of Nancy's life. I'm sure that's what made you spend part of your day writing this comment. Nancy, I hope you're proud!

      Delete
  24. How about "runny eggs?"

    Also, isn't there fleet something? Fleet . . . fleet . . . D'oh! Never mind.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Anonymous9:24 AM

    Rex, you've probably been in a mall and just don't remember it. They've changed. A restaurant is a basically a mall.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Hectic morning for me. Needed some QUICKOATS, and a couple of QUICKOAnS to get my vibe groovin'.

    For those new to crosswords, "ATTA girl" is short for "Indian flour girl."

    A French term for a Spanish cat would be LEGATO, non?

    I like that CAVIAR is what ties QUICKOATS and INSTANTRAMEN together. Reminds me of my college days.

    I can just hear my toddler granddaughter saying, "EYE WOVE YEW, YOSHI."

    Thanks for a briefly scrumptious Monday, Katherine Xiong.

    ReplyDelete
  27. Anonymous9:42 AM

    Another week begins with a MEH-onday.

    Question from yesterday - what abbreviation of measure was MIN? A MINute?

    ReplyDelete
  28. I guess the CAVIAR was there for consolation. Because the rest of this didn't pass my "breakfast test."

    Actually, I'm just making a joke. While you won't find me anywhere near QUICK OATS or INSTANT RAMEN, this was a fine Monday puzzle with an intelligent grid and an apt revealer. I liked it.

    ReplyDelete
  29. I don't know if it's still being made, but Mars used to have a candy bar called the Sprint Bar.

    ReplyDelete
  30. @Roo - you just made me think of JIFFYPOP

    Yesterday, I drove up Route 17 in Bergen County, NJ, and saw ULTA irl, across the street from a SEPHORA. Since it takes several turns and acts of god to get across rte 17, I don’t know if we can call them competitors:)

    I picked up some steel cut oats on sale once and they take an hour to make in my rice cooker. While delicious, I’m never up early enough to make them before work, so the QUICKOATS do come in handy.

    I declare myself a graduate of Rex university, thae final exam being:
    See DOASET, say EATASANDWICH in my head

    Been to Mall of America, which can’t be the Mall of the Americas because it’s northern neighbor in Edmonton is even bigger. They both have a feature that feels like the backgrounds in Flintstone chase scenes in that if you walk long enough you see the SAME stores in other sections of the mall. I guess they are big enough to be small cities, since they have multiples of stores also.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I love "it takes several turns and acts of god to get across rte 17". Though I've never been to Bergen county, I certainly recognize the situation. Even my GPS can fail me when trying to get from one mall to another.

      Delete
  31. I had the QU, and was very disappointed that it didn't turn out to be QUail eggS. Not exactly a breakfast staple, but neither are QUICK OATS (as compared to oatmeal).

    The other flaw in the theme is that the first two themers are actually FAST FOODS in a literal sense -- you make compromises in the quality in order to cook them fast. HASTY PUDDING, not so much.

    I did like the mini-theme of "things found on ponds," in the SW. And the old-timey spelling of Mao's name, the way I learned it.

    Zorn's LEMMA was my nemesis; I couldn't figure out the proof, and instructors kept giving me the same hint. I finally gave up trying to learn differential equations and became an English major.

    Methodological report: I've discovered that while I can't read the clue numbers in the newspaper, the "newspaper version" printout is bigger, and fits on one page, solving many problems for me.

    OK gatta run!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. In the "me, too" department - The recipient of my high school's math award, I found college freshman calculus impenetrable and became a German major.

      Delete
    2. @Carola -- While far from the recipient of my high school's math award -- don't think they even had one, actually -- I did consider myself strong in math and took an elective fourth year of math (calculus) that I enjoyed and got an "A" in. Then, just like you, I also took an elective calculus course freshman year at college. I didn't understand a word of it, was sure I was going to fail it, and cursed myself from here to Sunday for having done this to myself for absolutely no good reason. I eventually became a Government major -- not that I ever planned to major in math.

      Delete
  32. Pretty easy. The only thing that didn't come right to mind was HASTY PUDDING. Thank you & congrats on your debut, Katherine :)

    ReplyDelete
  33. Rckert10:42 AM

    RAMEN NOODLES before INSTANTRAMEN

    ReplyDelete
  34. The no-knows included the first two puzthemers, today at our house.

    @RP: Nice schlocky book cover pics. M&A soto liked em.

    staff weeject pick: YEW. Real partial to its clue's ode to the letter U.

    fave moo-cow eazy-E MonPuz clue: {___-Aid (drink whose mascot is a walking pitcher)} = KOOL. That clue went out of its way in lengthiness to vie for ultra-gimme status.
    Runner-up {Note after fa} = SOL kept it far simpler yet still mighty eazy-E.

    some fave stuff included: CAVIAR, PAELLA & DIMSUM, each crossin a FASTFOODS puzthemer. ANTONYM and its clue. LEMMA [nostalgia for an old math major].

    Thanx for the food fastin, Ms. Xiong darlin. Not as hungry as I was. And many congratz on yer fun debut.

    Masked & Anonym007Us

    ... and now, a little additional food for thought ...

    "Come Full Circle" - 7x7 12 min. themed runt puzzle:

    **gruntz**

    M&A

    ReplyDelete
  35. Pretty easy downs-only Monday. Only real troubles were with the Y entries at 8 and 40 D (YES I KNOW, YOUTHFUL) and exiting the NE and SW corners. Kind of tight there.

    Didn’t know HASTY PUDDING was a real thing. Thought it was just a stupid name chosen by a bunch of privileged ELITE university bros for their exclusive society. And is TENURE still something sought after by profs or is it a forgotten dream? @Rex, can you speak to this? I think I’d be more interested in disruption than TENURE. It would at least be fun.

    Disruption, at least subtle disruption, is fun. In the early 2000s I bought a watch from a street vendor in Beijing that has an image of Mao TSE Tung (aka Mao Zedong) on the face. Cost me a whopping 8 bucks! It is a close replica of a Mickey Mouse watch except, instead of the friendly rodent waving to you as the seconds tick, it’s the Chinese dictator. (Can you tell the difference?) Before my wife retired we would often have to attend fund-raising galas (she owned a psychology clinic and these were for ‘good’ causes) and I would always dress up in my best gala outfit, perfectly tailored, with the loveliest silk bow tie (usually black with a shot of red) around my neck, and my Mickey Mao watch on my wrist. “You’re not really going to wear that, are you?” “Of course I am. These people need a shot of subtly subversive humour.” She still danced with me.

    When I saw KOOL bubble up at 27A I got kind of worried they were trying to promote menthol flavoured cigarettes, but no, just super sugary drinks for kids. Good for the old Gray Lady. (Strangely, while I was typing this, my venerable iPod started playing Something Cool by June Christy. Eerie.)

    It’s almost midnight and there’s no way to post this until morning so… good night.

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  36. Medium for me. No WOES and no costly erasures, but ANTONYM was elusive because I didn’t read the clue carefully and I always have trouble spelling CAVIAR and PALATE so those crosses ate some nanoseconds.

    Solid and reasonably smooth and just about right for a Monday, liked it.


    Croce Solvers - Croce’s Freestyle #1052 was pretty easy for a Croce. That said, I had a spelling problem in the central south that required some help from my bride. Good luck!

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    Replies
    1. Croce 1052 was medium for me. No particular trouble areas, just steady progress.

      Delete
  37. Cute and aptly FAST. I loved writing in HASTY PUDDING, which I doubt I'd thought of since grade school (hi, @pablonh). Besides the theme foods, I liked the international array of PAELLA, DIMSUM, and CAVIAR and the food-adjacent APRON and PALATE. And I thought the SWAN, LOTUS, IVORY stack was lovely. One do-over: toque before APRON.

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  38. "Were those instant grits"? ....Vinny Gambini

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  39. Anonymous12:08 PM

    Legato is not a tempo :) it’s the opposite of staccato, meaning playing the notes in a smooth, connected way as opposed to separately.

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  40. SharonAK12:37 PM

    @Garyl ?not since the colonial rebellion? We sang many verses frequently in my childhood (tho I remember it as "eating hasty pudding") and I may be older than I ever meant to be, but not colonial.

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  41. Anonymous12:39 PM

    What the heck is a lemma in math?!?!

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    Replies
    1. Lemma, theorem, proposition, corollary: each of these means a mathematical assertion to be proven. There are no hard and fast rules by which some assertions are called lemmas and others are called theorems, but very roughly speaking, the word "theorem" is reserved for one of the main or summary statements of an article, a result that the author would really like to advertise. A proposition is a statement that arises in the course of the mathematical development, but not singled out for special attention like a theorem. A lemma is more like an auxiliary result that may be technical but which is called upon over and over again, something like a particularly useful proposition. A corollary is something like an observation that immediately flows from a theorem (or lemma or proposition) that was just proven.

      All these words are used in Euclid's Elements, and they are routinely used in modern-day mathematics with the rough meanings I gave above. The clue "Helpful theorem" is not incorrect: all the types of assertions mentioned above are theorems in a technical sense of "theorem", and sociology determines whether a different word gets used, but I would have clued it instead by "Helpful proposition in mathematics".

      Delete
    2. M and A Help Desk4:47 PM



      Lemmas are small proposals, with proofs, intended to be used in provin major math theorems. And small proposals with proofs after the theorems are called corollaries.
      Brings back fond memories of hard math classes in my college days.
      M&A

      Delete
  42. Anonymous12:50 PM

    Whoever crossed TAM and LEMMA is a bad person

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

    1. Something you might have when trying to move quickly (4)(4)
    2. Job done on one's hands and feet (4)(4)
    3. Shorthand for a stance (3)
    4. React to something moving, say (3)
    5. When mating typically occurs (3)(4)


    FIRE SALE
    MANI PEDI
    IMO
    CRY
    END GAME

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    Replies
    1. My favorite encore clues from last week:

      [Break the Hippocratic oath, say] (2)(4)
      [One might be ticked off] (4)


      DO HARM
      LIST

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  44. I did another one with my wife today. She is catching on to some of the xwordisms and is still surprised by others. Normally, I would try Mondays with acrosses only, but that would have been too tough for my wife, I think. Does anyone actually say “OHO?”

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  45. A fine, straight forward Monday with a cute theme, fun themers and a revealer that did what it was supposed to do. I'm happy to learn LEMMA, and I blanked on ULTA but otherwise no real challenges.
    I don't think I ever got far enough in Yankee Doodle to get to the HASTYPUDDING verse, but that was fun to learn and fell easily enough with the crosses.
    We've been a little light on clever cluing of late but still enjoyed this breezy nugget. Thanks Katherine and congrats on the debut.

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  46. Anonymous7:42 PM

    SSD may not have appeared in past NYTXWs, but an SSD (Solid State Drive) is absolutely a thing for anyone who has bought added storage for a computer.

    Also I remember de SOTO because he's mentioned in a Seinfeld episode as George's favorite explorer.

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  47. Anonymous8:17 PM

    All is not the antonym of nothing

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  48. What a stellar debut! Theme answers connected to the theme reveal beautifully and there were a couple spots that slowed my usual Monday romp down to a jog. Keep it up, Katherine Xiong!

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  49. Walter7:57 PM

    I really object to SOL, and my guess is nobody is with me on that?
    Sew......a needle pulling thread....i rest my case

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  50. Anonymous11:16 AM

    Sorry gang, but just getting to yesterday’s gem. Two things: how is BOSS the answer to “level-ending foe” and thought FRIVIA might be a fun word to describe trivia that is not so important, like the family dog on “Full House” vs the first president to attend college

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