Some really brilliant clues in here – if I’ve parsed it correctly then 16ac might be my COD, and if I haven’t, then it might still be. Loads of brilliant clues and words everywhere though, I’m sure everybody will have their own favourite. Well done setter!
Tomorrow is the first day of the New York Times pandemic-year crossword championship and I’m really looking forward to it. Oxbridge-rivalry-style jokes aside, the Other Times crossword is a lot of fun, with some spectacular Ninas (if they’re still called that across the pond) every week… even if you have a lot more crossers to work with, the lack of corroboration between cryptic and definitional parts makes it a lot more important to home in on the setter’s wavelength quickly, a challenge indeed. I look forward to matching wits with anyone reading this who might be showing up for the event!
ACROSS
1 Dish seen in fine old dresser (8)
MACARONI – double def: either pasta or an 18th century dandy
9 Boast pay can secure plant (8)
CROWFOOT – CROW [boast] + FOOT [pay]
10 Luxury’s endless advantage (4)
PLUS – PLUS{h}
11 Incumbent at first on females, one not so friendly, to relay pardon (12)
OFFICEHOLDER – O{n} + F F [two females] + I [one] + COLDER [not so friendly], “relaying” EH [pardon?]. Original containment indicator
13 Follow United, again in the money for winning (6)
PURSUE – take PURSE [the money for winning] and insert a U (“again”, as there’s already one in the original word)
14 Report of engine trouble — sponsor getting sack (8)
BACKFIRE – BACK [sponsor] + FIRE [sack]
15 A villain tailed by Sherlock, ultimately for sport (7)
KABADDI – A BADDI{e}, by {sherloc}K. An awesome Indian sport involving playing tag while holding your breath, that shows up in quiz reasonably often
16 Old shipping magnate’s donkey rides? (7)
ONASSIS – if he rides donkey, he IS ON ASS. If he donkey rides, he ON ASS IS. I think!
20 Peers into vessel, bonnet having been pulled back (8)
NOBLESSE – hidden reversed in {v}ESSEL BON{net}
22 Trick with needle to get swelling out (6)
CONVEX – CON [trick] with VEX [needle]
23 Laughter about need to employ such a search? (5-2-5)
HOUSE-TO-HOUSE – HOHO! “about” USE [need] TO, + USE [employ], semi-&lit
25 Something one might file away secure? (4)
NAIL – double def, a noun and a verb
26 Bird finally chooses this moment to cry out (5,3)
SNOWY OWL – {choose}S + NOW [this moment] + YOWL [to cry out]
27 Name of E number originally used in topping (8)
EBENEZER – E + N{umber} in BEEZER! [topping]
DOWN
2 Hymn from the works by European variously recalled at intervals (8)
ALLELUIA – ALL [the works] by E(uropean), + reversed {v}A{r}I{o}U{s}L{y}
3 A page of baseless, false old stories (6,6)
AESOP’S FABLES – (A P OF BASELESS*)
4 Duo I left floundering in the deep (8)
OUTFIELD – (DUO I LEFT*)
5 Reserve power needed for small cooler (3,4)
ICE CUBE – ICE [reserve] + CUBE [(third) power]
6 Face family, cold, having received welcome earlier (6)
GOTHIC – C(old), having GOT HI earlier. As in the font face
7 Useless little film receiving Oscar (4)
VOID – VID “receiving” O
8 Run, when in better shape, at first without a stitch (8)
STARKERS – R(un) in STAKER + S{hape}
12 Go, feeling one’s leaving for long time (4,8)
LIFE SENTENCE – LIFE [go, as in “there’s life in the old dog yet”] + SENT{i}ENCE
15 Family’s experiences after descending on a foreign city (8)
KINSHASA – KIN’S [family’s] + HAS [experiences] descend onto A. Capital of the DRC
17 Romantic piece: hit performance listened out for (8)
NOCTURNE – homophone of KNOCK TURN [hit | performance]
18 Thing that’s crossed channel that is crossing river? Correct (4,4)
IDEE FIXE – I.E. [that is], “crossing” DEE FIX [river | correct]. If you have a “thing” about something, well, over on the other side of the channel they might call that an “idee fixe”.
19 Main unit for broadcasters opening in Yale? (7)
KEYHOLE – KEY [main] + homophone of WHOLE [unit]. Yale as in a lock
21 Daily rounds too much, having to go to North London suburb (6)
SUTTON – SUN [daily (paper)] “rounds” O.T.T. [too much], reversed [having to go (from south) to north]. Devious because Sutton is very much south of the Thames
22 There’s a problem for all to see: ball trapped between rugby posts? (2-2)
UH-OH – U [for all to see (at the cinema), + O [ball] “trapped between” H and H [rugby posts!]
On resumption this morning, there was still nothing forthcoming so I used aids at 15dn in a bid to get myself going again. As it turned out I had correctly deduced KINSH?SA from wordplay and checkers but was unable to make the leap to the full answer because I have never heard of it or have forgotten it if it has come up previously. Would the new K-checker at 15ac help me with that clue? No. So I used aids on that one too and found another word I never heard of. At that point I gave up on the whole thing.
Edited at 2021-04-23 07:06 am (UTC)
I cannot see—but darkness, death and darkness.
30 mins pre-brekker left the Idee Fixe/Ebenezer crossers which I was never going to get, so quite pleased I abandoned.
I liked Onassis and COD to Convex.
Thanks setter and V.
Call me Colonel Blink. but I don’t understand how Beezer becomes “topping?”
NHO of the Indian game or the French obsession
FOI: Pursue
COD: Onassis
Excellent, fantastic; of the highest quality
Some of this is borderline unfair: MACARONI isn’t really a dish, ‘face family’ takes oblique definitioning to new extremes, random and rare name clued with a word that really needs an archaism indicator…
But ONASSIS is brilliant and raised a smile.
Idee fixe and convex just wouldn’t come through. Fair clues, nonetheless, imho.
Also entered kabaddy, as I didn’t read the clue properly.
Thanks v, and good luck with the NYT champs 🙂
Wrote kabaddy — came here — had a paddy
I did all those tough clues
But I now have the blues
One letter wrong — I’m a saddy
Let’s use GOTHIC as a case in point. You’re not going to get that “face family” is “a group of typefaces” until you get the answer, and until then the wordplay is an infinitely variable jumble. Even if you think greeting is going to be HI, putting it “earlier” suggests putting it quite a bit before C(old) not just in front of it. Sure, it works, but it’s all clearly designed to scramble the solving brain.
1ac was CALAMARI for most of its life, but the “put a feather in his cap” moment opened up most of the northern section.
Funnily enough, I got EBENEZER quite easily, though obviously without going via thinking of BEEZER first. Something to help us into what sort of name would have been kind but clearly our setter believed (any old random) name was sufficient. Thank goodness he didn’t clue it as stone or chapel, or the noise of weeping and gnashing of teeth might have been heard from the outer darkness into which most of us would be thrown.
A tough one, took me 38.31, last in IDÉE FIXE with its borderline unfair “thing” definition. Where is Hector Berlioz when you need him?
Edited at 2021-04-23 08:55 am (UTC)
The Ebenezers I knew were mostly in the South Wales valleys, where the Revival of the early 1900s created chapel capacity far in excess of the local populations. Other biblical names proliferated, Tabor, Shiloh and of course Tabernacle. Even in the 70s, when I knew them most were hanging on, sometimes very honourably, with tiny congregations. There are still viable and lively congregations around, but an awful lot of extra warehouses and workshops!
Thanks to Verlaine and setter
NHO BEEZER.
I’ve always thought it was BADDY but I see Lexico gives that as an alternative to BADDIE.
I biffed ALLELUIA (how many different spellings are there though?) and was unsure on MACARONI as I only knew the donkey and not where he got his name.
Good luck at the weekend V.
Before the DRC, in the sixties, the two Congos were distinguished in school Geography by one of them being known as KINSHASA Congo.
I got AESOP’S FABLES by jumbling ‘false’, which was wrong but worked. And NOCTURNE sprang to mind, as my first thought for ‘engine trouble’ had been ‘knock’.
Excellent puzzle, EBENEZER LOI.
30′ 51″, thanks verlaine and setter.
Great puzzle, thanks to setter
Edited at 2021-04-23 01:17 pm (UTC)
I suspect 2/3 of the setters would be cactus.
Macaroni was known from the species of penguin, which was named after the Italian dandy.
We’re back in lockdown for 3 days. The first community case of covid-19 here for 14 months was confirmed today.
Edited at 2021-04-23 02:48 pm (UTC)