FOI 10ac, LOI 17dn, Liked 26ac, 16dn and 20dn. What were your own favourite fillings in this cryptic sandwich?
ACROSS
1 Type of sandwich? Food, say, to be rejected in change of direction (10)
VEGEBURGER – GRUB, E.G. [food, say] reversed in VEER [change of direction]
6 Type of sandwich, large, fed to youngster (4)
CLUB – L [large] “fed to” CUB [youngster]
9 Find another rut requiring ploughing (3,2,5)
RUN TO EARTH – (ANOTHER RUT*) [“requiring ploughing”]
10 Cheers sources of light comedy — it’s soft stuff (4)
TALC – TA [cheers] + L{ight} C{omedy}
12 Stable-boy’s offer? Not so fast (4,4,6)
HOLD YOUR HORSES – double def with “Hold your horses, sir?”
14 Route through a yard? There’s no interest in it (6)
APATHY – PATH [route] “through” A Y [a | yard]
15 Pop group cut record? It goes to the head (8)
BANDANNA – BAND [pop group] + ANNA{l} [“cut” record]
17 Bull frolicked endlessly in late spring (8)
MALARKEY – LARKE{d} [frolicked “endlessly”] in MAY [late spring]
19 Some weather presenter (6)
SHOWER – double def with “one who shows”
22 Unhelpful union is an impediment to moving on (8,6)
NEGATIVE EQUITY – EQUITY being a union, for workers of a thespian persuasion, and negativity being an unhelpful frame of mind.
24 This love rejected would leave you bitter (4)
EROS – reversed SORE [bitter]
25 Reduced opening for leasing arrangement (6,4)
GROUND RENT – GROUND [reduced] + RENT [opening]
26 Far from expansive lie, heartlessly presented (4)
POKY – PO{r}KY [lie, “heartlessly”]
27 Sheer rage, though not entirely harsh (3-7)
SEE-THROUGH – SEETH{e} [rage, “though not entirely”] + ROUGH [harsh]
DOWN
1 Win or lose, perhaps, it’s some clever betting (4)
VERB – hidden in {cle}VER B{etting}
2 Leave to see the sights of US city, adopting new water transport (7)
GONDOLA – GO to DO L.A., “adopting” N
3 Savage, doing this to body, right and left (12)
BLOODTHIRSTY (THIS TO BODY R L*) [“doing…”]
4 Studies dismissing Democrat regarding intellect (6)
REASON – REA{d}S [studies “dismissing” D for Democrat] + ON [regarding]
5 Outward-looking, not stopping to accept mark of censure (8)
EXTERNAL – ETERNAL [not stopping] to “accept” X [mark of censure]
7 Article is probing famous person’s affair (7)
LIAISON – A IS [article | is] “probing” LION [famous person]
8 Supports sailors imprisoning one behind the scenes (10)
BACKSTAIRS – BACKS TARS [supports | sailors] “imprisoning” I [one]
11 Clearly avoid yesterday’s meat served up today? (4-8)
COLD-SHOULDER – double def, almost, with a cold shoulder of some kind of meat.
13 Place to see flying fish, same on all trips over Pacific, initially (6,4)
SALMON LEAP – (SAME ON ALL*) [“…trips”] over P{acific}
16 Peculiar proposal for paying poets? (8)
PERVERSE – one could pay a poet PER VERSE.
18 It records quantity of wood found on reserve (3-4)
LOG-BOOK – LOG [quantity of wood] found on BOOK [reserve]
20 I will leave to serve meal attended by university artist (7)
WATTEAU – WA{i}T [I “will leave” to serve] + TEA [meal] attended by U [university]
21 First person in Avignon to satisfy Catholic scholar (6)
JESUIT – JE [first person (singular) in France/Avignon] + SUIT [to satisfy]
23 Long pain after exercising to lose stone (4)
ITCH – {st}ITCH [pain after exercising, “to lose” ST for stone]
If anyone is wondering about Verlaine’s time, it was 9:30, pretty good for this puzzle.
VEGEBURGER was my next-to-the-last in; odd spelling. EXTERNAL, of all things, was LOI, because “outward looking” didn’t seem to fit as a definition.
I was very POKY in getting POKY.
I sometimes feel a bit sorry for setters having to offer enumerations. Things like RUN TO EARTH, HOLD YOUR HORSES and COLD SHOULDER would be a good deal harder with ‘two words’ or ‘three words’. Enumerating the word lengths makes them much, much easier.
PERVERSE got a chuckle from me, though I suspect I’ve seen it before.
Thanks setter, and blogger drunk on ancient beer. I misread your line at first, Verlaine, and thought you were drinking a beer *made* in 1896. I was wondering if that made a chap tell bawdy jokes about Molly houses and pick fights with people by calling them zounderkites or rantallions
Edited at 2019-04-12 10:01 am (UTC)
Edited at 2019-04-12 07:51 am (UTC)
Also, it’s possible to check answers on-line by clicking ‘reveal’ without participating in the league table. I do that as part of the automated blogging process and my name has never appeared in the list.
Took me 45 minutes to get there, and a pleasant journey it was. Slightly distracted halfway through by getting the Q and the J in quick succession and then looking for a nonexistent pangram. Also held up by really wanting 9a to be RUN TO HEATH, even though the anagram fodder wasn’t quite right.
Never *quite* stuck, but never quite getting on enough of a roll to build momentum. FOI 6a CLUB. (It took me longer to come up with VEGEBURGER, though I’ve eaten plenty in my time. For a history on the long-running debates of sandwich classification and a survey of the current state-of-the-art, see The Cube Rule)
WOD MALARKEY.
Edited at 2019-04-12 06:59 am (UTC)
Edited at 2019-04-12 06:03 am (UTC)
I slowed myself down by biffing VEGETARIAN at 1ac. As Sandy notes, VEGEBURGER is an odd spelling. Same for BANDANNA.
COD: PERVERSE.
Count me among the NNs for bandanna
My one problem was VEGEBURGER but the V of VERB suggested VEER and with GRUB for food I had an answer – I just didn’t think of it as a sandwich!
Well blogged V
I noted that the deeply authoritative Wiktionary lists VEGEBURGER as “(Britain) Alternative spelling of veggie burger” though its citations are both American.
Edited at 2019-04-12 09:39 am (UTC)
I think VEGEBURGER is far superior to ‘veggie-‘: as a single word it represents the morphological blend of ‘vege[table]’ and ”[beef]burger’. The vernacular form is so much cruder.
Thanks for your blog, V. And thanks to the setter.
I got through this one in 24min, which is on the fast side of my average, making it a relatively easy one for a Friday. Quite a few went in only vaguely parsed, and SEE-THROUGH was not parsed at all. Enjoyable Friday solve.
As for the French and their verbal kleptomania, they are shameless. They don’t even have their own word for quiche for gods’ sake. Too many four-hour lunchbreaks in the Académie if you ask me.
In France the plural of ‘le sandwich’ is ‘les sandwichs’ which I find hard to swallow.
Still, chacun a son gout
Edited at 2019-04-12 02:29 pm (UTC)
Edited at 2019-04-12 10:40 am (UTC)
Edited at 2019-04-12 09:46 am (UTC)
Ground rents are the reason the Duke of Grosvenor is so rich: he owns huge tracts of land in the West End, and is entitled to receive rents from a large number of very valuable properties.
I also agree totally about getting rid of multiword enumeration, lovely clues which lose impact….
14′ 30”, thanks verlaine and setter.
But the harpoon-puller-outer is undoubtedly the singer, not Bobby.
Roin
I run e.g. cold tap, resolved to damage shower (5,3)
That represented a significant pdm moment in my Times solving experiences, seeing shower in that sense, which stuck with me ever since.
The only thing I had to check was “ers” = bitter.
(But just noted that it is Eros reversed = sore. Could it not be Eros minus o = ers = bitter? Ers = Ervil = bitter vetch. That’s how I solved it but probably far too convoluted!!) Not seeing the wood for the trees again.
Edited at 2019-04-12 03:44 pm (UTC)