Quick Cryptic 3217 by Jalna

Another tricky one.

NOSH went in quickly enough, but the next five acrosses were all unyielding, and a fairly patchy solve continued right up until a bit of a stare at my last two of HARARE and CHECKOUT.

So 9:30 on the money, which is one of my slowest solves in a while (although I didn’t get a chance to try yesterday’s).

We were treated to a wide range of interesting clues and some lovely surfaces, and I very much liked it – many thanks to Jalna!

Across
1 Boy sent back hospital food (4)
NOSH – SON (boy) “sent back”, H(ospital)
3 Investigate where payments can be made (8)
CHECKOUT – and to CHECK OUT is to investigate
8 Heartless fighter lacking experience around conflict (4,3)
BOER WAR – BOXER (fighter) “heartless” = remove the heart/centre, RAW (lacking experience) “around” = reverse
10 Bit of quiet on a podcast (5)
PIECE – sounds the same (ie, heard on a podcast) as PEACE (quiet). BIT and PIECE can both mean COIN, as well as a generic scrap, etc.
11 What magnificent mum does, everybody repeats (11)
ALLITERATES – ALL (everybody) ITERATES (repeats)
13 Greeting king in a doorway every now and then (3,3)
KIA ORA – K(ing) I n A d O o R w A y “every now and then”. Literally “good health” in Maori, and also (with the irony typical of what we would now call a UPF) a brand of fruit juice concentrate that seemed to advertise quite a lot back in the 80s – owned by Coke and defunct in the UK as of 2019.
15 Schoolkids about to make mistakes (4,2)
SLIP UP – PUPILS (schoolkids) about = reverse
17 Pick up certain card in Monopoly or choose Risk? (4,1,6)
TAKE A CHANCE – double definition
20 Language with individual cases (5)
HINDI – is “cased” by witH INDIvidual
21 Look to comprehend what others are saying? (3-4)
LIP-READ – cryptic definition, tricky without checkers.
22 Suspect thug in back yard is affected by wind (8)
DRAUGHTY – anagram (suspect) of THUG in a reversal (“back”) of YARD
23 Payment finally agreed for satellite broadcast, perhaps (4)
FEED – FEE (payment), D (“finally” agreeD)
Down
1 State banks are overhauled (8)
NEBRASKA – anagram (overhauled) of BANKS ARE
2 Great   surge (5)
SWELL – double definition
4 Race around river area in city (6)
HARARE – HARE (race) around R(iver) A(rea). It’s in the top ten least desirable cities to live on the planet, apparently, just in case you were thinking of relocating there on a whim.
5 Sort of characters making up RNVR in naval vessel (7,4)
CAPITAL SHIP – CAPITALS are the “sort of characters making up RNVR”, HIP = in/cool/etc. News to me. The RNVR is the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve, if you’re wondering, and a capital ship is simply the largest and most powerful ship in a fleet, only coined fairly recently (in naval terms) in 1909.
6 Old writer — with drink — starts speaking candidly (5,2)
OPENS UP – O(ld) PEN (writer) with SUP (drink)
7 Those people ultimately dealt with ample criticism (4)
THEM – the “ultimate” letters of the rest of the clue
9 Weirdly awe-striking sport (5-6)
WATER-SKIING – anagram (weirdly) of AWE STRIKING
12 Added software programme shut down (8)
APPENDED – APP (software programme) ENDED (shut down)
14 One feels soldier maybe upset the Queen at some point (7)
ANTENNA – ANT (soldier, maybe) and then “upset” or upend ANNE (the Queen, at some point)
16 Story time incorporating book and iPad? (6)
TABLET –  TALE (story) T(ime) incorporating B(ook)
18 Relative from Greece infrequently heading north (5)
NIECE – “from” greECE INfrequently “heading north”
19 Dull noise so endlessly deafening at first (4)
THUD – THUS (so) “endlessly”, D (Deafening “at first”)

2 comments on “Quick Cryptic 3217 by Jalna”

  1. This goes down as a 22 minute solve but although it was hard I made things worse for myself by carelessly writing THUS at 19dn (thinking of the wordplay) which made 22ac impossible to solve until eventually I spotted my error. That must have added at least 5 minutes to my time.

    Despite its Mauri name KIA-ORA was an Australian brand that launched in the UK in 1917 and the Australians sold the British rights to Schweppes in 1929. I became aware of it as an orange drink in my childhood in the 1950s. Schweppes became Cadbury Schweppes in 1969 and it was from then on that KIA-ORA became an iconic cinema drink. The Coca Cola Company bought them out in 1998 and that was when the decline started.

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