Sunday Times 4787 by Jeff Pearce

A gentle puzzle this week which I suspect may have left some of the old hands wondering what to do with the rest of their Sunday morning, but which equally will have been encouraging for newer solvers.

Very little to report, really. The reading desk and the palm were both unknown to me, but in both cases the wordplay was most generous. The detailed parsing of 3d, 11d and 16d was a bit tricky (at least to me), although I would wager that many solvers would have just biffed these without pausing to conduct the detailed analysis that it behoves the blogger to perform.

So, with thanks to Jeff, let’s dive into the detail…

Definitions underlined: DD = double definition: anagrams indicated by *(–): omitted letters indicated by {-}

Across
1 Batter fish first then start to steam rhubarb (10)
CODSWALLOP – COD (fish) comes ‘first’, then S (start to Stream) then WALLOP (batter)
6 Drink from a small can, briefly (4)
ASTI – A + S[mall] + TI{n} (can, briefly)
9 Ugly ball he smashed gets show of amusement (5,5)
BELLY LAUGH – *(UGLY BALL HE) with “smashed” indicating the anagram
10 Not in favour of major road skirting edges of Newport
(4)
ANTI – A1 (major road) goes around (skirting) NT (edges of N{ewpor}T)
12 Allow prince to be very nasty indeed (6)
LETHAL – LET (allow) + HAL (prince – as in Henry Vth known as “madcap Prince Hal”)
13 Private place for film? (2,6)
IN CAMERA – DD
15 Prepare to go round part of theatre (5,6)
DRESS CIRCLE – DRESS (prepare) + CIRCLE (to go round)
18 Portable food didn’t have drink for Spooner (6,5)
PACKED LUNCH – The Reverend may have complained that his lunchbox LACKED PUNCH
21 Grannie follows deer — trying, at first, to be still (8)
STAGNANT – NAN (grannie) ‘follows’ STAG (deer) + T (first letter – at first – of Trying)
22 Source of wine for artist in restaurant (6)
CARAFE – RA (artist) ‘in’ CAFE (restaurant)
24 A doctor’s old reading desk (4)
AMBO – A MB (a doctor) + O (old), giving us a word meaning “an early Christian raised reading desk or pulpit”. Had not come across this before, but the word play was very generous.
25 Made a meal of deliveries and declared (10)
OVERSTATED – OVER (deliveries – cricket reference to a set of six balls bowled) + STATED (declared)
26 Flat race is short (4)
EVEN – EVEN{t} (race is short)
27 Make a bloomer in return for a sweet and spicy
snack
(10)
BRANDYSNAP – BRAND (make – as in “what make of car is that?”) + PANSY reversed (bloomer in return). This item is generally rendered as two separate words (or occasionally hyphenated, it would seem) – not that it makes much difference…
Down
1 Hastily mend an old paving stone (6)
COBBLE – DD
2 Remove obstruction in river (6)
DELETE – LET (obstruction – as in “without let or hinderance”) ‘in’ DEE (river)
3 Approach Polish guys outside a southern capital?
(4,3,5)
WAYS AND MEANS – WAY (approach) + SAND (polish) + MEN going around A (guys outside a) + S (southern), with the whole lot meaning ‘capital’ in the sense of ‘resources’
4 Perhaps metal from church roof in the van (4)
LEAD – The reference to the traditional lead on the church roof gives us a mildly cryptic steer towards the homographic answer
5 Setting up keyboard instrument with one pipe (10)
ORGANISING – ORGAN (keyboard instrument) + I (one) + SING (pipe)
7 I order you to serve porridge, for example (8)
SENTENCE – Gentle cryptic based on “porridge” being slang for a prison sentence
8 Made it twice possibly? (8)
IMITATED – *(MADE IT IT) – with ‘twice’ telling us to double the IT content – and “possibly” indicating the anagram. And I think it’s an & Lit (or maybe a semi & Lit – I’ll leave that to the maestros to determine!)
11 Around end of dinner, food served includes an
unhealthy-looking cake (6,6)
DANISH PASTRY – DISH with AN inserted (food served includes an) + PASTY (unhealthy looking) with an R buried inside (around end of dinneR)
14 Good batting at all times by George! (4,1,5)
WELL I NEVER – WELL (good) + IN (batting) + EVER (at all times)
16 Rat initially attracted by rubbish put outside (8)
APOSTATE – A (initially Attracted) + TAT (rubbish) with POSE (put) going around it (outside)
17 Grope for board game (8)
SCRABBLE – DD
19 Sailor climbing brown palm (6)
RATTAN – TAR reversed (sailor climbing) + TAN (brown) giving the type of climbing palm widely used for making furniture. Apparently. New to me, but again our setter was most magnanimous with the wordplay.
20 Finally strippers finish burlesque (4-2)
SEND-UP – Last letter (finally) of stripperS + END UP (finish)
23 Look happy when dull work is nearly done (4)
GRIN – GRIN{D} (dull work – ‘nearly’)

26 comments on “Sunday Times 4787 by Jeff Pearce”

  1. Straightforward 24 minutes for me. Vaguely knew the reading desk. First heard of RATTAN many years ago when vising Habitat or somesuch household goods store.
  2. That’s my leaderboard time–which puts me at 155–but sounds too fast. DNK 25ac, and was trying to figure out how ATE fit in. RATTAN quite familiar–maybe it’s a warm-weather furniture material. Certainly I’ve seen more than enough rattan chairs and sofas in my time. AMBO I thought we’d had; but I may be confusing it with ‘umbo’.
  3. A gentle one by Jeff.AMBO & RATTAN not all that new to old timers.COD APOSTATE,a lovely surface,l must say.Nick,drop the ‘novice’,you certainly are not.
    Ong’ara,
    Kenya.
    1. Ong’ara, thanks for your contribution which is welcome as always, but could you in future please put a space between each full stop and the first letter of the next sentence?

      Failing to do this causes Live Journal to identify your message as ‘suspicious’ and consigns it to spam until one of the Maintainers has reviewed and ‘unspammed’ it. Thank you.

  4. …in our house is my wife. Recommendations from this committee are then brought to a full Council meeting, on which I sit, whose constitution requires it to accept all such suggestions. I found this easyish, taking 19 minutes. I like Spoonerisms and thus enjoyed having a PACKED LUNCH but I’ll give COD to APOSTATE. I see COBBLE was clued as an old stone. Doesn’t Jeff know that we wanted the M61 cobbled through Bolton? Thank you to Nick and Jeff.
  5. I did this in 4:04, which definitely qualifies it as easy in my book: it’s my Sunday PB and fastest ever recorded time for a standard cryptic.
    We’ve definitely had AMBO before, because it went straight in (as did pretty much everything else, of course) and where else would I have seen it?
    I don’t know if I knew that RATTAN is a type of palm but I knew the furniture.

    Edited at 2018-03-04 08:33 am (UTC)

  6. 10.45! Biffin’ ‘ell! Or biffin’ ‘eaven maybe. Never done it so fast and never will again, I’m sure. Better go back and try and parse a few now.
  7. 17:26 definitely my quickest time for a Sunday puzzle. I went through this pleasant offering like a hot knife through butter. No unknowns although a slight pause at LOI 16dn where I had to squint a bit to see “rat” and “apostate” as equivalent though the wordplay was clear.
  8. I don’t know my time for this one, but my notes say “felt 50m-ish”. So very slow for what folk are saying was an easy one. Having said that, I’m here taking a break at the end of my first hour’s session with today’s puzzle, and not even halfway through, so perhaps I’m just feeling a bit thick on Sundays recently…

    FOI 4d LEAD, LOI 16d APOSTATE. Enjoyed 8d IMITATED and 27a BRANDY SNAP.

    Edited at 2018-03-04 10:54 am (UTC)

    1. Today’s is a stinker. I think I might have given up if it weren’t my turn to blog. The desire to avoid a public humiliation proved just enough of a spur!

      Edited at 2018-03-04 11:02 am (UTC)

      1. Yes it’s brutal today and I thought one of them borderline unfair.
            1. Non. Je parle bien français mais je ne m’attends pas à le voir dans un mots croisés du Times de Londres!
        1. Well, I got there in the end but I stopped tracking the time! Looking forward to next week’s post mortem…
  9. 9:43 for me.I thought we were in QC land here. Like keriothe, a PB for me for a Sunday…. but I’ve not been doing them for long. I happened to know both AMBO and RATTAN, which helped.
  10. I zipped through this one in 20:37, so definitely on the easier end of the spectrum. Having read the comments, including Dean’s on Twitter, I’m now regarding my impending foray into today’s puzzle with trepidation. Nothing unknown in this one, having met AMBO and RATTAN in previous puzzles, but an enjoyable 20 minutes. Thanks Jeff and Nick.
  11. So 14 minutes which is my smartest Sunday return for a whole yonk!
    Congratters to lord Keriothe that is some going!

    Today’s was the stinker we’ve all been expecting.

    FOI 6ac ASTI
    LOI 16dn APOSTATE
    COD 1ac CODSWALLOP
    WOD 27ac BRANDY SNAP

    Edited at 2018-03-04 02:44 pm (UTC)

  12. As Nick says this was encouraging for newer solvers. I solved it fairly quickly in one session.
    My last three were 24a (unknown), 26a and 16d.
    Liked 18a. Enjoyable Sunday solving. David

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