Times Cryptic No 27366 – Saturday, 01 June 2019. Give me the simple solve …

Well, this was harder than the previous week. It also expanded my general knowledge with things like 11 and 26 across, and was a master class in oblique definitions like those at 14 across, and 15 and 19 down! I think, once the penny dropped, 19dn was my clue of the day!

Finishing the puzzle was interesting. My last five answers were 18dn, 27ac, 19dn, 20ac and 15dn, where each answer gave me just enough helpers to see the next one! Thanks to the setter for a very enjoyable puzzle.

Clues are in blue, with definitions underlined. Answers are in BOLD CAPS, then wordplay. (ABC*) means ‘anagram of ABC’. Deletions are in [square brackets].

BTW I will be out of contact for most of the day, so refer to the comments with any issues.

Across
1 Multi-tasking psychiatrist accommodating Italian tenor, not the first one (8)
JUGGLING: JUNG was the psychiatrist, “accommodating” GIGLI the tenor, minus his first “I”.

9 Vegetable course spoken of, followed by whip (4,4)
ROOT CROP: ROOT sounds like route, and then a CROP is a whip.

10 Perhaps miss chasing ball in sports ground (4)
OVAL: O (ball), VAL (a random girl).

11 Rex loudly scrapping with Tim for sweets (5,7)
DOLLY MIXTURE: anagram (“scrapping”) of (REX LOUDLY TIM*). Never heard of it, but I can visualise the dolls’ tea party!

13 Shrinking skin on feet of duck that’s lost weight (6)
EBBING: [w]EBBING.

14 Wine found next to hamper: that brings relief! (3,5)
RED CROSS: RED (wine), CROSS (hamper). Bringing relief in disaster zones, of course.

15 Type that exasperates, somewhat (3,4)
PET HATE: hidden answer (indicated by “somewhat”), and the whole clue as an &lit. definition.

16 Great figures maybe exhaust and defeat one (7)
COLOSSI: CO (carbon monoxide = exhaust gas, maybe), LOSS (defeat), I (one).

20 Tramps round Australia in tears (8)
FLOOZIES: O (round) OZ (Australia), all in FLIES (tears). I had the OOZ early, but was slow to see that “tears” was “speeds”, not “weeps”.

22 Petition backing high speed rail terminal (6)
EUSTON: EUS=SUE (petition, “backing”), TON (high speed).

If there’s one thing that I like
It’s a burn up on my bike
A burn up wiv a bird up on my bike
Now the M1 ain’t much fun
Till you try and do a ton
A burn up on my bike, that’s what I like.

23 Preacher, one carrying around miniature cloth for protection? (5-7)
BIBLE THUMPER: or, differently split, a BIBLET HUMPER. “Biblet” isn’t in the 3 dictionaries I checked, but you get the idea. We call these folks BIBLE BASHERS in my neck of the woods, but again I got the idea.

25 Negative response from Guthrum oddly ignored Henry (2-2)
UH-UH: ignoring the odd letters, GUTHRUM becomes -U-H-U-. Add H for Henry.

26 Symbol of affection nothing granny would show? (4,4)
LOVE KNOT: LOVE (nothing), KNOT (a granny knot, for example). Another I hadn’t heard of, but had no trouble believing.

27 Pole and Greek performing in corner where Victoria is (4,4)
HONG KONG: N (North pole), GK (Greek), ON (performing), all in HOG (corner).

Down
2 Not going to work in blue van I rent (8)
UNVIABLE: anagram (“rent”) of (BLUE VAN I*).

3 First prize catch to get out in the public sphere! (8,4)
GOLDFISH BOWL: GOLD (first prize), FISH (catch), BOWL (get out, at cricket).

4 Husband lifting pants for taking up? (2-6)
IN FLIGHT: anagram (“pants”) of (H LIFTING*).

5 Russian spies you touching cheese (7)
GRUYERE: GRU (Russian spies: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Intelligence_Directorate_(GRU)), YE (you), RE (touching).

6 Party girl to serve porridge (2,4)
DO BIRD: I might resurrect an old practice and leave this one to explain itself!

7 Hamburger off the shelf? (4)
FRAU: cryptic definition. A married German woman would not be on the metaphorical shelf, and would be addressed as FRAU, not FRAÜLEIN. I suspect people will either love or hate this clue. I haven’t altogether decided which camp I’m in!

8 Journalists visiting mostly like holiday entertainment (5-3)
APRES-SKI: PRESS inside (“visiting”) AKI[n].

12 Slips into lorry, stammering in panic (6-6)
TERROR-STRUCK: ERRORS in T-TRUCK (“stuttering”).

15 Simple life of bouncer after promotion (8)
PUFFBALL: BALL (bouncer) after PUFF (promotion). I took “simple life” as in the song, give me the simple life, but of course it’s a fungus.

17 On receiving foreign correspondent, promoting large sort of office (4-4)
OPEN-PLAN: PEN PAL with the ‘L’ “promoted”, inside ON.

18 Hardly the reaction of one in the fast stream (4,4)
SLOW BURN: self-explanatory once you remember a BURN is a stream.

19 Pack in wooden boxes for old cabinet maker (7)
ASQUITH: QUIT (pack in) “boxed” by ASH. Delightful definition! H. H. Asquith was Prime Minister 1908-1916, so his cabinet was made up of Cabinet Ministers, not wood. (No unkind comments about Cabinet Ministers, please!)

21 According to signal from Cockney, Parisian’s one (2,4)
IN TUNE: ‘INT (signal, with the ‘H’ dropped), UNE (French for ‘one’).

24 Drink spoken of in female company? (4)
BEVY: sounds like BEVVY. The setter didn’t really need the “spoken of”, since Chambers gives BEVY and BEVVY as alternative spellings for a drink. I didn’t realise that “bevy” specifically means a group of women, although a “bevy of beauties” obviously is so.

31 comments on “Times Cryptic No 27366 – Saturday, 01 June 2019. Give me the simple solve …”

  1. A tough one, in the right sort of way. DNK DOLLY MIXTURE & GRU. I wasn’t sure of ‘off/on the shelf’, but with the checkers it was hard to avoid FRAU. As usual, it took me ages to spot the hidden at 15ac. Definitely COD to ASQUITH.
  2. The Earl of Oxford at 19dn was a well disguised clue. However when one sees ‘cabinet maker’, one tends not to think of Chippendale & Co but Prime Ministers.

    FOI 5dn GRUYERE (cheesy week!)

    LOI 25ac UH-UH!

    COD 1ac JUGGLING

    WOD 20ac FLOOZIES

    Mr. Browndog, never heard of DOLLY MIXTURE!! What kind of childhood did you have!? But then neither has my Chambers! And obviously not known across the pond.

    26ac LOVE KNOTs are found the world over esp. in 27ac HONG KONG and China.

    Edited at 2019-06-08 01:31 am (UTC)

  3. I don’t think it has been mentioned that this is a pangram.

    Hard work, but worth every bit of the effort required. My only unknown was GRU at 5dn, as thankfully I knew today’s foreign cheese (although I can’t say that I’d ever eat it through choice).

    Yes, Bruce, I’m pretty sure that BIBLET doesn’t exist but it’s made up following the convention that -LET added to the end of a noun can indicate a smaller version of the item in question, and this is absolutley fine in wordplay. I’d tend towards ‘bible-basher’ or ‘tub-thumper’, with the latter used more generally and often with reference to politicians, but BIBLE-THUMPER is in Collins along with ‘-puncher’ and ‘-pounder’.

    I wondered whether 19ac was breaking the convention on capital letters in clues as I would have assumed that ‘cabinet’ required a capital C when referring to the conglomeration of ministers who rule over us. The definition in Collins appears to support this view but the entry then goes on to give a host of examples, all spelt in lower case. SOED says ‘usually C-‘ and Chambers has ‘often, the Cabinet’.

    Edited at 2019-06-08 05:35 am (UTC)

    1. I would have thought it depends on whether the reference is generic or specific: the Asquith Cabinet vs. the prime minister appoints the members of the cabinet. For what it’s worth, the ODE entry is ‘cabinet (also Cabinet)’.
      1. Yes, that was my conclusion too, and there wasn’t a breach of convention, but it had made me wonder.
  4. …in some versions. Found this tough in places, taking 43 minutes. BIBLE-THUMPER went straight in unparsed, and remained so, but was used more frquently than BIBLE-BASHER in my neck of the woods. DOLLY MIXTURE was familiar to me as a young child, but with sweets remaining on rationing until 1953 not often to be had. Even then, for economic reasons, I can remember my Dad bringing home a Mars bar as a treat, and slicing it into four pieces for each family member. Our old family dog Rex, who was partial to chocolate drops, didn’t get any, so I gave him a bit of mine. I knew LOVE-KNOT from the many renditions of Barbara Allen I’ve heard through the years, including both the Evs and Joan Baez. LOI HONG KONG. I liked ASQUITH and FLOOZIES, but COD to JUGGLING. Thank you B and setter.

    Edited at 2019-06-08 06:17 am (UTC)

      1. So people were told later. It never seemed to bother Rex, who always had chocolate drops for his birthday, much preferring Cadbury’s to the doggy ones. He never showed any ill effects. He was a super dog. A black and tan mongrel, he came into my life early in 1949 and stayed until 1965.
        1. A question of quantity, presumably. They will certainly eat it if given the opportunity, but then you can say that of more or less anything.

          Edited at 2019-06-08 10:22 am (UTC)

    1. Sweet rationing did actually end in the late forties for a short while but was soon reintroduced. I fondly remember a box of Smarties (much like M&Ms) in ’53.

      Edited at 2019-06-08 03:26 pm (UTC)

      1. They’re still going strong, H. The blue ones were briefly withdrawn, until a natural additive was found that could produce the colour, and not because gentlemen of a certain age were confusing them with other blue pill-shaped items.
  5. I thought this was a very clever puzzle which rewarded the considerable time I spent on it last Saturday. I was travelling up to Cambridge so I first glanced at the puzzle in the 48 minutes it takes from Kings Cross-one of the very good rail services we have,but also very busy and occasionally with only four coaches and people crammed in and standing. Cambridge is a very popular destination.
    There were several clues where I thought I had the answer but not the full parsing: JUGGLING and GRUYERE for example. By the time I got home I think I had the same five left as our setter. LOI was ASQUITH, a delightful moment when I saw it; ditto FLOOZIES.I did a world tour for Victoria but still failed to remember HONG KONG but it had to be.
    Many great clues. I thought FRAU was brilliant. David
  6. ….she LOVEs me KNOT”, blowing a PUFFBALL as we went, and then cheating to make sure we were loved. Part of my (fairly) innocent childhood, along with DOLLY MIXTURES which were always in the plural, since one was never enough ! BIRDS and FLOOZIES were perfectly acceptable terms back then, but some might hold this puzzle in sexist contempt. I just cracked on and thoroughly enjoyed it, even though my 20 minute target was breached.

    I did a lot of JUGGLING with this toughie, although the only unknown was GRU, and only the BIBLET HUMPER was left for Bruce to unpick.

    I had to think a little before accepting “exhaust = CO”.

    I wonder how many succumbed to biffing “slow turn” at 18D – a beautiful trap set for the unwary !

    FOI OVAL
    LOI PUFFBALL
    COD FRAU (loved ASQUITH too !)
    TIME 22:04

  7. Thank you, Bruce, for your parsing of COLOSSI, BIBLE THUMPER, HONG KONG, and IN TUNE.
    My notes tell me I took 40 minutes just on the SW corner.
    Definite COD to ASQUITH.

    Edited at 2019-06-08 07:42 am (UTC)

  8. I thought both ASQUITH and FRAU were very good. Knew GRU, but then again the Soviet system had so many spy agencies and incarnarnations thereof that just about any group of letters would probably qualify.
  9. I I have “fantastic” scrawled on my sheet, so thank you setter (and thanks Bruce for answering several of my marginal question marks!) An hour and eight minutes, starting with 5d GRUYERE (my love of spy novels came in handy) and ending with 6d, not by any stretch the hardest, but I just couldn’t see the second word.

    I’m with Verlaine on 7d: loved it once I got there, and plenty of others along the way were good fun, too. Managed to slow myself down by popping ROOT BEET into 9a for a while, and also not counting carefully enough before I wrote BIBLE BASHER in at 23 before finding a blank square left over at the end. Oops.

    Edited at 2019-06-08 08:43 am (UTC)

  10. 45:57 and a bit of a struggle, but enjoyable nonetheless and all successfully parsed. I liked JUGGLING, BEVY and the well hidden PET HATE, but I’m with Verlaine on loving FRAU.
  11. Enjoyed this one .. though I was left wondering why a puffball should be described as “simple,” compared to, say, a nettle. It might look it, but it isn’t.
    Fungi are a whole kingdom, like plants or animals, and a highly successful one they are too. and we cannot exist without their aid. We should respect their different nature .. (wanders off, muttering to self ..)

    Edited at 2019-06-08 09:03 am (UTC)

  12. I enjoyed this one. FRAU was my LOI with a eureka moment. FLOOZIES and PUFFBALL were just ahead of it. Knew the GRU. Didn’t parse BIBLET HUMPER but knew the expression BIBLE BASHER and extrapolated. 31:16. Thanks setter and Bruce.
  13. 19:07. Super puzzle.
    ‘Cabinet maker’ is an old chestnut. In ST puzzle 4706 Jeff Pearce even used it on its own as a definition.
    ‘Hamburger off the shelf’, on the other hand, is original as far as I know, and quite brilliant.
  14. A lovely puzzle. I had kept it for this morning and it’s cheered up my day. I didn’t know GRU but it had to be. And I’ve only heard of DOLLY MIXTURES in the plural but as an anagram there was no problem there. I loved the twisty definitions – especially FRAU at 6d. 42 minutes. Ann
  15. 40:41. Terrific puzzle. Loved the Hamburger and cabinet-maker clues. Thought the hidden at 15ac was also very good.
  16. Ok, enjoyer of the Times Crossword that I am and intend to remain, we have now all surely reached a stage of cultural evolution when un-ironic use of “bird” to mean woman/girl is not only embarrassingly anachronistic, but unacceptable.
    Lazy setter’s clichés, such as the almost weekly “O.R.” for “men”, and other such utterly archaic usage known only to avid crossworders is irksome enough for relative newcomers like me.
    And I loathe gratuitous, virtue-signalling and phoney sanctimony, so I hope this isn’t taken as such.
    But I just feel that this “Bird” thing, in the company of Floozies/Tramps and the whole sexual availability thing of “Frau” (which anyway the setter got wrong) – collectively crosses a line.
    We’ve had so many brain-stretching puzzles recently showing how enjoyable fresh-thinking crossword-setting can be like, that surely we can dispense with this tired, hackneyed, rubbish, and move into the 21st century?
    (And this isn’t sour grapes, I promise. I finished this puzzle super-quickly, perhaps fuelled by the above ire, and even enjoyed some of the other clues.)
    Also, I still love this blog and all the comments, so I hope this doesn’t get me barred. I just couldn’t, in all good conscience, leave it unsaid.
    1. If you’re a relative newcomer how do you know so much about setters ‘ cliches?

      Just a thought 🙂

      FGBP

  17. Thanks setter and Bruce
    A very enjoyable crossword for all of the reasons mentioned above – was another lover of FRAU and the clever twist to some of the definitions.
    Was one of the ‘gullible’ who fell for SLOW TURN until doing my final parsing check off … and not finding it in the dictionary – very good clue when was put back on the straight and narrow. Took that last run-through to find the deviously hidden PET HATE as well.
    Although JUGGLING was one of the first answers written into the grid, it was another that had to painstakingly figured out in that run-through, made harder for not knowing Beniamino GIGLI (another clever trick to remove ‘the first one’).
    Don’t think that there was a bad clue amongst them – finishing with COLOSSI, that SLOW BURN and TERROR-STRUCK as the last one in.

Comments are closed.