PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 6!π SERVED
Schpuzzle of the Week:
A couple o’ witnesses, both to growth
Name four ways the following couplet relates to effortlessness and ease:
“I, raising hens, flora, both
Bear witness to unfailing growth.”
Your answer will include:
Ⅰ. a five-word idiom;
Ⅱ. two-word idiom;
Ⅲ. a one-word synonym of “leisure” or “relaxation”; and
Ⅳ. a two-word idiom (which includes a hyphenated word).
Hint: Ignore two letters that appear in two consecutive words in the couplet (one letter in each word). These letters spell a prefix associated with “two” and “both.”APPPETIZER MENU
Conundrunbeatable Appetizer:
“Parsery,” artistry and royalty
Parsing opposites
The art of sitcomedy
2. 🤣Think of the last name of a European artist in six letters.
Rearrange to name an ‘80s sitcom.
Reversal and rearrangement result in royalty
3. ♚Think of a male first name in five letters that, when reversed, is a female first name and that, when rearranged, is another female first name notably held by a member of royalty.
MENU
Just Hangin’ Round The Castle Slice:
Draw a bridge over a moat
Name what you might see near a castle.Remove two letters and reverse the order of two others to name what else you might see
near a castle.
Name these two things.
Riffing Off Shortz And Cole Slices:
Radiant reddish radishes in red dishes
Will Shortz’s September 19th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Rachel Cole of Oakland, California, reads:Name something grown in a garden. Change
the second letter, and double the third letter, to get an adjective that describes this thing. What is it?
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz and Cole Slices read:
ENTREE #1
Name two things a scuba diver might see. One is reddish-pinkish-hued. The other is something that Charlie Allnut loathed.Rearrange the combined letters of these words to spell the first and last names of a puzzle-maker.
Now rearrange the combined letters of the puzzle-maker’s name to form something a mountaineer might hear and who might be the source of what the mountaineer heard.
Who is the puzzle-maker?
What things might a scuba diver see?
What might a mountaineer hear and what might be its source?
ENTREE #2
Name something that grows in a garden.
Replace the first letter with two letters whose numerical positions in the alphabet sum to 40 (A=1, B=2, C=3...).The result is something green... (oops, I mean
grown) in bays.
What are these things that grow in gardens and bays?
ENTREE #3
Name an edible grown in a garden, in two words totaling ten letters.
Move the ninth letter and tenth letter one place later in the alphabet (so A becomes B, B becomes C, etc.).
Change the eighth letter, a vowel, to a different vowel and double it. The result is an edible “grown” in a vat.
What are these two edibles grown in a garden and in a vat?
ENTREE #4
Name a place where you can pick anything “from fruit to nuts.”
Change the fifth letter, and delete the sixth
letter, to name something grown in a garden.
What are this place and thing grown in a garden?
ENTREE #5
Name a legume grown on a tree.
Change the fifth letter, and double the third
letter, to get a root vegetable.
What are these two edibles that grow?
ENTREE #6
Name a flower grown in a garden. Write it in lowercase letters.
Replace the third letter with the letter that follows it in the alphabet.Now replace that letter with two letters that, if kerned too closely together, resemble the letter they replaced. The result will be an edible
grown in a garden.
What are this flower and edible?
ENTREE #7
Name an edible grown in a garden.
Within this word is a three-letter word for what a golf ball may knock into while producing a birdie, or perhaps eagle or even double-eagle.
Replace that three-letter word with a three-letter word for a male turkey.
The result is a likely destination for this edible.
What are this edible and this destination?
Dessert Menu
Professional Dessert:
Reversing a second amendment
Name a person whose profession is mending. Spell it backward to form a word that means to mend something you mended before.What are these two words?
Every Friday at Joseph Young’s Puzzleria! we publish a new menu of fresh word puzzles, number puzzles, logic puzzles, puzzles of all varieties and flavors. We cater to cravers of scrumptious puzzles!
Our master chef, Grecian gourmet puzzle-creator Lego Lambda, blends and bakes up mysterious (and sometimes questionable) toppings and spices (such as alphabet soup, Mobius bacon strips, diced snake eyes, cubed radishes,
“hominym” grits, anagraham crackers, rhyme thyme and sage sprinklings.)
Please post your comments below. Feel free also to post clever and subtle hints that do not give the puzzle answers away. Please wait until after 3 p.m. Eastern Time on Wednesdays to post your answers and explain your hints about the puzzles. We serve up at least one fresh puzzle every Friday.
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Howdy all. I actually went to bed last night and slept...so didn't tackle P! till this morning. I believe I have everything solved except the Schpuzzle (funny how those seem to alternate between easy ones and impossible ones...this being one of the latter).
ReplyDeleteI'm not SURE about the first Conundrum, but otherwise, the Entrees were fun because they weren't overly difficult this week, i.e. a bit of hunting and/or intuition and they were solvable....as were the Slice and Dessert. Thanks Lego!
You are quite welcome, ViolinTeddy.
DeleteLegoWhoHintsThatInMathew'sConundrum#1AppetizerTheNounAndVerbHaveAccentsOnDifferentSyllables
Well, then one of the two Con #1 words I came up with is definitely wrong....and I'll have to go look at the second word, because at the moment, I can't even remember what it was!
DeleteGood end of the week(and "Ask Me Another")to all!
ReplyDeleteEarlier tonight I listened to the very last episode of AMA. It was fun, but bittersweet. I do hope Ophira Eisenberg and Jonathan Coulton team up again in some capacity later on. It was a great show. I know for many listeners, it helped get them through the pandemic. Pity it had to end. Mom made us some burgers and fries for supper. They were delicious. I took a walk earlier this afternoon, and I showered just now. I still have the Prize Crossword to go after this.
Now my progress with this week's offerings.
Got Conundrums #2 and #3, but judging from Lego's last comment, I do not have Mathew's intended answer for #1. Got all Entrees except #2, and the Dessert. Any hints for the others will be greatly appreciated(especially the Schpuzzle, which from the look of it, I'm definitely NEVER going to get on my own!).
Good luck to all in solving, please stay safe, and if you're vaxxed relax, but if not, get that shot! Cranberry out!
pjbWishesAllThe"AskMeAnother"PeopleGoodLuckInAllTheirFutureEndeavors,WeShallMissYou!
Hello, all.
ReplyDeleteGot everything except the Schpuzzle. My [alternate, per Lego's hint] answer for Con #1 has 1 syllable.
geofan,
DeleteI think ViolinTeddy and perhaps others also have that one-syllable solution to Conundrum #1.
The Schpuzzle is difficult for me to come up with hints for. But I'll try to rustle some up...
Here is one (likely too-obscure) effort:
Counting down the Fibonacci Sequence:
INFINITY...21, 13. 8, 5, 3, 2, 1, 1
Legonacci
I think I'm in that same boat, geo. Maybe the same 1 syllable word, maybe not. Regardless, I'm sticking with it since it seems to fit the bill.
DeleteThe sum of 5, 3 and 2 is 10, which is the number of words in...
DeleteLegoWhoOffersTheFollowingCoupleOfExamplesComposedByAHeroOfHis:"TygerTygerBurningBrightInTheForestsOfTheNight"FollowedBy"WhatImmortalHandOrEyeCouldFrameThyFearfulSymmetry?"
I THINK I might be 'on' to what one has to do for the Schpuzzle, but it's very labor-intensive. Am I right? I haven't totally worked it out yet, though.
DeleteComment on. Con #1: No, I didn't have a one-syllable word, rather two syllables, but the stress didn't change; thus it can't be the intended word. I did come up with another one, however, which may be correct.
DeleteJust solved the Sunday Puzzle. Last night I heard they're taking off "Says You" as well! Do the public radio people know something the listeners don't?
ReplyDeletepjbWarningLegoHeMayHaveNoSundayPuzzleToRiffOffOfSoon!
That sounds like a loaded question. However, I think Lego should double the usual first place prize purse this week for anyone who solves the Schpuzzle easily.
DeleteHmmmm, GB. That suggestion reminds me a bit of this Billy Preston song.
DeleteLego(Pursin'HisLipsAndSingin')Nothin'TimesAnythin'(IncludingTwo)YieldsNothin'!
Late Sunday/Early Monday Hints:
ReplyDelete(The Admittedly Labor-Intensive) Schpuzzle of the Week:
Try breaking the couplet into three parts:
* the first line;
* the first three words of the second line,
* the last two words.
Conundrunbeatable Appetizer:
1. Strawberry Alarm Clock, Southwest F.O.B.
2. Not everyboby knows this artist's name, but most have seen his art.
3. The first name notably held by a member of royalty was held also by a swimmer whose surname was a homophone of a kind of nymph that gave life to lakes, rivers, springs, and fountains. The word for that nymph is a fourth anagram of to the three names that are the answer to this conundrum.
Camelotical Slice:
The first thing you might see near a castle sometimes jumps overothers near the castle!
The other thing you might see near a castle is relatively immobile (unlike his hubby!).
Riffing Off Shortz And Cole Slices:
ENTREE #1
Charlie Allnut loathed live bait. What the mountaineer might hear may be a mountain nymph... or a phenomenon named after that mountain nymph.
ENTREE #2
Pearl onions?
ENTREE #3
The edible grown in a garden sound like it might be a bit burnt
ENTREE #4
Name a place where fruity trees are grown... like apples, for example.
ENTREE #5
Name a legume grown on a tree can be a chocolate substitute.
ENTREE #6
I am told that the edible grown in a garden is often transported via truck. Its seems the truck is a precarious place to be if you are an eater instead of an edible!
ENTREE #7
Try to put backspin on the ball when using your wedge.
Professional Dessert:
The person whose profession is mending in not a soldier or spy. The person might be a tailor, of course, but not in this puzzle, Buddy!
LegoNotesThatThereIsNoChanceEverSomeOfUsHumanWillMendOurEvilWays
I have to laugh at myself, Lego, because if you had seen the complicated way I was tackling the Schpuzzle, you would have just shaken your head. I was indeed on the correct track, and had come up with the right five-word idioim and two-word idiom, but the wrong synonym , and was hopelessly stuck on the hyphenated idiom.
DeleteHowever, your hint makes things much simpler, especially since the first two idioms I'd come up with were already correct. With a new synonym, however, I am still having trouble with the hyphenated idiom. I have one word chosen, but can't make anything out of the rest. Will keep trying. However, I am pleased that I had figured out, however convoluted, how to go at this.
Well, I finally got the first Conundrum. Thanks for that.
ReplyDeletepjbAskingWhoKnewEnglandDanAndJohnFordColeyWereInOneOfThoseBandsBeforeTheyWereADuo?
Late to the party. Still working on dessert and E6. Nice trip to Florida nature coast to visit the Manatees. Too early -but did see one in "the wild" close to Hunter's Spring off Crystal River. Did not realise how big they are.
ReplyDeleteHow I would LOVE to see a manatee in the wild....sigh....
DeleteUp here in the Midwest (Minnesota and Wisconsin), we don't see many manatees... but we do sea cows!
DeleteLego
Tuesday Hints:
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
I. not a kettle of fish... think hoops and staves instead.
II. Anti-perspirant is not necessary.
III. "Long ago; formerly" (archaic anagram)
IV. "Hey, these apples are a piece of cake to pick!"
Appetizer Menu
1. "I don't detect any pot at all... but it does smell like I'm in church!"
2. White geese flying east, black geese flying west
3. Quinn, Comăneci, Rigg
Camelotical Slice:
Your move
Riffing Off Shortz And Cole Slices:
ENTREE #1
The cowpoke exited the cor(r)al early because he had committed to be the (squaredance-step-moderator) at the hoedown in the barn that evening.
ENTREE #2
John Jacob...
ENTREE #3
Packer fans sporting yellow-foam-wedge-headwear have an advantage in solving this one.
ENTREE #4
This one's easy... I would never lie, or kid.
ENTREE #5
"Eh, What's up, Doc?" (Well, not the root vegetable! But the legume? Sure.)
ENTREE #6
Tiny Tim would have had an advantage in solving this one.
ENTREE #7
Popeye would have had an advantage in solving this one.
Professional Dessert:
L. Frank Baum would have had an advantage in solving this one.
LegoWhoHasNoAdvantageAtAllInGivingHintsForThisOne
Schpuzzle: Poetically Licensed Anagrams for:
ReplyDeleteI. Shooting fish in a barrel
II. No seweat
III. Rest
IV. Low-hanging fruit
Appetizers:
1. Incense & Incense [first wild guess was Springs & Springs]
2. (M.C.) Escher & Cheers
3. Aidan; Nadia; Diana
JHRTC Slice: Knight (- ht & reverse n & i =) King
Entrees:
1. Rachel Cole; Coral & Leech; Echo & Caller
2. Asters & Oysters
3. Swiss Chard & Swiss Cheese
4. Orchard & Orchid
5. Carob & Carrot
6. Tulip & Turnip
7. Spinach & Stomach
Dessert: Tinker & Reknit
Good gray cell agitation, Mathew and Lego
Schpuzzle: [Parts (I), (II), (IV) post-Wed-hint]
ReplyDelete(I) SHOOTING FISH IN A BARREL [anagram of “I, raising hens, flora, both”]
(II) NO SWEAT [with (III) below, anagram of “Bear witness to” – B, I]
(III) REST [see (II) above]
(IV) LOW-HANGING FRUIT [anagram of “unfailing growth”]
But what do these words [other than (III)] have to do with relaxation, unless one is a mass murderer?
All that comes to mind is SITTING DUCKS.
Conundrums:
1. [pre-Lego Fri hint] STRETCH: stretch (out, to rest), to stretch (extend, tension)
[post-Lego Fri hint]:
(a)CÓNSOLE (as a TV set to watch, to relax), CONSÓLE (to comfort from stress)
(b) ÍNCENSE (as in a temple), INCÉNSE (to anger, make tense)
2. ESCHER → CHEERS
3. AIDAN, NADIA, DIANA
Slice: KNIGHT – HT, exch I,N → KING
Entrées
#1: RACHEL COLE → CORAL, LEECH; CALLER ECHO, CALL RE-ECHO [alt: LOCAL CHEER, e.g., a Sherpa, saying “We reached the top!”]
#2: ASTER – A + OY → OYSTER
#3: SWISS CHARD → SWISS CHASE→ SWISS CHEESE
#4: ORCHARD – R, chg A to I → ORCHID
#5: CAROB – B + R → CARROT
#6: TULIP, chg L to M → + RN → TURNIP
#7: SPINACH – PIN + TOM → STOMACH
Dessert: REPAPERER → REREPAPER
Post-Mon-hint: TINKERER → REREKNIT
9/28/21 82 DF
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle:--A barrel of laughs?
Appetizers: Conundrums
1. Incense ,Incense
2. Escher , Cheers
3. Aidan, Nadia, Diana, also Dania
Slice: Knight , -ht /mix, King
Entrees:
1. Rachel Cole; Coral , Leech, Echo ---
2. Asters , Oysters
3. Swiss Chard , Swiss Cheese
4. Orchard , Orchid (connection to Blaine’s puzzle t his week)
5. Carob , Carrot
6. Tulip , Turnip
7. Spinach ,, Stomach
Dessert:----- Stoner/ renots
Schpuzzle
ReplyDelete1. SHOOTING FISH IN A BARREL
2. NO SWEAT
3. REST
4. LOW-HANGING FRUIT
Appetizer Menu
1. INCENSE
2. (M.C.)ESCHER, CHEERS
3. AIDAN, NADIA, DIANA
Menu
Just Hangin' Round The Castle Slice
KNIGHT, KING
Entrees
1. RACHEL COLE, CORAL, LEECH, ECHO, CALLER
2. ASTER, OYSTER
3. SWISS CHARD, SWISS CHEESE
4. ORCHARD, ORCHID
5. CAROB, CARROT
6. TULIP, TURNIP
7. SPINACH, STOMACH(PIN, TOM)
Dessert
TINKER, REKNIT
Got through "Masked Singer", gave up on "Alter Ego".-pjb
Geez, once again it totally slipped my mind about Wed/answers. If there have been add'l hints since yesterday, I haven't seen them:
ReplyDeleteSCHPUZZLE: Remove a “B” from ‘Bear’ and an "I" from ‘Witness’ per the in-puzzle hint
Five-word Idiom: "SHOOTING FISH IN A BARREL” [From first line of couplet]
Two-word Idiom: "NO SWEAT” [From second line’s first 3 words]. [All pre-hints]
Synonym: “REST”. [Remainder of second line’s first 3 words].
Hyphenated Idiom: LOAFING, leaving G H I N R T U W.????
CONUNDRUMS:
1. INCENSE [Post-hint]. Pre-hint answer: CONSOLE [As in relaxing in front of a TV set, but someone consoles a tense person?]. ]
2. ESCHER => CHEERS
3. AIDAN => NADIA => DIANA
SLICE: Turns out I had the wrong answer for this
ENTREES:
1. CORAL & LEECH => RACHEL COLE => ECHO & CALLER
2. ASTER => OYSTER. [O + Y = 40]
3. SWISS CHARD => SWISS CHEESE
4. ORCHARD => ORCHID
5. CAROB => CARROT
6. Tulip => TURNIP
7. SPINACH => STOMACH
DESSERT: TINKER => REKNIT
This week's official answers for the record, part 1:
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
A couple o’ witnesses, both to growth
Name four ways the following couplet relates to effortlessness:
“I, raising hens, flora, both
Bear witness to unfailing growth.”
Your answer will include:
I. a five-word idiom;
II. two-word idiom;
III. a one-word synonym of “leisure” or “relaxation”; and
IV. a two-word idiom (which includes a hyphenated word).
Hint: Ignore two letters that appear in two consecutive words in the couplet (one letter in each word). These letters spell a prefix associated with “two” and “both.”
Answer:
The first line of the couplet is an anagram of the idiom "shooting fish in a barrel."
The first three words of the second line of the couplet (after you remove the B from "Bear" and the i from "witness) are anagrams of the idiom "no sweat" and the synonym "rest."
The final two words of the couplet are an anagram of "low-hanging fruit".
Appetizer Menu
Conundrunbeatable Appetizer:
“Parsery,” artistry and royalty
Parsing opposites
1. Name a seven-letter word that as a noun is associated with relaxation and as a verb is associated with tension.
Answer: INCENSE
The art of sitcomedy
2. Think of the last name of a European artist in six letters. Rearrange to name an ‘80s sitcom.
Answer: ESCHER, CHEERS
Reversal and rearrangement result in royalty
3. Think of a male first name in five letters that, when reversed, is a female first name and that, when rearranged, is another female first name notably held by a member of royalty.
Answer: AIDAN, NADIA, DIANA (Princess of Wales)
MENU
Camelotical Slice:
Draw a bridge over a moat
Name what you might see near a castle.
Remove two letters and reverse the order of two others to name what else you might see near a castle.
Name these two things.
Answer:
Knight; King
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 2:
ReplyDeleteRiffing Off Shortz And Cole Slices:
Radiant reddish radishes in red dishes
ENTREE #1
Name two things a scuba diver might see – one reddish-pinkish-hued, the other something that Charlie Allnut loathed. Rearrange the combined letters of these words to spell the first and last names of a puzzle-maker.
Now rearrange the combined letters of the puzzle-maker’s name to form something a mountaineer might hear and who might be the source of what the mountaineer heard.
Who is the puzzle-maker?
What might a scuba diver see?
What might a mountaineer hear and what might be its source?
Answer:
Rachel Cole; coral, leech; echo, caller
ENTREE #2
Name something grown in a garden. Replace the first letter with two letters whose numerical positions in the alphabet sum to 40 (A=1, B=2, C=3...). The result is something grown in bays.
What are these things grown in gardens and bays?
Answer:
Aster; Oyster
ENTREE #3
Name an edible grown in a garden, in two words totaling ten letters. Move the ninth letter and tenth letter one place later in the alphabet (so A becomes B, B becomes C, etc.). Change the eighth letter to a different vowel and double it. The result is an edible “grown” in a vat.
What are these two edibles grown in a garden and in a vat?
Answer:
Swiss chard; Swiss cheese
ENTREE #4
Name a place where you can pick anything “from fruit to nuts.”
Change the fifth letter, and delete the sixth letter, to name something grown in a garden.
What are this place and thing grown in a garden?
Answer:
Orchard; Orchid
Lego...
This week's official answers for the record, part 3:
ReplyDeleteRiffing Off Shortz And Cole Slices (continued):
ENTREE #5
Name a legume grown on a tree. Change the fifth letter, and double the third letter, to get a root vegetable.
What are these two edibles that grow?
Answer:
Carob; Carrot
ENTREE #6
Name a flower grown in a garden. Replace the third letter with the letter that follows it in the alphabet.
Now replace THAT letter with two letters that, if kerned (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/kern) too closely together, resemble the letter they replaced. The result will be an edible grown in a garden.
What are this flower and edible?
Answer:
Tulip; Turnip
tulip=>tumip=>turnip
ENTREE #7
Name an edible grown in a garden. Within this word is a three-letter word for what a golf ball may knock into while producing a birdie, or perhaps eagle or even double-eagle.
Replace that three-letter word with a three-letter word for a male turkey. The result is a likely destination for this edible.
What are this edible and this destination?
Answer:
Spinach; Stomach
spinach=>s pin ach=>s tom ach=>stomach
Dessert Menu
Professional Dessert:
Reversing a second amendment
Name a person whose profession is mending.
Spell it backward to form a word that means to mend something you mended before.
What are these two words?
Answer:
Tinker; reknit
Lego!
Was Frank Baum hint a reference to the Tinman? Must have been.
DeleteI believe that is correct, Plantsmith.
DeleteLegoWhoNotesThatFrankOzTinkeredWithPuppets
Frank was into a bunch of different things.
ReplyDelete