PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 6!π SERVED
Schpuzzle of the Week:
Laureates and lariets
Take the name of a past TV Western character portrayed by a future movie star.
Anagram the character’s surname to form the surname of a Nobel Prize laureate.Anagram the character’s first name to form an adjective describing this Nobel laureate’s output.
What are the names of this character and laureate?
What is the adjective?
Appetizer Menu
Ripcord-Roarin’ Appetizer:
Get to a town, find a country and state
“You can’t get there from here...”1. 🚗🚆👣There is a town in the lower 48 United States of America that cannot be reached by car, rail or foot without first traveling through a foreign country.Can you name it?Hint: No man is an island... neither is this town.
A stately country dish
2. 🍽Name a country in one word, then add the one-word name of one of our states to the end.
The result is the name of a well-known culinary dish of another country, in two words.
What is the name of this dish?
MENU
Tropical Tourism Slice:
Lying supine on the Seychelles
Spoonerize (that is, switch the initial sounds of) the two parts of a compound adjective that might describe a tourist after she or he returns from a tropical vacation. Place a space between the two parts, then place a two-letter preposition in that space.
The result sounds like a three-word phrase for what the tourist was likely lying upon during much of the the vacation.
What are this adjective and phrase?
Riffing Off Shortz And Mace Slices:
Pomegranates-mangled yield mango and pears
Will Shortz’s January 29th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Samuel Mace of Smyrna, Delaware, reads:Name a fruit in one word. Drop the last two letters. The remaining letters can be rearranged to name two other fruits. What are they?
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Mace Slices read:
ENTREE #1
Name a puzzle-maker in two words. Delete one of two consonants that appear twice in his name.Rearrange the remainng letters to spell the name of an Old Testament figure who was cheated out of his inheritance, and a creature whose pelt may have figured into the ruse used by his brother in doing so.
Who is the puzzle-maker?
What are the Old Testament figure and creature?
Note: Entree #2 was created and contributed by a friend and a fan of Puzzleria! We proudly and gratefully present it here:
ENTREE #2
Name a fruit in one word. Delete a pair of double letters in the word. (For example, if “grasshopper” were a color you would remove either the “ss” or the “pp”.)ROT 22 the remaining second letter. ROT 2
the remaining last letter. The resulting remaining letters can be rearranged to name two animals.
What is the fruit, and what are the animals?
ENTREE #3
Name a fruit in one word. Drop the last two letters. Rearrange consecutive letters of the result to spell a three-letter synonym of a four-letter word for what is found on the skin of a certain fruit. The remaining letters, in order, spell a smaller fruit.
What is the one-word fruit?
What are the three-letter synonym and four-letter word?
What is the smaller fruit?
Hint #1: The four-letter word and its three-letter synonym begin with the same two letters.
Hint #2: The “certain fruit,” followed by the four-letter word, is sometimes found on skin that is not the skin of a fruit.
ENTREE #4Name a fruit that is a compound word. Replace its “e” with an “a” and place a space between the compound parts. The result is the name of a person who served more than 15 years as a mayor, but who also served six months in a federal prison.
What is this fruit?
Who was this mayor?
ENTREE #5
Name a fruit, in one word, and a Spanish word for any of several oaks of California and Mexico. Rearrange these 12 combined letters
to name two months of the year.
What are this fruit and word for one of these oaks?
What are the two months?
ENTREE #6Name a four-letter proper noun that appears four times in the first four chapters of Genesis.
Name also an adjective and noun together that describe 1) St. Thérèse of Lisieux, 2) St. Teresa of Ávila, 3) Mother Teresa and 4) Kateri Tekakwitha. Drop the last two letters. The 13 letters of this result can be rearranged to name a fruit in two words.
What are this proper noun, adjective and noun and two-word fruit?
ENTREE #7
Take a four-letter word for animal or vegetable matter (such as chopped fish or corn) thrown overboard to attract fish. Name also a specific five-letter fruit that you might also try using as bait.Rearrange these combined letters to spell two fruits that begin with the same letter.
What are this fish-attracting word and fruity bait?
What are the two alliterative fruits?
ENTREE #8
Name two similar fruits, each beginning with a letter in the first fourth of the alphabet. Name also a spherical fruit. Replace an “a” with an “o”.
Rearrange these combined 13 letters to spell:
🤴 two similar creatures that, if smooched by a princess, might transform into handsome prince, and
🛋 a lamp-dweller who may perform such a transformation if no princess is available.
What are these similar fruits and the spherical fruit?
What are the two similar creatures and the lamp-dweller?
ENTREE #9
Name a fruit in one word that is usually followed by the word “fruit,” and a variety of another fruit, each in four letters.
Double a letter in the first fruit. Rearrange those five letters to spell the first name of a fictional plumber. Add the letter that you doubled to the four letters in the other fruit variety, then rearrange the result to name that plumber’s twin.
What are this fruit and variety of fruit?
Who are the twin plumbers?
ENTREE #10
Name a fruit in one word.
Rearrange its first four letters to name something Billy Collins penned.Rearrange its remaining letters to name the title of what he penned.
What is this fruit?
What did Billy Collins pen. What is its title?
Hint #1: This particular something that Billy Collins penned appeared in The New Yorker a decade ago.
Hint #2: Take the title of what Mr. Collins penned. Remove the middle letter. The result is the first 66.67% of the letters of one of those “spherical fruits” alluded to in Entree #8.
Dessert Menu
Chic Sequel Dessert:
Dapperly dressed character, coming & going
Think of a movie that spawned multiple sequels.
Find a verb for what the lead character was able to do to death very early on in that movie.The second two-thirds of this verb spell something he wore on his back. The first third sounds like something he wore on his front.
Who is this lead character?
What did he wear on his back and what did he
wear on his front?
What was he able to do to death, early on?
Hint: The character was known by more than one name.
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.
We invite you to make it a habit to “Meet at Joe’s!” If you enjoy our weekly puzzle party, please tell your friends about Joseph Young’s Puzzleria! Thank you.
Slice: After my last trip i was basically flat broke.
ReplyDeleteIs that a Paul-like hint, Plantie?
DeleteI will take that as a compliment.
DeleteHaving spent the last almost 4.5 hours, I am devoid of the answers to only SDB's second, and Entrees 2 and 3. But this is enough puzzling for now, I'm going to sleep.
ReplyDeleteIs Pto a country? What about Baked?
ReplyDeleteAssuming you are referring to SDB's 2nd, I have begun to suspect that by "one of our states" he means something OTHER than the 50...i.e. a psychological state, etc.
DeleteNo!
DeleteStill, ViolinTeddy, I believe it was wise of you to explore the possibility that our "resident free-faller" might have been employing that other meaning of "state" in his puzzle.
DeleteAnd it was very "skydiveboylike" to categorically "plug the entrance to that rabbit hole" with a giant exclamation Mark!
LegoWhoNotesThatTheAmbiguityOfTheDoubleMeaningOf"State"IsSomewhatAkinToPuzzlesAboutFindingA"WorldCapital"(IsItLimaOrLira?DiliOrDollar?YaoundeOrEuro?)
Please! I do not like giving hints to my puzzles, and at the same time I do not like for them to be misunderstood, especially when both of them are very straight forward. There is no ambiguation in the presentation of either of them. I would prefer it be understood because I do not want anyone led astray, as I would like to know if others feel these are better than what Will Shorts throws at us. If you all go looking in the wrong places due to misdirection, then how will I know? The state in question is one of our 50.
DeleteI predict our balloon visitor may pass over this state.
DeleteHowever; VT it seems that Lego has used that "state of play," ruse at least once in the past. Or i could also say "t here is a connection to a past puzzle of note." A 3 on the trickster scale.
DeleteI feel that Will is now preoccupied with the World Table tennis championships- just around the corner. Let's let him get ready.
DeleteI believe that NPR had a puzzle not that long ago that stated something like "Name a state that contains all five vowels exactly once" and the answer was "euphoria."
DeleteExactly, Tortie. That is a perfect example of the ambiguity of the word "state" in a puzzle.
DeleteLegoStateingTheNotSoObvious
Heh heh...I rest my case!
DeleteTo be fair, beginning "states" with a lower case "s" suggests considering possibilities other than proper nouns.
DeleteThere are many clueless folk from Seattle including my brother in law, and yours truly.
DeleteAnd Solid state also has a military connection.
Or the Happiest Place on Earth?
ReplyDeleteAh, dear old high-priced D'land....
DeleteGood first-Friday-of-February to all!
ReplyDeleteMom and I are fine. We had supper with Bryan, Renae, and Mia Kate at Cracker Barrel this evening. I had two "Sunday Homestyle Chicken Breasts" with green beans, loaded mashed potatoes, biscuits and butter, and a Coke Zero Sugar. Mom had meatloaf, chicken and dumplings, and carrots, but she only liked the carrots. Mia Kate had chicken and dumplings too, but she barely touched hers. Kept scrolling through her phone for almost the entire meal. We also looked at photos from their trip to Hawaii. Lots of chickens over there, as well as some nenes(Hawaiian geese). Then we got home and I did my other puzzles before commenting here.
As for this week's selections, most of them were easy, though I couldn't get Entrees #3, #6, or #8. Plus, I may or may not have an answer for SDB's second Appetizer, but then I doubt I'll get any help to straighten any of that out. I will be happy to see any and every hint provided by Lego, of course, as the week goes on.
Good luck in solving to all, please stay safe, and may our future weather have little or nothing to do with a furry rodent who was dragged out of his home by some overdressed guy yesterday in Gobbler's Knob, Punxsutawney, wherever that is in PA. Cranberry out!
pjbKnowsThereAreAlreadyALotOfMeteorologistsInThisCountryWhoKnowWhatThey'reDoing,WhatDoWeNeedAGroundhogToDoThisFor?!
sdb's Appetizer #1 has an alternate answer, although the alternate is not a town (there are only 152 inhabitants), as the intended answer is.
ReplyDeleteAs a complement (and a compliment) to sdb's Appetizer #1, Campobello Island in Canada (known for FDR) can only be reached via land through the USA. There is also a domestic ferry to Canada.
ReplyDeleteThere's also another area in the U.S. where you need to travel through another country, at least if you're traveling by land.
DeleteThere's also another town in another state where the border is smack dab in the middle of town. There is a building where you can freely be in either country without going through customs.
Correct. Stansted, QC and Derby Line, VT.
DeleteYour "need to travel through another country" example is my example above.
Tortie: with corrected link, sorry.
DeleteYour "need to travel to another country example is my example" above.
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteTortie, that was the alternate solution I had. I chose not to publish it, so as not to give untoward hints to other solvers.
DeleteTortie et al.: The same is true of the intended solution, which I saw from a large ferry in Aug 1977 (though I have not been to the US town itself).
DeleteOops, just deleted the post now. While I was pretty sure it wasn't the intended answer, I didn't think about it being TMI.
DeleteHi, everyone. Well, I may have solved everything but App #2. For Entree #6, I didn't drop any letters. Is this correct, or do I need to find a different pair of words?
ReplyDeleteAlso, for Entree #2, there is a variant that doesn't involve a ROT22 operation on the second letter, but keeping everything else the same.
I just realized what I'd been doing wrong re Entree 2....duh...I took 26, subtracted 22 and somehow got '2', meaning I was backing up only two letters, instead of four. Double duh....here I went through UMPTEEN fruits with double letters, only to realize I'd started with the correct fruit all along.
ReplyDeleteHint for sdb's Appetizer #2: The first part of the second word anagrams to a word commonly used in all three countries.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
DeleteYou are welcome, Nodd. I would indeed be interested in considering any "NPR reject puzzles" you may send my way (jrywriter@aol.com). Most of my puzzles that appear on Puzzleria! are NPR rejects, as are some (but not all) puzzles posted here by our talented cadre of a dozen-or-so "guest puzzle-makers." The original puzzles submitted by this creative crew are the best part of our blog. Thanks, Nodd.
DeleteLegoWhoAlsoIsThankfultoskydiveboyForInvitingNoddToPostACommentHere
Notea; This comment was posted originally below Nodd's, February 5, 2023 at 12:52 PM Comment.
DeleteNodd,
Welcome to Puzzleria!
Kudos on solving skydiveboy's puzzle.
LegoWhoGivesHisNodOfApprovalToNodd'sComment
Noteb: This was Nodd's reply to my welcoming Nodd to our blog.
DeleteThanks, Lego! Now that I've figured out how your blog works I'm sure I'll be commenting frequently. (I also have some NPR reject puzzles if you're interested in considering them.)
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteLego, apologies for what must have been TMI. I regret I managed to get rba'd my first day here!
DeleteNo need for you to apologize, Nodd. It is I who must apologize to skydiveboy for elaborating on your subtle hint, which was "okay," according to skydiveboy. He prefers that his puzzles "stand on their own" and "speak for themselves," sans hinting. We should respect his wishes. I especially should respect his wishes.
DeleteSo, for future reference, let's not give any hits for skydiveboy's puzzles.
LegoWithApologies
Certainly. I've deleted the hint I posted below to Appetizer #1.
DeleteWellkommen Nod.
DeleteDanke schön, Plantsmith.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteHappy to see you here, Nodd, and I'm looking forward to your puzzles.
ReplyDeleteFYI, anyone can give hints for my puzzles; just don't give away any answers. I also do my best to provide hints to Lego ahead of time.
Lego, do you think you can add a message for SDB's puzzles in the future that no hints are to be provided? I might not remember otherwise. Thanks!
TortieWhoIsStillStuckOnApp2
There seems to be an unfortunate misunderstanding about the puzzles I create and allow Lego to use from time to time. Lego provides hints to HIS puzzles. I have always been opposed to this practice, but it is his blog and he can do as he pleases. That being said, we have a long standing agreement that HE will not provide hints to my puzzles. This applies to HIM and HIM alone. Everyone who visits this site knows HE knows the answers to my puzzles, and therefore anything HE says regarding them can be construed as being a hint. I expect VISITORS here to comment on my puzzles if they desire, but not give them away. I expect visitors here will indicate they have solved one of my puzzles, or make other comments, but not the HOST.
DeleteBoth my puzzles Lego is running this week are ones I recently coined and emailed to Will Shortz, who rejected them. I simply cannot comprehend why he refuses to use puzzles that reflect the intelligence of his NPR audience. When I let Lego run one WS has rejected I look at the responses here to get an idea if others think they are more suitable than what he serves up over at NPR. If they are interfered with then I cannot get a reliable idea.I hope this will clear up this misunderstanding.
Tuesday Hints:
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
Anagram the last four letters of the laureate's surname to get the first half of the TV character's surname.
Appetizer Menu
(skydiveboy asks that no hints be given.)
Tropical Tourism Slice:
The image is a hint. Try to ignore the "seychelles." Imagine, rather, a more conventional beach scene.
Riffing Off Shortz And Mace Slices:
ENTREE #1
"I'd walk a mile for a..."
"He came, __ ___, he conquered."
ENTREE #2
Met, Darryl __________
"White, Anglo-_____ __________"
"Gladly, the cross-eyed ____"
ENTREE #3
The fruit is a compound word consisting of a different fruit and an anagram of "R U fit?"
ENTREE #4
Washington, D.C.
ENTREE #5
Change an R to a W in the Spanish word for any of several oaks of California and Mexico. Spell the result backward to get "the arm's 'knee'."
ENTREE #6
The four-letter proper noun is "paradisaical."
The first word in the fruit is a list given to a hubby.
ENTREE #7
The four-letter word for animal or vegetable matter is also a "buddy."
God used the "fruity bait" to catch Eve and Adam sinning!
ENTREE #8
Some people, according to the lyics, apparently dream of the lamp-dweller.
ENTREE #9
The plumbers are Italian, but may have been born in a 4-syllable ancient Crete town.
Answer:
ENTREE #10
The title of what Billy Collins penned is a bird whose first, second, third, fifth, sixth and seventh letters form the first two-thirds of another fruit.
Chic Sequel Dessert:
Clark a Pseudonym (a commenter on Blaine's Blog) has an advantage in solving this puzzle.
LegoWhoSuggestsYouDon'tSpitIntoTheWindOrPullTheMaskOffTheOl'LoneRanger
For the Schpuzzle hint, shouldn't the anagram apply to the actor, and not the character?
DeleteTortieWhoNotesThereIsAConnectionBetweenTheActor'sNameAndTheTVShowGenre
I must say that in E3, the four-letter word synonym + y would not have made for a good nickname.
DeleteTortitude,
DeleteYou are correct. Thank you!
My Schpuzzle Hint should read:
Anagram the last four letters of the laureate's surname to get the first half of the surname of the actor who portrayed the TV character.
LegoWhoObservesThatTortieSeemsToHaveBeenBlessedWithThe"ViolinTedditorTouch!"
A P! Fan,
DeleteExactly!
A good nickname, for example, for a Valparaiso collegiate star... or for a bear, even one who has no hair!
LegoWhosoHometownIsAboutTenMilesFromTheHometownOfTheValparaisoCollegiateStar
Current progress report:
DeleteDefinitely have Entrees #3 and #6, still need help with the rest of #8(the lamp-dweller part was the easiest). BTW Tortie, I know exactly what you mean concerning the actor's name. I also know the show's theme song was performed(albeit in a rather different way)in a popular movie from 1980. They even mentioned the character's name!
pjbAlsoKnowsTheSongMustBePerformedInTheKeyOfA("GoodCountryKey!")
Entree #8 Hint.
DeleteThe two similar fruits, each beginning with a letter in the first fourth of the alphabet are:
* one you might find in a colander, or on a word that sounds like a colander, and
* a fruit that sometimes precedes the surname of Sir Isaac.
LegoWhoWonders:"IfIAmThe'Colander'OfATrophyTroutInAFishingContestDoIGetToSplitThePrizeMoneyWithMyFellow'Colander'?"
As a n00b here (and I'll likely kick myself when you tell me) I need to know what "ROT" means.
ReplyDeleteIt is basically the same as moving so many numbers up or down in the alphabet stream. Correct me if wrong.
ReplyDeleteThat is a nice visual way of understanding ROT, Plantsmith.
DeleteHere is also a link that may prove helpful.
Hack(WhichIs"Lego"ROT22)ROT22MeansMovingTheLettersOfLego22PlacesLaterInTheCircularAlphabet...WhichIsEquivalentToMovingTheLetters4PlacesEarlierInTheCircularAlphabet
Here are (belated, I know) hints for what I think I've solved so far.
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week: My answer has its limitations.
Appetizer 1: Pretty place. (My understanding based on the 2/7 post from sdb is he's okay if we give hints, just not the host. If I'm wrong, advise and I'll delete.)
Appetizer 2: The first part of the second word anagrams to a word commonly used in all three countries. (Ditto.)
Tropical Tourism Slice: A weighty subject, by George.
Entree 4: Presumably a favorite of beavers.
Entree 7: Inexpensive fossil fuel unit.
Entree 8: Encounter in L.A. that becomes physical.
Entree 9: Moving out of the governor’s mansion.
ROWDY YATES > WORDY YEATS [This one really made my day because it proved I’m not a complete slouch when it comes to literature.]
ReplyDeletePOINT ROBERTS, WA [My first thought was Washington, D.C., but I didn’t want to get into a discussion of “town” vs “city”, or whether or not DC is really part of the lower 48. Besides, copying “town in the lower 48 United States of America that cannot be reached by car, rail or foot without first traveling through a foreign country” and pasting it into Google took me there directly.][Duckduckgo, however, leads me to Angle Inlet, MN]
CHILE COLORADO [I’d not heard of this before, and I don’t really know if it’s the same stuff that I’ve been eating all these years. I just love having my lack of sophistication thrown in my face. Let the pronunciation lesson begin.]
SUNTANNED > TON OF SAND [Life’s a … well, you know …]
SAMUEL MACE > ESAU, CAMEL
STRAWBERRY > SPRAWBEA > BEAR, WASP [Obviously, one animal is an anagram of another animal’s body parts.]
GRAPEFRUIT - IT > FUR, GRAPE [A Beetle Bailey character comes to mind.]
MARIONBERRY > MARION BARRY [I wonder if he was named for the fruit, and if it affected his psychological development.]
APRICOT, ROBLE > APRIL, OCTOBER
EDEN, HOLY WOMEN > HONEYDEW MELON
CHUM, APPLE > PEACH, PLUM
DATE, FIG, ORANGE - A + O > FROG, TOAD, GENIE
UGLI (fruit) + I > LUIGI / ROMA (apple) +I > MARIO [Super!]
POMEGRANATE > POEM, TANAGER [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdistoUW4CQ&t=9s]
ESCAPE > ES CAPE > “S” CAPE > CLARK KENT
Nice work! I think the apple is called Rome rather than Roma. I took Roma to refer to the Roma tomato, which is also a fruit.
DeleteI think you are correct.
DeleteSchpuzzle: ---
ReplyDeleteAppetizers:
1. POINT ROBERTS, WA
Alt: Angle Township, Lake of the Woods county, MN. But it is not a town (only 152 inhabitants) as Pt. Roberts, WA is.
2. --- If “Chile colorado” is the answer, I have never heard of it.
Slice: ---
Entrées
#1: SAMUEL MACE – M → ESAU, CAMEL
#2: GOOSEBERRY – OO, S rot22, Y rot2 → GOEBERRA → BEAR, OGRE
#3: GRAPEFRUIT – IT → FUR (peach fuzz), GRAPE
#4: MARIONBERRY, chg E to A → MARION BERRY (Wash, DC)
#5: APRICOT, ROBLE → OCTOBER, APRIL
#6: EDEN,
#7: CHUM, APPLE → PEACH, PLUM
#8: DATE, FIG, ORANGE, chg A to O → FROG, TOAD, GENIE
#9: ROMA (tomato), UGLI + I → MARIO, LUIGI
#10: POMEGRANATE → POEM, Tanager
Dessert: ---
Schpuzzle: ROWDY YATES (played by Clint Eastwood in Rawhide); (William Butler) YEATS; WORDY
ReplyDeleteApp:
1. POINT ROBERTS, WA
2. ??? Stumped after looking af country, state, and foreign dish lists several times. Maybe something with Turkey?? Looking forward to the answer.
Slice: SUNTANNED; TON OF SAND
Entrees:
1. SAMUEL MACE; ESAU, CAMEL
2. STRAWBERRY, WASP, BEAR (note: Raspberry yields Asp and Bear w/o the ROT22 instruction)
3. GRAPEFRUIT; FUR, FUZZ; GRAPE
4. MARIONBERRY; MARION BARRY
5. APRICOT, ROBLE; OCTOBER, APRIL
6. EDEN, HOLY WOMEN, HONEYDEW MELON
7. CHUM, APPLE; PLUM, PEACH
8. DATE, FIG, ORANGE; TOAD, FROG, GENIE
9. UGLI (fruit), ROMA (tomato); LUIGI, MARIO
10. POMEGRANATE; POEM, TANAGER
Dessert: SUPERMAN; CAPE, S; ESCAPE
Looks like the answer for App 2 was CHILE COLORADO. Add me to the list of people who have never heard of this. I didn't even encounter it in my food lists. Looking it up, it seems more like what I would call "beef chili."
DeleteIt's on the menu a lot in Mexican restaurants in the southwest, but people in other areas probably won't have seen it.
DeleteHeard of "Chile relleno, " cheese stuffed peppers -Anejo? but not the Colorado one.
DeleteMy answers match Paul’s so I won’t repeat them. My hints and their explanations:.
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week: My answer has its limitations. (Clint Eastwood, who played Rowdy Yates, said in “Magnum Force”: “A man's got to know his limitations.”)
Appetizer 1: Pretty place. (A “point” is a place. Julia Roberts starred in “Pretty Woman”.)
Appetizer 2: The first part of the second word anagrams to a word commonly used in all three countries. (Colo → loco.)
Tropical Tourism Slice: A weighty subject, by George. (A ton is weighty. George Sand was a Victorian novelist.)
Entree 4: Presumably a favorite of beavers. (Marionberries are widely grown in Oregon.)
Entree 7: Inexpensive fossil fuel unit. (Cheap → peach; lump (of coal) →plum.)
Entree 8: Encounter in L.A. that becomes physical. (A “date” in the Big “Orange” becomes physical, the science of physics having been heavily influenced by Newton, who shares a name with a fig cookie.)
Entree 9: Moving out of the governor’s mansion. (“Luigi’s Mansion” is a Nintendo game. “Arrivederci Roma.” Roma is a kind of tomato. “Mario” Cuomo resigned as NY governor.)
Nodd, do you ever do cryptic crosswords? It seems like you have the right kind of mind for them. Patrick J. Berry (pjb/cranberry) has produced many clever cryptic crosswords for this blog if you'd like to try them out. pjb eventually posts great hints, which turns them more into regular crosswords. Then I can usually solve most of the crossword, and "reverse engineer" the cryptic part of the clues. You might actually get the cryptic part right of the bat, though!
DeleteNo, I haven't. I'll check it out. Thanks, Tortitude!
DeleteOh, I just looked at your answer again. Andrew Cuomo resigned, not Mario.
DeleteOops, you're right. I should have said his son resigned. Good catch!
DeleteGreat comment, Tortitude, touting cranberry's Cryptic Crossword puzzles. They are indeed amazing.
DeleteLegoAddsThatHeAgreesWithTortieThatPatrickDoesIndeedProvideExcellentHintsForHisCrosswords!
2/7//23- 66 clear -Spring peak / Still no comet ZLF sightings?
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week: ? Steve McQueen -Josh Randall. “Wanted dead or Alive.”
Appetizer:
Derby Line, Vt
Baked Alaska
.
Vowelless Slice: Sun-tanned. (Tun) Ton of Sand (sanned)
Riffing Off Shortz
ENTREE #1 Samuel Mace, Esau, camel..
ENTREE # 2
ENTREE #3
ENTREE #4 Marion Berry, Marion Barry
ENTREE #5Grapefruit, Furr, ,, fuzz, grape
Entree #6, Eden, holy women Honey Dew Melon,
ENTREE #7 Bait, plum, peach, Chum- apple
ENTREE #8 Frog,toad, genie, -Fig,date, orange.
ENTREE #9. Ugli Fruit, Roma(tomato) Luigi, Mario, Mario brothers
Entree #10. Billy Collins, poem,”Tanager” Pomegranate
Dessert: Escape, S.,Cape , Superman
SCHPUZZLE: CLINT EASTWOOD as ROWDY YATES => YEATS; WORDY
ReplyDeleteSKY DIVERSIONS:
1. POINT ROBERTS, WA [I never knew this…fascinating]
2. HOLLAND-AISE? If only “AISE-SAUCE” were a US state! ????/IN/DIANA
SLICE: SUNTANNED => TUN /OF/ SAND => TON OF SAND
ENTREES:
1. SAMUEL MACE => ESAU & CAMEL
2. S(T)RAWBER/RY => SPRAWBEA => WASP & BEAR
3. GRAPEFRU/IT => FUR [FUZZ], GRAPE
4. MARIONBERRY => MARION BARRY
5. APRICOT & ROBLE => APRIL & OCTOBER
6. EDEN & HOLY WOMEN => HONEYDEW MELON
7. CHUM & APPLE => PEACH & PLUM
8. ORANGE, DATE & FIG => FROG & TOAD & GENIE
9. UGLI => LUIGI; ROMA + I => MARIO
10. POMEGRANATE => POEM, TANAGER
DESSERT: ESCAPE => CAPE & “S” => SUPERMAN
Schpuzzle
ReplyDeleteROWDY YATES(played by Clint Eastwood on "Rawhide"), (William Butler)YEATS, WORDY
Appetizer Menu
1. POINT ROBERTS, WASHINGTON(I'll take your word for it.)
2. CHILE COLORADO(There is such a thing. I kept trying to find something that begins with TURKEY. The closest I came was a TURKEY MARYLAND, but I didn't find much about it.)
Menu
Tropical Tourism Slice
SUNTANNED, TON OF SAND
Entrees
1. SAMUEL MACE, ESAU, CAMEL
2. STRAWBERRY, WASP, BEAR
3. GRAPEFRUIT, GRAPE, FUR, (peach)FUZZ
4. MARIONBERRY, MARION BARRY
5. APRICOT, ROBLE, APRIL, OCTOBER
6. EDEN, HOLY WOMEN, HONEYDEW MELON
7. CHUM, APPLE, PEACH, PLUM
8. DATE, FIG, ORANGE, FROG, TOAD, GENIE
9. UGLI, ROMA, LUIGI, MARIO
10. POMEGRANATE, POEM, "TANAGER"
Dessert Menu
Chic Sequel Dessert
SUPERMAN, ESCAPE, "S", CAPE
I hate to admit in the past I may have sent off a similar puzzle idea to Will Shortz concerning the "ESCAPE/S/CAPE" wordplay, or it may end up in a future cryptic crossword here. Just know you have been warned if it ever does come up again.-pjb
I prefer Turkey New Orleans. A cajun dish that is -or could be- kind of spicy.
DeleteApt anagram for CLINT EASTWOOD:
ReplyDeleteOLD WEST ACTION
Earlier movie reference: In "The Blues Brothers"(1980), Jake and Elwood and their band are playing at Bob's Country Bunker, but they must quickly come up with some tunes to fit their audience at this gig, so someone suggests the "Rawhide" theme, to which Elwood responds, "The old favorite. Rowdy Yates." But I think I had heard of Rawhide before I'd ever even seen the film on TV. I just happen to know the movie reference as well, so I just thought I'd mention it.
pjbIsOnAMission,ThoughNotNecessarilyFromGod
This week's official answers, part 1
ReplyDeleteSchpuzzle of the Week:
Laureates and lariats
Take the name a TV Western character portrayed by a future movie star.
Anagram the character’s surname to form the surname of a Nobel Prize laureate.
Anagram the character’s first name to form an adjective describing this Nobel laureate’s output.
What are the names of this character and laureate?
What is the adjective?
Answer:
Rowdy Yates (portrayed by Clint Eastwood on "Rawhide"); (William Butler) Yeats; Wordy;
Appetizer Menu
Ripcord-Roarin’ Appetizer:
Get to a town, find a country and state
“You can’t get there from here...”
1. There is a town in the lower 48 United States of America that cannot be reached by car, rail or foot without first traveling through a foreign country. Can you name it?
Hint 1: No man is an island... neither is this town.
Answer:
Point Roberts, Washington
Hint #1: Point Roberts is not an island, but is on the southernmost tip of the Tsawwassen peninsula, south of Vancouver, Canada.
A stately country dish
2. Name a country in one word, then add the one-word name of one of our states to the end.
The result is the name of a well-known culinary dish of another country, in two words. What is the name of this dish?
Answer:
Chile Colorado (a Mexican stew made with a red chile sauce)
https://tastesbetterfromscratch.com/chile-colorado/
https://www.bonappetit.com/recipes/article/groat-ricks-chili-colorado
MENU
Tropical Tourism Slice:
Lying supine on the Seychelles
Spoonerize the two parts of a compound adjective that might describe a tourist after returning from a tropical vacation.
Reverse the order of the two parts.
Place a two-letter preposition between these spoonerized parts. The result sounds like a three-word phrase for what the tourist was likely lying on during much of the the vacation.
What are this adjective and phrase?
Answer:
Suntanned; ton of sand
(suntanned=>tunsanned=>tun of sanned=>ton of sand)
Lego...
This week's official answers, part 2
ReplyDeleteRiffing Off Shortz And Mace Slices:
Pomegranates mangled yield mango and pears
Will Shortz’s January 29th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle, created by Samuel Mace of Smyrna, Delaware, reads:
Name a fruit in one word. Drop the last two letters. The remaining letters can be rearranged to name two other fruits. What are they?
Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Mace Slices read:
ENTREE #1
Name a puzzle-maker in two words. Delete one of two consonants that appear twice in his name. Rearrange the remainng letters to spell the name of an Old Testament figure who was cheated out of his inheritance, and a creature whose pelt figured into the ruse used by his brother in doing so.
Who is the puzzle-maker?
What are the Old Testament figure and creature?
Answer:
Samuel Mace; Esau, Camel; (The black, silk-like hair of the Oriental "camel-goat" was used in Biblical times as a substitute for human hair.)
Note: Entree #2 was created by a friend and a fan of Puzzleria! We proudly and gratefully present it here:
ENTREE #2
Name a fruit in one word.
Delete a pair of double letters in the word. (For example, if “grasshopper” were a color you would remove either the “ss” or the “pp”.)
ROT 22 the remaining second letter. ROT 2 the remaining last letter. The resulting remaining letters can be rearranged to name two animals.
What is the fruit, and what are the animals?
Answer:
Strawberry; Wasp, Bear
Explanation: Drop the double-r's. ROT 22 “t” becomes “p”. ROT 2 “y” becomes “a”. Result: “sprawbea,” whch can be rearranged to spell “Wasp” and “Bear”
Possible Hints: 10 letters; a triplicate letter; land animal; flying animal
ENTREE #3
Name a fruit in one word. Drop the last two letters. Rearrange consecutive letters of the result to spell a three-letter synonym of a four-letter word for what is found on the skin of a certain fruit. The remaining letters, in order, spell a smaller fruit.
What is the one-word fruit?
What are the three-letter synonym and four-letter word?
What is the smaller fruit?
Hint #1: The four-letter word and its three-letter synonym begin with the same two letters.
Hint #2: The “certain fruit,” followed by the four-letter word, is sometimes found on skin that is NOT the skin of a fruit.
Grapefruit, Fur ("fru" rearranged), fuzz fur (a synonym of "fuzz" which is found on the skin of a peach), Grape
Hint: "Peach fuzz" is found on on some human faces
ENTREE #4
Name a fruit that is a compound word. Replace its “e” with an “a” and place a space between the compound parts. The result is the name of a person who served more than 15 years as the mayor of a major U.S. city, but who also served six months in a federal prison.
What is this fruit?
Who was this mayor?
Answer:
Marionberry; Marion Barry
ENTREE #5
Name a fruit, in one word, and a Spanish word for any of several oaks of California and Mexico. Rearrange these 12 combined letters to name two months of the year.
What are this fruit and word for oaks?
What are they?
Answer:
Apricot, Roble; April, October;
ENTREE #6
Name a four-letter proper noun that appears four times in the first four chapters of Genesis. Name also an adjective and noun together that describe 1) St. Thérèse of Lisieux, 2) St. Teresa of Ávila, 3) Mother Teresa and 4) Kateri Tekakwitha. Drop the last two letters. These 13 letters can be rearranged to name a fruit in two words.
What are this proper noun, adjective and noun and two-word fruit?
Answer:
Eden, Holy women; Honeydew melon
ENTREE #7
Take a four-letter word for animal or vegetable matter (such as chopped fish or corn) thrown overboard to attract fish. Name also a specific five-letter fruit that you might also try using as bait.
Rearrange these combined letters to spell two fruits that begin with the same letter.
What are this fish-attracting word and fruity bait?
What are the two alliterative fruits?
Chum; Apple; Peach, Plum
Lego...
This week's official answers, part 3
ReplyDeleteRiffing Off Shortz And Mace Slices continued):
ENTREE #8
Name two similar fruits, each beginning with a letter in the first fourth of the alphabet. Name also a spherical fruit. Replace an “a” with an “o”.
Rearrange these combined 13 letters to spell:
* two similar creatures that, if smooched by a princess, might transform into handsome princes, and
* a lamp-dweller who may perform such a transformation if no princess is available.
What are these similar fruits and spherical fruit?
What are the two similar creatures and the lamp-dweller?
Answer:
Orange, date, fig; Toad, frog, genie
ENTREE #9
Name a fruit in one word that is usually followed by the word “fruit,” and a variety of another fruit, each in four letters.
Double a letter in the fruit. Rearrange those five letters to spell the first name of a fictional plumber. Add that double letter to the four letters in the other fruit variety, then rearrange the result to name that plumber’s twin.
What are this fruit and variety of fruit?
Who are the twin plumbers?
Answer:
Ugli (fruit), Roma (tomato); Luigi and Mario, the "Mario Brothers";
(ugli+i=Luigi, roma+i=Mario)
ENTREE #10
Name a fruit in one word.
Rearrange its first four letters to name something Billy Collins penned.
Rearrange its remaining letters to name the title of what he penned.
What is this fruit?
What did Billy Collins pen. What is its title?
Hint: This particular something Billy Collins penned appeared in THE NEW YORKER a decade ago.
Answer:
Pomegranate; Poem, "Tanager"
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2017/feb/11/saturday-poem-tanager-by-billy-collins
Dessert Menu
Chic Sequel Dessert:
Dapperly dressed character, coming & going
Think of a movie that spawned multiple sequels.
Find a verb for what the lead character managed to do to death very early on in that movie.
The second two-thirds of this verb spell something he wore on his back, and the first third sounds like something he wore on his front.
Who is this lead character?
What did he wear on his back and what did he wear on his front?
What did he do to death, early on?
Hint: The character was known by more than one name.
Answer:
Superman; Cape, an "S" (emblem); escape (The parents of the infant Kal-El send him in a spaceship to Earth from the doomed planet Krypton. Thus that infant, who would become Clark Kent (Superman) on Earth, managed to ESCAPE death.)
Hint: The chararacter was named Kal-El at birth, and on Earth was known as Clark Kent and also by his superhero name, Superman.
Lego!
CHILE COLORADO is a MEXICAN main course. It is very different from USA stews. The dried chiles are what make the difference, and they are not at all hot. The internet is full of poor recipes for this amazing dish, but you must use a good one or you will not really have a true Chile Colorado. Colorado is red in Spanish, and this dish has nothing at all to do with our State of Colorado. Here is the recipe I use and recommend:
ReplyDeletehttps://glebekitchen.com/chile-colorado-the-best-beef-chil/
I suggest if you intend to give it a try that you read it over and over very carefully and follow the directions to the letter, other than you do not need to use fire roasted tomatoes, you may use regular ones.
This dish is listed on many menus in Mexican restaurants, but it in many cases will not be the real deal. They cut corners because they can get away with it. Here where I live fifty years ago there was a joint run by a Mexican family that did it properly, and it was to die for. Now I cannot find it done properly anywhere I have tried in Washington State. There is a place in The Dalles, Oregon that I sometimes eat at that does it right. It is very time consuming and messy to make, but if done right you will love it. The recipe in my link is provided by a guy up in Canada, so it does get around I guess. I am not surprised that many of you have not heard of this dish, but it is hugely popular where true Mexican food is found, but not in chain restaurants. I hope you enjoyed my puzzle, along with the Pt. Roberts one.
Somehow, a dish "to die for" does not compute in my calculus. Just to complete a (perhaps short) circuit, wasn't that Esau's bargain, in a way?
ReplyDeleteGreat story, sdb! We never know who may come into our lives.
DeleteI'd try the chile recipe only I don't eat meat. Maybe I'll try to contact Romain and see if there's a vegan-friendly version, LOL.(Fat chance, I know -- chile afficionados bristle at the thought of chile without meat. Even adding beans is blasphemy.)
Yeah, I saw that you avoid getting to the meat of things. lol
DeleteOf course just once won't hurt too much. Seriously though, I am surprised that no one seemed to remember that the puzzle also required that the dish is actually from a third country: Mexico. One here even seems to think New Orleans is a state, not to mention that I stipulated it is a one word state. But then I consider the source.
The hint I posted referred to the third country: "The first part of the second word anagrams to a word commonly used in all three countries." I didn't mention Mexico by name in my answer because I figured anyone who looked up "Chile Colorado" would see where the dish was from.
DeleteRight, and I forgot about that, but I gnu you were well aware of Mejico being the thurd kuntry.
DeleteXi-xi-xi.
DeleteWasn't it Rumpole who used to refer to Xi who must be obeyed?
DeleteRight, and when they told 45 that "Xi is here, Mr. President," he said, "She is? Is she hot? Does Melania know?"
DeleteGood zhou!
DeleteHu?
DeleteYu.
DeleteDeng!
DeleteWhat's huang?
DeleteI. M. Pei sure I not no.
DeleteNeed a han to figure it out?
DeleteMo Yan you no.
DeleteThat would be a huynh-huynh situation.
DeleteYou not Wong there.
DeleteI feel Puyi Laozi now, by by.
DeleteSari to hear. Chao.
DeleteYu Yangtze sari. No Peking. Iran.
Delete