Thursday, January 22, 2026

Beverage bottles and beetles; “Writers of the Purple Prose! Tracking Subatomic Subs! (...From a cruciverbal setter with fortitude!) Joe Strummer? Not the answer! “We ought to have a motto!”


 PUZZLERIA! SLICES: OVER 5πe2 SERVED

Schpuzzle of the Week:

Writers of the Purple Prose

Zane Grey, a native of Zanesville, Ohio, was a dentist, minor league baseball player and novelist perhaps best known for authoring “Riders of the Purple Sage.” 

Grey may well have written – but alas did not write – the following line in any of his fictional works:

“I once faced a crafty ________, perched upon the pitcher’s mound like a Greek god atop Olympus. I was patient and worked the count to full – three balls, two strikes. But he then served up a knuckleball that fluttered by like a
butterfly and, like a knucklehead, I swung, missed and struck ___! _____!”

The letters in the first blank are an anagram of the letters in the last two blanks.

What are the three missing words?

Appetizer Menu
‘Tis Patrick’s Cryptic Opus #42!...
(From a Cruciverbal Setter with Fortitude!)
Our good friend and “resident Renaissance Man” Patrick J. Berry (aka cranberry” or PJB) is the proud possessor of a broad spectrum of interests, knowledge, and popular cultural chops.
Music, for instance, is just one of Patrick’s myriad interests. In this, his latest cryptic masterpiece, our favorite cruciverbalist has planted seven crossword clues (six of them “Down,” one of them “Across”) that harmonize to produce a masterful musical theme!
’Tis truly a beautifully phonic, and symphonic, feat! Thus this, Patrick’s 42nd Cryptic Crossword to be featured on Puzzleria!, shall surely challenge your musical chops and sharpen your musical IQ.
We invite you to revel in Patrick’s enigmatic magic, and to share in his knowledge of, and enthusiasm for, joyous noises!
You may want to prpare yourself by solving one-or-more of Patrick’s previous 41 Cryptic Crosswords... just open any one of the links below:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
For those who may be new to cryptic crossword puzzles, Patrick has compiled the following list of basic cryptic crossword instructions:

Regarding the Across and Down clues and their format: The number (or numbers) that appear in parentheses at the end of the clue indicate how many letters are in the answer. Multiple numbers in parentheses indicate how letters are distributed in multiple-word answers.

For example, (5) simply indicates a 5-letter answer like “Queen,” (4,4) indicates a 4-plus-4-letter answer like “bass riff,” and (1-4) indicates a 1-letter-plus-4-letter hyphenated answer like “B-Side.”

For further insight on how to decipher these numbered cryptic clues, see Patrick’s “Cryptic Crossword Tutorial” in this link to his November 2017 Cryptic Crossword. 

That Tutorial appears below the filled-in Answer Grid in that edition of Puzzleria!

And so, relax, place a groovy vinyl platter on
your turntable and don your headphones...and your thinking cap! 

Enjoy the jangle! And the jingle!

ACROSS

1. Strange to see a policeman when he’s not working(7)
5. Spot some sort of
conspiracy in school(7)
10. Air Force veteran has a shot, though not as physically fit(8)
11. Celebrities, without hesitation, can be such
malicious individuals(6)
12. Cut on record including bit of improvisation by lead
singer(6)
13. Duck outside room in end(8)
14. What might happen as one’s turned to leave, grabbing keys?(4,6)
16. Bit of the Riot Act?(4)
17. Republicans taken aback by old comic strip character(4)
19. Depressed, went to get drink(10)
21. Tries again before last minute, for practice(8)
22. Turn boat around, eager to lose English sea monster...(6)
23. ...recalled this alternative involves one island in the South Pacific(6)
24. Bloody excellent meat kept inside on
display(8)
25. Sad end after serious cut(7)
26. No sense in some having sex?(7)

DOWN

2. Filmmaker has wasted life, with love over(7)

3. Song from 9 crashing bore? It may be an omen! (4,3,4,4)

4. Stranger story to be found in article(5)

6. Singer ruined art, to a VIP? (9)

7. No time for idiot paid to sing a new arrangement for 9’s hit (4,1,3,2,5)

8. In short, managed to find fruit(7)

9. Pop singer making Presbyterians nervous?
(7,6)

15. See 22 Down

18. Talk at length about classwork(7)

20. Part for extremely likeable people in
movie(7)

22. Family concealing rage, ultimately very embarrassed about cat hanging around—married him!(5.9)

MENU

Cork-Or-Cap Hors d’Oeuvre:

Beverage bottles & beetles

Name a surname that is a brand name.

Name also a kind of bottle associated with cheap summertime beverages that boast relatively itsy-bitsy alcohol contents. 

Spoonerize these words to get a summertime insect.

What are this brand name and kind of bottle?

What is the summertime insect?

Drummer? Strummer? Punk-Band Bummer  Slice:

Joe Strummer? Not the answer!

Name a living musician, in two words, whose main instrument was not designed to be strummed.

The last 40% of this musician’s name is the brand of a hair-care product. 

The first 60% of the name spells an adjective used by this manufacturer and similar product manufacturers to tout the “naturalness” of their their product.

Riffing Off Shortz And Young Entrees:

Tracking Subatomic Subs!

Will Shortz’s January 18th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday Puzzle Challenge, created by Joseph Young of St. Cloud, Minnesota, reads:

Think of a word that means “very small.” Move
the first syllable to the end, separated by a space, and you’ll get a two-word phrase naming something that is very large. What words are these?

Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Young Entrees read:

ENTREE #1

Take:

~ the surname of a past “trophy-worthy” wordplay aficionado and author (4 letters), 

~ the surname of a past “winning” European poet and playwright (4 letters), and

~ the first name of a living Pulitzer Prize–winning historian, biographer and author of New York Times bestsellers (3 letters).

Rearrange these 11 letters to spell the name of a puzzle-maker.

Who are these three authors and one puzzle-maker?

(Note: Entrees #2 through #7 are terrific riffs courtesy of our friend Nodd, author of “Nodd ready for prime time” on Puzzleria!)

ENTREE #2

Think of a word describing figurative speech. 

Move two consecutive interior letters to the
end, preceded by a space, to get a two-word phrase describing Piper Laurie’s character in a 1976 film. 
What words are these?

ENTREE #3

Think of a word for what you might need to do with new software if it does not work correctly at first. 

Move five consecutive letters to the end, preceded by a space, to get a two-word phrase describing what an NBA center might need at a dude ranch. 

What words are these?

ENTREE #4

Think of the last name of a 20th-Century author and religious figure. 

Move three consecutive letters to the end, preceded by a space, to get a two-word phrase describing a famous town in England. 

What words are these?

ENTREE #5

Think of a word for a category of military operations. Move six consecutive letters to the end, preceded by a space, to get a two-word phrase describing Hannibal Lecter. What words are these?

ENTREE #6

Think of a word that means alert. Move five consecutive letters to the end, preceded by a
space, to get a two-word phrase describing action you might need to take to ensure certain pests are not entering your house. What words are these?

ENTREE #7

Think of a word for an improvement or innovation. Move the first syllable to the end, preceded by a space, to get a two-word phrase describing something you might have seen in 2024. What words are these? 

ENTREE # 8

Name a well-known word that appears to consist of a pair of adjacent numerical prefixes, each with the same number of letters. The apparent prefix on the right, however, does not function as a prefix (it’s on the right!) and derives from a Greek word associated with marketing.

What is this well-known word?

ENTREE #9

Think of a numerical prefix, like the “uni-” in “unicycle” or the “kilo-” in “kilowatt.

Place after this prefix letters that would spell a mathematical constant... if we were to replace a vowel with the next vowel that follows it in the alphabet (a becomes e, e becomes i, i becomes o, etc.).

This prefix, followed by the altered

mathematical constant, spell a food that has an “awfully offal” reputation, even though it is a nutrient-rich source of protein, B vitamins and minerals.

Move the prefix to the end. The result is a kind of dish – not a dish (like revenge!) best served cold, but one best not served at all!

What are this prefix, mathematical constant and dish? 

ENTREE #10 

Morton, feeling depressed and down in the dumpy doldrums, scheduled an appointment with his psychiatrist, Dr. Psyche Trieste, to discuss a change of scenery, of surroundings, of lifestyle, of perspective, of friends, of habits. 

Dr. Trieste listened carefully and patiently, only infrequently asking her patient to clarify and explain his plight more fully. 

After a half-hour of listening to Morton's morosely meandering monologue, the doc prescribed a radical change of scenery...

“Morton,” she said, “there is no more fitting solution and change-of-scenery that I can recommend to you than Asia!”

Within a month, Morton had been lain to rest. His survivors, alas, are accusing Dr. Trieste of murder, and suing her for, psychological malpractice.

What was her alleged “rhetorical murder weapon?” 

Dessert Menu

Island Nation Dessert:

“We ought to have a motto!”

Remove the first and final letters from the second word in the name of an island nation. “Just slightly rearrange its remaining letters. 

Insert a space someplace to get the first two words of an official national motto.

Then fill in the following blanks: “If metal gets
___ it may ____.” Move the last letter of the first word to the beginning of the second word, forming the remaining words of the motto.

What are this island nation and words in the two blanks?

What is the national motto?

Every Thursday 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 Thursday.

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.

62 comments:

  1. Note:
    To place a comment under this QUESTIONS? subheading (immediately below), or under any of the three subheadings below it (HINTS! PUZZLE RIFFS! and MY PROGRESS SO FAR...), simply left-click on the orange "Reply" to open a dialogue box where you can make a comment. Thank you.
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Replies
    1. SUNDAY HINTS FOR ENTREES 2-7:
      2. The first word in the two-word phrase means foolish. The second is the postal abbreviation for an Eastern U.S. state.
      3. The first part of the first word is an item of equestrian equipment. The second part is where you might find a horse.
      4. Spiritual leader for Tom Cruise and others.
      5. Spock is the first word of the phrase, Khan is the second.
      6. Bronson in “Death Wish,” minus one letter.
      7. Selina Meyer.

      Delete
    2. Nodd, could we please have a hint for your #5's military operation, because I'm getting nowhere with the Spock/Khan hint.

      Delete
    3. SUNDAY HINTS

      Schpuzzle of the Week:
      “Writers of the Purple Prose!”
      The first blank: "What Soup?"
      The second blank: Word that follows "lock" or "knock" or precedes "law" or "draw"
      The third blank: "Pgeorge Pbernard _____"

      “Tis Patrick’s Cryptic Opus # 42!...
      ...(from a cruciverbal setter with fortitude!)

      I shall leave the giving of cryptic crossword clues up to Patrick's discretion.

      Cork-Or-Cap Hors d’Oeuvre
      A homophone of a timely benefit;
      the first syllable of the name of Archie's pal;
      a kind of bride;
      Ward's wife;
      Word that follows "flu";

      Natural Hair Care Slice:
      "AI Junta!"
      No, that's not Al (uppercase A, lowercase L) who is leading the Junta! It is AI (uppercase a, uppercase i)!

      Riffing Off Shortz And Young Entrees:
      Tracking Subatomic Subs!
      ENTREE #1
      Willard ESPY, Victor HUGO, JON Meacham

      See Nodd's hints to his excellent riffs (Entree #2 through Entree #7) in his January 25, 2026 at 3:39 PM Comment.

      ENTREE #10
      Dr. Triest's murder weapon was three words beginning with y, t and a.

      Island Nation Dessert
      “We ought to have a motto!”
      The initial letters of the four words in the motto are an anagram of a small thin bit of barky wood one might find beneath a tree.

      LegoLateAgain!

      Delete
    4. VT, the word that becomes a two-word phrase in Entree 5 is a synonym of "mental." The first word of the phrase describes Spock and the second describes Norman Bates.

      Delete
    5. Thanks for the hints. I was able to solve Entree #5.

      Still stuck on Entree #10, and I need a hint for Entree #8. Hopefully we'll get App hints soon. I haven't even really worked on that yet.

      Also, it looks like the Entree #1 answers were printed. I didn't see the Entree #1 answer posted last week (Hors d'Oeuvre/Slice were listed twice). What were the three Twain-related words that start with 'R'?

      Delete
    6. Yes, Nodd, thank you for that additional hint. I NEVER would have come it with the type of military operation (because I'd never heard of it whatsoever), but have it now. I didn't even know to WHICH "Khan" you were referring in your first hint...the one on Start Trek or Genghis?...and would never have applied the second word of the phrase to whichever Khan it turned out to be.

      Tortie, I'm glad I'm not the only one still stuck on. Entrees 8 and 10. I guess they must be the really hard ones from Lego this week.

      The answers to last week's Entree #1 WERE there, because I remember seeing them. I can't recall all three of them now without going to find the entire P! (since once I post my answers, I delete the Draft where I'd kept them), but I do remember that ONE of the "R" words was 'relativistic."

      Delete
    7. Well, Tortie, this is definitel the Twilight Zone, because NOW when I went to find last week's Entree #1 answers from Lego, you are correct: THEY ARE NOT THERE! But i KNOW I saw them, because I compared them to my own answers (which were correct---hurrah.). So I have copied and pasted mine: RADICAL, REVISIONIST, RELATIVISTIC. Which I got straight off Google (in a quote from someone whom I can't recall, either.)

      Delete
    8. Hmm, I just noticed that (as Tortie mentioned) there is NO Hint for Entree #8, on which I, too, am still stuck.

      Delete
    9. Re the Hors D'O, I think it would have been helpful if the puzzle had stated that the spoonerizing results in a 'sounds like', because the text makes one believe that the spelling is the same, re the first words anyway.

      Delete
    10. It's been a tough couple of weeks in PuzzleriaLand! My sincere apologies. I am obviously struggling, especially lately, with organizing the puzzles from week-to-week. It's a mess, I know. I vow to step back, and then step forward to take steps to cut back on (and perhaps even eliminate) the growing confusion.
      That said, the post immediately below gives an update on Entrees #8 and #9:
      LegoWhoUrgesYouToReadThePostBelow

      Delete
    11. Puzzlerians!
      Here is a hint for Entree #9, which I did not include in Sunday's late hints.
      I did not include a hint because I some how misplaced my answers to both Entree #9 and Entree #8! Fortunately, I have since found the answer to Entree #9. So...
      Here is a hint for Entree #9:
      The prefix that the dish begins with, like "uni" is one that may precede "-cycle..." and, it has the same number of letters as "uni".
      Alas. because I do NOT KNOW the answer to my Entree #8, giving a hint to it has become a bit problematic for me!
      And, I have tried to solve it (Entree #8, that is, the puzzle I wrote just a few days ago!), but with no luck!
      So, if any of you brilliant Puzzlerians! has solved my Entree #8, and are inclined to offer a hint, please do so!

      LegoApologetically&Gratefully

      Delete
    12. I think the answer to Entree 8 may be suggested by the title of a book by Eric Berne.

      Delete
    13. Nodd, is it the title of songs by the Spinners and Joe South?

      In any case, the closest I got was something that stars with the same prefix as Entree #9, but the second part of the word doesn't appear to be a prefix, nor does it seem to be related to marketing.

      Delete
    14. Yes, Tortie, that's the title. My answer is an example of such. It does not start with the prefix in Entree 9, but rather with one that is two places earlier. But of course I have no assurance my answer is the one Lego had in mind.

      Delete
    15. OK, got it now. I think that must be the answer. If you delete the second letter, you'll have a string of consecutive letters of the alphabet. The penultimate letter of the word is the letter that precedes them in the alphabet.

      Delete
    16. I believe I have finally solved Entree #8, as well, thanks to Nodd's hint and Tortie's sentence about it also being a song title...which caused me to look up the 'category' and stumble upon the well-known item (whereupon I looked up the suffix and Google said that it DOES relate to Greek marketing, a fact I certainly NEVER knew before, so HURRAH.)

      Delete
    17. CRYPTIC HINTS
      ACROSS
      1. Another way of saying "imperfect tempo".
      5. Rhymes with "watch", "notch", and "Ed Koch".
      10. It begins with the same letter as "fatter".
      11. Śssssssssnakes!
      12. A synonym of "drop", one could do it to a family member!
      13. The main word in a Tom Hanks movie title from 2004(besides "The").
      14. Many are often listed in prescription drug ads. Could be nausea or dizziness, commonly.
      16. A Greek letter(four letters)that has only one consonant.
      17. "We have met the enemy, and they is us."
      19. Er...did I spit?
      21. Initially, Lego included this word in his text for the puzzle. It contains a vehicle many people would die to ride inside.
      22. Must be released, per "Clash of the Titans"(1981).
      23. Not Haiti, but it has the same letters AND one more.
      24. Did a striptease, perhaps?
      25. Meteorologists like using this word to describe weather conditions, whenever possible(then add a D).
      26. One letter off from something Ms. Powter wanted to stop.
      DOWN
      2. "La Dolce vita", "8 1/2", "La Strata", to name just a few.
      3. This and 7 Down, both hit songs for 9 Down, also both end in a phrase or word, respectively, which are synonyms for "encore".
      4. "In space, no one can hear you scream."(1979)
      6. A tenor, one of three.
      7. See 3 Down.
      8. A homophobe for a word meaning "modern".
      9. One of many young talent who were on the "Mickey Mouse Club"(not Gosling, Timberlake, or Aguilera).
      15. See 22 Down.
      18. What most of the "M*A*S*H" cast would usually do.
      20. It's on the table...the periodic table, that is.
      22. The guy who married 9 Down whose name is NOT Jason Alexander(Costanza? No, different guy.).
      pjbSaysBetterLateThanNever

      Delete
    18. I have every answer except for Entrees 2, 5, and 10. The Slice is deja vu all over again.
      pjbIsRemindedOfCrosby,Stills,Nash,AndOfCourse,Young

      Delete
    19. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
  3. Replies
    1. OOh, hurrah, this DOES actually work! I think perhaps Paul had something about the electrons not properly manifesting and so forth!.....

      Delete
  4. IF YOU HAVE COMMENTS THAT DO NOT PERTAIN TO ANY OF THE FOUR CATEGORIES ABOVE, YOU MAY WRITE THEM BELOW THIS POST. THANK YOU.
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  5. I have to comment own here, because no matter how hard I tried, I could NOT get the 'reply' button to respond, up in the "My Progress" section. So I'd be interested to know if the same thing is happening to anyone else? (I think such a thing occurred once before, can't recall when,, tho, or if it ever fixed itself.)

    Anyway, just wanted to say gladly that I managed to solve the Schpuzzle fairly quickly, since when I saw it was about baseball, I started to cringe!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Thanks for that post, VT.
    I, alas, am having the same problem. At this point I have no clue about how to fix it. When I tried to "Reply" to your 7:27 PM Comment, I couldn't do it. And neither could I post a Reply to "Questions?" "Hints" "Puzzle Riffs" "My Progress So Far" or "If you have comments..."!!!
    I'll try to figure it out... but don't hold your breath! I am flummoxed by such glitches!
    My apologies to all.
    LegoHopingSomebodyMightOfferSomeAdvice

    ReplyDelete
  7. I think it's a Heisenberg uncertainty quantum thing; sometimes the electrons just don't manifest where they're supposed to.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Maybe it's kind of like musical chairs. Electrons that fail to SHOW UP AT (see what I did there?) the "right" location in a timely manner have to settle for whatever space is "left".

      Delete
  8. Yes, Paul... That is exactly what I thought also!

    LegoWhoVenturesToGuessFurtherThatSomeOfTheProtonsNeutrons&FermolecularQuantumQuarksAlsoSomehowGotKnockedOffKilter!

    ReplyDelete
  9. For what it's worth, I notice that you can open the links to Patrick's previous 41 Cryptic Crossword Puzzles (just above the picture of the planets)... So I guess the inability to open a link is an issue (but still, an inconvenient and annoying issue!) only in our Comments Section.
    LegoWhoIsOpenToSuggestionsFromAny"BloggerSavvy"VisitorsToOurBlog(BeThey"Regulars"Or"Lurkers")

    ReplyDelete
  10. Interestingly, I still have the ability to delete a comment from our blog... I could remove the "TEST" comment I posted above, for example, if I wanted to.
    LegoWhoAsks"ButHowCanWeGetOur'Reply'FunctionToWork?!"

    ReplyDelete
  11. Well, at least it's NOT just me, then. That is SOME comfort, even though this week will be interesting, given that we will be back to having mixed comments down here at the bottom from everyone.

    ReplyDelete
  12. At this point, I am stuck on: the Hors D'O, and Entrees 4, 5, 8 and 10.(But I always consider having solved ANY of Nodd's Entrees ahead of hints to be a victory, which this week means FOUR of them!)

    ReplyDelete
  13. My Hors d’Oeuvre answer works phonetically only. I'm not sure if that's what's intended.

    ReplyDelete
  14. If I can get Patrick's A17 I'll bet we all can.

    ReplyDelete
  15. For those who solve cryptics with pen and paper I've made a pdf, yours to download at https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/nrmj2jv46kjqph2220k7t/Patrick-Berry-Cryptic-2026-01-22.pdf?rlkey=2bteu98aguyz02g9g8rb7vhi8&st=ilowehbk&dl=0.

    Also, I'm pretty sure 9D should be Presbyterians not Prespyterians; I use the former in the pdf.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks for that! Normally I just print the grid and look online at the clues. I think it should be easier having both in the same place.

      Delete
  16. Thanks greatly, Eco, for the "Presbyterians" correction (I fixed it), and for the downloadable pdf to use with Patrick's excellent cryptic crossword.
    LegoWhoNotesThat"Prespyterians"MayBePrecariouslyCloseTorBecoming"Preppyterians"(WhichOnSecondThoughtMightBeKindOfFitting!)

    ReplyDelete
  17. Regarding Nodd's "January 23, 2026 at 4:52 AM" Comment:
    "My Hors d’Oeuvre answer works phonetically only. I'm not sure if that's what's intended..."
    Yes, after the brand name and kind of bottle are "spoonerized" the result is a summertime insect. The "kind of bottle" and the second word of the insect differ only because of their different first letters.
    The first word in the brand name (minus its "apostrophe 's' ") and the first word of the insect have in common only their final two letters.

    LegoAttemptingToLessenTheConfusion!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. For some unknown-to-me reason, the orange "Reply" link now seems to open like it should! Let's hope that it was just a temporary glitch!
      LegoBewilderedByBlogger!

      Delete
    2. Thanks for clarifying the Hors d'Oeuvre, Lego.

      Delete
  18. Happy Friday to all upon this blog(weather permitting wherever you are)!
    Mom and I are fine. We didn't eat out tonight, mainly because we are in dire financial straits. She's had trouble with her credit card today, and so have I with mine. We needed to get a few things before the impending winter storm for our area(as I'm sure many across the country must be before this weekend approaches), but my card was almost declined at Aldi! Instead of going to a drive-through, Mom and I had some flounder and hush puppies, which were in our freezer in the garage all this time, with our choice of vegetable(mixed veggies for me, green beans for her). Pretty good actually, but even if it wasn't, I'm in no position to complain. Hopefully we'll have enough for meals until my next check comes sometime next week, and if the worst case scenario happens due to the weather, we may be having cereal or soup(or both!) for a few meals! I also hope we'll still be in constant contact here on my Kindle, but you never know. I should be able to provide hints for my puzzle, but if not then you'll know the reason why. My hints aren't ready just yet, we'll just have to see how things are when I wake up tomorrow. I have at least recharged my devices so far tonight. As it is, I haven't got any answers for the other puzzles this week, but I sure hope I'll have some good hints to help me later on from all parties involved. I can't believe Lego messed up the "Presbyterians" clue, but I'm glad somebody else pointed it out to him so that he could fix it already.
    Good luck in solving to all, and please stay safe(especially with the weather this weekend). Everybody should keep the whole country in their prayers(and Mom and me in particular)during this next week. Cranberry out(maybe for the last time in a while)!
    pjbSaysMayTheLordBlessAndKeepAllOfUsTheseDays(EvenThoseWhoMayNotBelieveLikeWeDoDownHereInAlabama)

    ReplyDelete
  19. Almost forgot about the hints! I will come up with some and get back to the HINTS portion some time later this evening. Stay tuned here, same Pat time, same Pat channel!
    pjbShould'veDoneItLastNight,Obviously!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you, Patrick... no worries.
      I am always tardy with my hunts.

      LegoWhoSurmisesThatPatrick'sMiddleNameIs"Punctual"

      Delete
    2. With a monogram like pjb? Don't think so.
      pjbDoesThink"PunctualPatrick"SoundsNiceAndAlliterative,Though

      Delete
  20. Schpuzzle: SOUTHPAW, OUT, PSHAW
    App: (mostly Post hint)
    Across: 1. OFFBEAT, 5. SPLOTCH, 10. FLABBIER, 11. VIPERS, 12. DISOWN, 13. TERMINAL, 14. SIDEEFFECT, 16. IOTA, 17. POGO, 19. DISPIRITED, 21. REHEARSED, 22. KRAKEN, 23. TAHITI, 24. REVEALED, 25. SEVERED, 26. INANITY
    Down: 1. FELLINI, 3. BABYONEMORETIME, 4. ALIEN, 6. PAVAROTTI, 7. OOPSIDIDITAGAIN, 8. CURRANT, 9. BRITNEYSPEARS, 15. FEDERLINE, 16. OPERATE, 20. ELEMENT, 22. KEVIN
    Hors d’Oeuvre: BOONE’S, JUG; JUNE BUG
    Slice: HERB ALPERT
    Entrees:
    1. (WILLARD R.) ESPY, (VICTOR) HUGO, JON (MEACHAM), JOSEPH YOUNG
    2. IDIOMATIC, IDIOTIC MA
    3. REINSTALL, TALL REINS
    4. HUBBARD, BARD HUB
    5. (Post hint: ) PSYCHOLOGICAL, LOGICAL PSYCHO
    6. VIGILANT, ANT VIGIL
    7. ADVANCE, VANCE AD
    8. (Post Nodd hint: ) MONOPOLY
    9. TRI, PI, TRIPE/PETRI
    10. ???? (something with Taiwan? Tokyo?)
    Dessert: UNITED KINGDOM, WET RUST; IN GOD WE TRUST

    ReplyDelete
  21. SCHPUZZLE – SOUTHPAW; OUT, PSHAW
    APPETIZER – ACROSS: 1. OFFBEAT 5.? 10. FLABBIER 11.? 12.? 13. TERMINAL 14. SIDE EFFECT 16. IOTA 17. POGO 19. DISPIRITED
    21. REHEARSE 22. KRAKEN 23. TAHITI 24. REVEALED 25.?
    26. INANITY; DOWN: 2. FELLINI 3. BABY ONE MORE TIME 4. ALIEN
    6. PAVAROTTI 7. OOPS I DID IT AGAIN 8.? 9. BRITNEY SPEARS
    15. FEDERLINE 18. OPERATE 20. ELEMENT 22. KEVIN
    HORS D’OEUVRE – BOONE, JUG; JUNE BUG
    SLICE – HERB ALPERT (HERBAL, PERT)
    ENTREES
    1. WILLARD ESPY, VICTOR HUGO, JON MEACHAM; JOSEPH YOUNG
    2. IDIOMATIC, IDIOTIC MA
    3. REINSTALL, TALL REINS
    4. (L. Ron) HUBBARD, BARD HUB (Stratford-upon-Avon)
    5. PSYCHOLOGICAL, LOGICAL PSYCHO
    6. VIGILANT, ANT VIGIL
    7. ADVANCE, VANCE AD
    8. MONOPOLY
    9. TRI, PE (PI), PETRI
    10. EUTHANASIA (YOUTH IN ASIA)
    DESSERT – UNITED KINGDOM; WET, RUST; “IN GOD WE TRUST”

    ReplyDelete
  22. Another Wednesday, I completely forgot...sigh. PJB, I took a stab at a few of your Crossword clues, ONLY thanks to your hints!

    SCHPUZZLE: SOUTHPAW => OUT! PSHAW!

    CRYPTIC CROSSWORD (!!):

    5 Across: SPLOTCH;
    13 Across: TERMINAL;
    2 Down: FELLINI;
    3 Down: BABY ONE MORE TIME
    6 Down: PAVAROTTI;
    7 Down: OOPS I DID IT AGAIN:
    8 Down : CURRANT;
    9 Down: BRITNEY SPEARS;
    22 Down : KEVIN FEDERLINE, altho I have NO idea what a cat hanging around has to do with anything [Thanks to the hints]

    HORS D’O: BOONE JUG => JUNE BUG

    SLICE: HERB ALPERT

    ENTREES:

    1. [Willard] ESPY, [Victor] HUGO, JON [Meacham] => JOSEPH YOUNG

    2. IDIOMATIC => IDIOTIC MA

    3. REINSTALL => TALL REINS

    4. HUBBARD => BARD HUB [Never would have thought of this guy, even tho I had ID’d the image to be MOTHER HUBBARD. Duh]

    5. PSYCHOLOGICAL => LOGICAL PSYCHO

    6. VIGILANT => ANT VIGIL

    7. ADVANCE => VANCE AD

    8. MONOPOLY [Nodd’s hint (and Tortie’s song titles): "GAMES PEOPLE PLAY"]

    9. TRI + PI => TRIPE; PETRI

    10. YOU, THEN, and ASIA => EU/THAN/ASIA

    DESSERT: [UNITED] KINGDOM => IN GOD & 'WET RUST' => IN GOD WE TRUST

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. VT,
      The name FEDERLINE contains the word FELINE, which has to be "put around" RED spelled backwards.
      pjbWillLetLegoExplainEverythingLaterTonight

      Delete
  23. Puzzleria- 49 degrees and rain.
    Schpuzzle-- Southpaw, out, pshaw.

    ReplyDelete
  24. This week's official answers, for the record, Part 1

    Schpuzzle of the Week:
    Writers of the Purple Prose

    Zane Grey, a native of Zanesville, Ohio, was a dentist, minor league baseball player and novelist perhaps best known for authoring “Riders of the Purple Sage.”
    Grey may well have written – but alas did not write – the following line in any of his fictional works:
    “I once faced a crafty ________, perched upon the pitcher’s mound like a Greek god atop Olympus. I was patient and worked the count to full –three balls, two strikes. But he then served up a knuckleball that fluttered by like a
    butterfly and, like a knucklehead, I swung, missed and struck ___! _____!”
    The letters in the first blank are an anagram of the letters in the last two blanks
    What are the three missing words?
    Answer:
    Southpaw; Out! Pshaw!

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  25. This week's official answers, for the record, Part 2

    ‘Tis Patrick’s Cryptic Opus #42!...
    (From a Cruciverbal Setter with Fortitude!)

    Note: See Patrick's filled-in crossword grid at the bottom of this week's Puzzleria!... just above our Comments Section.

    ANSWERS:

    ACROSS

    1. Strange to see a policeman when he’s not working(7)
    OFFBEAT
    OFF BEAT
    5. Spot some sort of conspiracy in school(7)
    SPLOTCH
    PLOT inside SCH
    10. Air Force veteran has a shot, though not as physically fit(8)
    FLABBIER
    FLIER containing A BB
    11. Celebrities, without hesitation, can be such malicious individuals(6)
    VIPERS
    VIPS containing ER
    12. Cut on record including bit of improvisation by lead singer(6)
    DISOWN
    DOWN(on record, as written down)containing I+S
    13. Duck outside room in end(8)
    TERMINAL
    TEAL containing RM+IN
    14. What might happen as one’s turned to leave, grabbing keys?(4,6)
    SIDE EFFECT
    "I'S" reversed+DEFECT containing(the keys of)E+F
    16. Bit of the Riot Act?(4)
    IOTA
    hidden inside rIOTAct
    17. Republicans taken aback by old comic strip character(4)
    POGO
    Grand Old Party(GOP)reversed+O
    19. Depressed, went to get drink(10)
    DISPIRITED
    DIED containing SPIRIT
    21. Tries again before last minute, for practice(8)
    REHEARSE
    REHEARS+E
    22. Turn boat around, eager to lose English sea monster...(6)
    KRAKEN
    ARK reversed+KEEN-E
    23. ...recalled this alternative involves one island in the South Pacific(6)
    TAHITI
    THAT reversed containing I, then add I to the end
    24. Bloody excellent meat kept inside on display(8)
    REVEALED
    RED containing E+VEAL
    25. Sad end after serious cut(7)
    SEVERED
    SEVERE+D
    26. No sense in some having sex?(7)
    INANITY
    IN+ANY containing IT

    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  26. This week's official answers, for the record, Part 3

    DOWN
    2. Filmmaker has wasted life, with love over(7)
    FELLINI
    LIFE anagram containing NIL reversed
    3. Song from 9 crashing bore? It may be omen!(4,3,4,4)
    BABY ONE MORE TIME
    BOREITMAYBEOMEN anagram
    4. Stranger story to be found in article(5)
    ALIEN
    LIE inside AN
    6. Singer ruined art, to a VIP?(9)
    PAVAROTTI
    ARTTOAVIP anagram
    7. No time for idiot paid to sing a new arrangement for 9’s hit(4,1,3,2,5)
    OOPS I DID IT AGAIN
    IDIOTPAIDTOSINGA anagram-T
    8. In short, managed to find fruit(7)
    CURRANT
    RAN inside CURT
    9. Pop singer making Presbyterians nervous?(7,6)
    BRITNEY SPEARS
    PRESBYTERIANS anagram
    15. See 22 Down
    FEDERLINE
    18. Talk at length about classwork(7)
    OPERATE
    ORATE containing PE(physical education class)
    20. Part for extremely likeable people in movie(7)
    ELEMENT
    L(ikeabl)E+MEN inside ET
    22. Family concealing rage, ultimately very embarrassed about cat hanging around—9 married him!(5,9)
    KEVEN FEDERLINE
    KIN containing E+V (KEVIN) +FELINE containing RED reversed (FEDERLINE)MENU
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  27. This week's official answers, for the record, Part 4

    DOWN
    2. Filmmaker has wasted life, with love over(7)
    FELLINI
    LIFE anagram containing NIL reversed
    3. Song from 9 crashing bore? It may be omen!(4,3,4,4)
    BABY ONE MORE TIME
    BOREITMAYBEOMEN anagram
    4. Stranger story to be found in article(5)
    ALIEN
    LIE inside AN
    6. Singer ruined art, to a VIP?(9)
    PAVAROTTI
    ARTTOAVIP anagram
    7. No time for idiot paid to sing a new arrangement for 9’s hit(4,1,3,2,5)
    OOPS I DID IT AGAIN
    IDIOTPAIDTOSINGA anagram-T
    8. In short, managed to find fruit(7)
    CURRANT
    RAN inside CURT
    9. Pop singer making Presbyterians nervous?(7,6)
    BRITNEY SPEARS
    PRESBYTERIANS anagram
    15. See 22 Down
    FEDERLINE
    18. Talk at length about classwork(7)
    OPERATE
    ORATE containing PE(physical education class)
    20. Part for extremely likeable people in movie(7)
    ELEMENT
    L(ikeabl)E+MEN inside ET
    22. Family concealing rage, ultimately very embarrassed about cat hanging around—9 married him!(5,9)
    KEVEN FEDERLINE
    KIN containing E+V (KEVIN) +FELINE containing RED reversed (FEDERLINE)MENU
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  28. This week's official answers, for the record, Part 5

    Riffing Off Shortz And Young Entrees:
    Tracking Subatomic Subs

    Will Shortz’s January 18th NPR Weekend Edition Sunday Puzzle Challenge, created by Joseph Young of St. Cloud, Minnesota, reads:
    Think of a word that means “very small.”
    the first syllable to the end, separated by a space, and you’ll get a two-word phrase naming something that is very large. What words are these?
    Puzzleria!s Riffing Off Shortz And Young Entrees read:

    ENTREE #1
    Take:
    ~ the surname of a past “trophy-worthy” wordplay aficionado and author (4 letters),
    ~ the surname of a past “winning” European poet and playwright (4 letters), and
    ~ the first name of a living Pulitzer Prize–winning historian, biographer and author of New York Times bestsellers (3 letters).
    Rearrange these 11 letters to spell the name of a puzzle-maker.
    Who are these three authors and one puzzle-maker?
    Answer:
    Willard ESPY; Victor HUGO; JON Meacham; JOSEPH YOUNG

    (Entrees #2 through #7 are terrific riffs courtesy of our friend Nodd, author of “Nodd ready for prime time” on Puzzleria!)
    ENTREE #2
    Think of a word describing figurative speech.
    Move two consecutive interior letters to the
    end, preceded by a space, to get a two-word phrase describing Piper Laurie’s character in a 1976 film. What words are these?
    Answer:
    IDIOMATIC, IDIOTIC MA

    ENTREE #3
    Think of a word for what you might need to do with new software if it does not work correctly at first.
    Move five consecutive letters to the end, preceded by a space, to get a two-word phrase describing what an NBA center might need at a dude ranch.
    What words are these?
    Answer:
    REINSTALL, TALL REINS

    ENTREE #4
    Think of the last name of a 20th-Century author and religious figure.
    Move three consecutive letters to the end, preceded by a space, to get a two-word phrase describing a famous town in England.
    What words are these?
    Answer:
    (L. Ron) HUBBARD, BARD HUB (Stratford-upon-Avon)

    ENTREE #5
    Think of a word for a category of military operations. Move six consecutive letters to the end, preceded by a space, to get a two-word phrase describing Hannibal Lecter. What words are these?
    Answer:
    PSYCHOLOGICAL, LOGICAL PSYCHO

    ENTREE #6
    Think of a word that means alert. Move five consecutive letters to the end, preceded by a
    space, to get a two-word phrase describing action you might need to take to ensure certain pests are not entering your house. What words are these?
    Answer:
    VIGILANT, ANT VIGIL

    ENTREE #7
    Think of a word for an improvement or innovation. Move the first syllable to the end, preceded by a space, to get a two-word phrase describing something you might have seen in 2024. What words are these?
    Answer:
    ADVANCE, VANCE AD
    Lego...

    ReplyDelete
  29. This week's official answers, for the record, Part 6


    ENTREE # 8
    Name a well-known word that appears to consist of a pair of adjacent numerical prefixes, each with the same number of letters. The apparent prefix on the right, however, does not function as a prefix (it’s on the right!) and derives from a Greek word associated with marketing.
    What is this well-known word?
    Answer:
    Monopoly;
    Note: "Monopoly" comes from the Greek prefix mono-, which means "one," and pōlein, "to sell."

    ENTREE #9
    Think of a numerical prefix, like the “uni-” in “unicycle” or the “kilo-” in “kilowatt.”
    Place after this prefix letters that would spell a mathematical constant... if we were to replace
    a vowel with the next vowel that follows it in the alphabet (a becomes e, e becomes i, i becomes o, etc.).
    This prefix, followed by the mathematical constant, spell a food that has an “awfully offal” reputation, even though it is a nutrient-rich source of protein, B vitamins and minerals.
    Move the prefix to the end. The result is a kind of dish – not a dish (like revenge!) best served cold, but one best not served at all!
    What are this prefix, mathematical constant and dish?
    Answer:
    Tri-; Tripe ("pe" would become "pi"); Petri Dish (a dish you would NOT want to eat from!)

    ENTREE #10
    Morton, feeling depressed and down in the dumpy doldrums, scheduled an appointment with his psychiatrist, Dr. Psyche Trieste, to discuss a change of scenery, of surroundings, of lifestyle, of perspective, of friends, of habits.
    Dr. Trieste listened carefully and patiently, only infrequently asking her patient to clarify and explain his plight more fully.
    After a half-hour of listening to Morton's morosely meandering monologue, the doc prescribed a radical change of scenery...
    “Morton,” she said, “there is no more fitting solution and change-of-scenery that I can recommend to you than Asia!”
    Within a month, Morton had been lain to rest. His survivors, alas, are accusing Dr. Trieste of murder, and suing her for, psychological malpractice.
    What was her alleged “rhetorical murder weapon?”
    Answer:
    “... you than Asia” (which sounds like "euthanasia")

    Dessert Menu
    Island Nation Dessert:
    “We ought to have a motto!”

    Remove the first and final letters from the second word in the name of an island nation. “Just slightly rearrange” its remaining letters. Insert a space someplace to get the first two words of an official national motto.
    Then fill in the following blanks: “If metal gets
    ___ it may ____.” Move the last letter of the first word to the beginning of the second word, forming the remaining words of the motto.
    What are this island nation and words in the two blanks?
    What is the national motto?
    Answer:
    United Kingdom; wet, rust
    "In God we trust" (motto of the United States of America)
    WET + RUST => WE TRUST
    (united kIN GODm); wet, rust;
    Note: "In God we Trust is the official motto of the United States, mandated by law in 1956, appearing on all U.S. currency and reflecting a national identity rooted in faith, particularly prominent during the Cold War to distinguish the U.S. from atheistic communism.

    Lego!

    ReplyDelete
  30. Schpuzzle
    SOUTHPAW, OUT, PSHAW
    For cryptic answers, check Lego's recap(which I didn't mean to interrupt with my answers, though!).
    Menu
    Cork-Or-Cap Hors d'Oeuvre
    BOONE(Farm Wine), JUG, JUNE BUG
    Drummer? Strummer? Punk-Band Bummer Slice
    HERB ALPERT(HERBAL-PERT again!)
    Entrees
    1. (Willard)ESPY+(Victor)HUGO+JON(Meacham)=JOSEPH YOUNG
    2. IDIOMATIC, IDIOTIC MA(the mother in "Carrie")
    3. REINSTALL, TALL REINS
    4. (L.Ron)HUBBARD, BARD HUB(Stratford-on-Avon, birthplace of William Shakespeare)
    5. PSYCHOLOGICAL, LOGICAL PSYCHO
    6. VIGILANT, ANT VIGIL
    7. ADVANCE, (J.D.)VANCE AD
    8. MONOPOLY
    9. TRI, PI, TRIPE/PETRI
    10. EUTHANASIA=YOU+THEN+ASIA
    Island Nation Dessert
    (United)KINGDOM, IN GOD WE TRUST, WET RUST
    Masked Singer Results:
    QUEEN CORGI=CLAUDIA OSHRY(comedian/influencer/"The Toast" podcast host)
    No one guessed her, and neither Mom nor I know her. She(Claudia)also insisted she be taken out of the competition(for some unknown reason), so they had to unmask her.-pjb

    ReplyDelete