Cooking Lessons: In cooking, Stock (also known as Fond), is a savory cooking liquid that forms the basis of many dishes, such as soups, stews and sauces. There are four basic kinds of stock: White Stock (Chicken), Brown Stock (Beef or other meat/bone source), Vegetable, and Fish Stock. The classifications refer to the contents and method used to prepare the stock, not the color.
20-Across. Be too afraid to: CHICKEN OUT OF.
28-Across. Add extra protection: BEEF UP SECURITY.
43-Across. Ask leading questions: FISH FOR ANSWERS.
And the unifier:
48-Across. Noncash corporate benefits, or what a cook would call the starts of 20-, 28-, and 43-Across?: STOCK OPTIONS.
Across:
1. Desert hill shaped by wind: DUNE. Also the title of a 1965 Sci-Fi novel by Frank Herbert (Oct. 8, 1920 ~ Feb. 11, 1986).
5. __ bene: NOTA. Today's Latin lesson. Nota bene, abbreviated as N.B., is a Latin phrase meaning "note well" or "take special notice." In legal documents, the phrase is used to highlight important details or draw attention to key pieces of information in a document.
9. Tax deadline month: APRIL.
14. Breakfast chain that serves stacks: IHOP. International House of Pancakes
15. Gem with milky iridescence: OPAL. Australia is known for its beautiful opals. Hi, Kazie!
16. Ecological community: BIOME. According to National Geographic, a Biome is "an area classified according to the species that live in that location. Temperature range, soil type, and the amount of light and water are unique to a particular place and form the niches for specific species allowing scientists to define the biome."
17. Daughter of Katie Holmes: SURI. Suri Holmes (b. Apr. 18, 2006) is the daughter of Katie Holmes (b. Dec. 18, 1978) and Tom Cruise (b. July 3, 1962). [Name # 1.]
18. Fictional sleuth Wolfe: NERO. Nero Wolfe came on to the scene in 1934 when the detective novel Fer-de-Lance, by Rex Stout (Dec. 1, 1886 ~ Oct. 27, 1975) was first published. Nero Wolfe later became a television series in the 1982, which starred William Cannon (Sept. 27, 1920 ~ Feb. 11, 1994). [Name # 2, fictional.]
19. Conked out: SLEPT.
23. Restaurateur Matsuhisa: NOBU. [Name # 3.] // And 3-Down. Wrap for a tobiko maki roll: NORI. // 11-Down. Filling in a tobiko maki roll: ROE. Funny story. I recently ate at NoBu in Vegas. It was incredible expensive. There were five us and we ate on the cheap. We each ordered only one sushi roll each, so the total bill for all of us was probably the standard bill for most of the restaurant's diners.
24. Red Sox div.: AL EAST. As in the American League East in Baseball.
32. Walks quickly: LEGS IT.
33. Arterial blockage: CLOT.
34. House mem.: REP. As in a member of the House of Representatives in Congress.
35. Doesn't stick the landing, say: ERRS. I was not familiar with the expressing "stick the landing." Apparently, it means to succeed and do something well. Hand up if you knew this expression.
36. Tennis great Shriver: PAM. Pam Shriver (b. July 4, 1962) was active in the 1980s and 1990s. She also played in the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. [Name # 4.]
37. Pirelli product: TIRE. This company has been in business since 1972.
38. Responded to a growling stomach: ATE.
39. Superstar: IDOL. Idol appeared in last week's puzzle, too.
41. Plato's hometown: ATHENS. Athens, Greece, that is. [Name # 5.]
46. "That's true about me": YES, I AM.
47. Wee bit: WHIT.
54. "__ luck!": LOTSA.
57. Verdi tragedy: AIDA. This opera, which makes frequent appearances in the puzzles, is a tragic opera set in the Old Kingdom of Egypt. The opera was written by Giuseppe Fortunino Francesco Verdi (Oct. 10, 1813 ~ Jan. 27, 1901), with the libretto written by Antonio Ghislanzoni (Nov. 25, 1824 ~ July 16, 1893). It was later made into a musical by Elton John (b. Mar. 25, 1947) and Tim Rice (b. Nov. 10, 1944). [Name # 6.]
58. Water repellent?: MOAT. Cute clue.
59. Easy-to-read font: ARIAL. This is Arial Font. This is Times Font. This is Courier Font.
60. Word with bed or engine: TWIN. As in a twin bed or a twin engine.
61. Podcaster Klein: EZRA. I am not familiar with Ezra Klein (b. May 9, 1984). Apparently, he is an American journalist and political analyst. He his the host of his own podcast called The Ezra Klein Show. [Name # 7.]
62. 1983 Streisand title role: YENTL. Barbra Streisand (b. Apr. 24, 1942) portrayed Yentl in the musical drama of the same name. The musical was based on a story by Nobel Prize recipient Isaac Bashevis Singer (Nov. 11, 1903 ~ July 24, 1991) about a young woman who pretends to be a man in order to continue her studies. [Names # 8 and 9, one real, one fictional.]
63. Some video game inhabitants: SIMS.
64. Quakers, e.g.: SECT. As in a religious sect.
Down:
1. Ultimate equipment that weighs 175 grams: DISC.
2. "Not happening": UH, UH.
4. Magnificence: EPICNESS. Yup, that's a real word that means The quality or state of being epic.
5. Only: NONE BUT.
6. Bare one's soul: OPEN UP.
7. Root in Hawaiian cuisine: TARO. We see both Taro and Ube in the puzzles.
8. Baseball family name: ALOU. There were several brothers and their sons who played in major league baseball. Felipe Alou (né Felipe Rojas Alou; b. May 12, 1935) is the oldest of three brothers. he was the first Dominican to play regularly in the Major Leagues. He played for the San Francisco Giants, Atlanta Braves, Oakland A's, the New York Yankees and, after he retired from playing, he managed the Montreal Expos. Matty Alou (né Mateo Rojas Alou; December 22, 1938 ~ November 3, 2011) played as an outfielder in Major League Baseball for the San Francisco Giants. Jesús Alou (né Jesús María Rojas Alou; March 24, 1942 ~ March 10, 2023) was the youngest Alou brother. He played for the San Francisco Giants, the Houston Astros, the Oakland Athletics, and the New York Mets. [Names # 10, 11, and 12.]
Felipe's sons, Moisés (né Moisés Rojas-Alou Beltré (b. July 3, 1966) and Luis E. Rojas (b, September 1, 1981), also played baseball. [Names # 13, and 14.]
9. Big name in vodka: ABSOLUT. Absolut Vodka is a brand of vodka, produced near Åhus, in southern Sweden. It comes in many flavors. [Name adjacent.]
10. Steal: PILFER. Fun word.
12. Little scamp: IMP.
13. "__ that sink in": LET.
21. Nobel Peace Prize winner Annan: KOFI. Kofi Atta Annan (Apr. 8, 1938 ~ Aug. 18, 2018) was was a Ghanaian diplomat who was the seventh secretary-general of the United Nations. He served in that position from 1997 to 2006. In 2001, he and the United Nations were the co-recipients of the 2001 Nobel Peace Prize. [Name # 15.]
22. Filled tortilla: TACO.
25. Better ventilated: AIRIER.
26. Rears, at sea: STERNS.
27. Hunts and pecks on a keyboard: TYPES.
28. Wodehouse character Wooster: BERTIE. Sir P D Wodehouse (né Pelham Grenville Wodehouse; Oct. 15, 1881 ~ Feb. 14, 1975) was a British writer and creator of Jeeves, the butler to feather-brained Bertie Wooster. [Names # 16 and 17, one real, one fictional.]
29. Door to the street: EGRESS. Most of us would just say Exit door.
30. Teatro alla __: Milan opera house: SCALA.
31. Horror movie street: ELM. The trees on this street are 32-Down.
32. Like shade trees: LEAFY.
36. "__ favor": "please," in Spanish: POR. Today's Spanish lesson.
37. What are a-changin', in a Dylan song: THE TIMES. [Name # 18.]
39. "Possibly not even that": IF AT ALL.
40. "__ arigato": Japanese "thank you very much": DOMO. Today's Japanese lesson.
41. Fireplace accessories: ASH PANS. Makes for easy clean-up.
42. Foolish one: TWIT.
44. Show derision to: HISS AT.
45. Ego of "SNL": NWODIM. Egobunma Kelechi Nwodim (b. March 10, 1988) is an American actress and comedian. I haven't watched Saturday Night Live in years, so didn't recognize this name. [Name # 19.]
49. Movie musical starring Judi Dench and Idris Elba: CATS. I never saw the movie Cats, but I did see the musical. That was enough. [Names # 20 and 21.]
50. Fuzzy fruit: KIWI. Also a small flightless bird from New Zealand.
Today's constructors are David Distenfeld and
Seth Weitberg. David's
December 10, 2020
puzzle is the first one I ever reviewed for C.C. See if you
Dr. Who fans can spot the mistake I made on the very first page.
And here's a capsule bio from
Husker's review of David's first LAT themeless. And today Seth Weitberg is making his LAT debut.
Today David and Seth give us 4 theme clues about the different kinds of
WORK that aspiring sports pros have to take on to support themselves
while they're waiting for their big break, while still aggressively
staying at the top of their game. Sometimes in order to make it they have to
team up with a buddy, and sometimes, as we see in this
Siskel and Ebert review of a film about a basketball star who
partners with a martial arts expert things don't WORK out too well (Tomato Meter 11%) ...
Here
Roger's review
in writing. Not to keep you in suspense any longer here's the reveal. I think this week's theme is a slam dunk (I hope! 😀)
...
62A. Guard aggressively, and an apt description of 18-, 24-, 38-,
and 50-Across: DOUBLE TEAM. Double teaming is most often used against high scoring players,
but it can have its disadvantages. For all of you basketball noobs (e.g.
MOI)
here is an explanation of double teaming.
And of course it's an APT description of the themers, because the
fill for each clue consists of DOUBLETEAMnames ... 18A.
Works as a decoy vendor?: HAWKS DUCKS. The Atlanta HAWKS are an NBA basketball team.
This was a deceptively simple theme, but I'm sure it wasn't so easy to pull off.
Here's the grid ...
Here's the rest.
Across:
1. Improvise: AD LIB.
6. Woodstock supergroup, briefly: CSNY. Crosby, Stills &
Nash (CSN) was a folk rock supergroup made up of American
singer-songwriters David Crosby, Stephen Stills, and English
singer-songwriter Graham Nash. When joined by Canadian singer-songwriter
Neil Young as a fourth member, they were called Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (CSNY).
They are noted for their intricate vocal harmonies and lasting
influence on American music and culture, as well as their political
activism and often tumultuous interpersonal relationships. Here's the
title track for their album Déjà Vu. You've probably heard it before ...
10. Where to find bands on bands: RADIO. Here's the band for WBJC 91.5 FM. They don't play much band music, but they did once play the overture to the soundtrack for The Last Emperor which was written by David Byrne of the new wave bandThe Talking Heads ...
15. Whooping __: CRANE. For 50 years the USGS Patuxent Wildlife
Research Center in Maryland ran a captive breeding program to help save
Whooping CRANES
from extinction. We learned in school that they migrated every year to
Texas. We never saw them in Maryland, but were able to catch glimpses of
them in a birding trip to the marshes of the
Aransas National Wildlife Refuge
in Texas near the San Antonio Bay.
Young Whooping Crane
16. Next in line: HEIR.
17. Like most Ken dolls: BLOND.
18. [Theme clue]
20. Fielder's need: GLOVE. Teri and I are both left handers and
my son is a right hander. Only
one of my grandchildren is left handed and she is into sports. As a
result of attending several Oriole games this past season she developed
an interest in baseball. She had a birthday recently, so we bought her
this left-handed fielder's GLOVE ...
Left handed fielder's glove
21. Aliens, for short: ETS.
22. Layered dessert: TORTE.
23. Mineral deposits: ORES. Not all mineral deposits are ORES, but ORES
contain mineral deposits.
24. [Theme clue]
28. Meat and potatoes, often: ENTREE.
31. __ canto: BEL. Today's Italian lesson, BEL canto
translates as "beautiful singing". It designates an opera style
characterized by a relatively small dynamic range, an exact control of
the intensity of vocal tone, a demand for vocal agility, and clear
articulation of notes and enunciation of words. The three Bel canto
composers par excellence are Gioacchino Rossini (1792-1868), Gaetano Donizetti (1797-1848) and Vincenzo Bellini (1801-1835). Here's soprano Anna Netrebko showing us how it's done with Norina's aria Quel guardo il cavaliere ("That I look at the knight") from Donizetti's Don Pasquale ...
32. Sch. group: PTA.
33. Snoozer: BORE. I hope Anna didn't BORE you with her vocal antics. 😀
34. "I feel you": SAME HERE.
38. [Theme clue]
43. Set of promotional materials: MEDIA KIT.
44. Dory pal: NEMO. His name of course comes from the intrepid Captain NEMO, commander of the Nautilus submarine in Jules Verne's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, the basis for this thrilling 1954 movie ...
45. Fender accessory: AMP.
47. World's second-tallest bird: EMU. The EMU belongs to a group of flightless running birds known as ratites, the most primitive of the modern bird families. The ratite family includes the kiwi, ostrich, cassowary, and rhea,
all birds found only in the Southern Hemisphere. The emu is the
second-largest living bird in the world (the ostrich is the largest).
Emu Dromaius, novaehollandiae
48. Souped-up ride: HOT ROD. Hot Rod is also the name a 2007 American comedy film directed by Akiva Schaffer (in his directorial debut) and written by Pam Brady. The film stars Andy Samberg as amateur stuntman Rod Kimble, whose stepfather, Frank
(Ian McShane), continuously mocks and disrespects him. When Frank
becomes ill, Rod raises money for his heart operation by executing his
largest stunt yet. It scored only 39% on the Tomatometer, but I linked
this because I'm a big fan of Ian McShane.
50. [Theme clue]
55. Capital once called Christiania: OSLO. New to me.
56. Gas up?: BLOAT.
57. Sport with takedowns, for short: MMA. Mixed Martial Arts.
60. Horned herbivore: RHINO. Don't let one catch you eating any of their herbs!
Rhinoceros
62. [Theme reveal].
64. Toy truck brand: TONKA. My youngest grandson is crazy about them.
Tonka Mighty Dump Truck
65. Ski town outside Salt Lake City: ALTA.
66. Step in the shower?: RINSE.
67. Promise: SWEAR.
68. Cond. once called shell shock: PTSD. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder.
Very clinical sounding. "Shell shock" is a much more vivid term. My
father was shell shocked during WWII. Afterwards he was electro-shocked
by "therapists". He never talked about the war.
69. Car rental choice: SEDAN.
Down:
1. Icy Hot target: ACHE.
2. "Darn!": DRAT.
3. Statutes: LAWS.
4. Tats: INK.
5. Principal pal: BESTIE.
6. Boor: CHURL.
7. Religious divisions: SECTS. Revisions to ISMS.
8. Kicks with swooshes: NIKES.
9. Mos. and mos.: YRS.
10. "Notorious" SCOTUS justice: RBG. Ruth Bader Ginsburg was"notorious" for being a formidable opponent in the court room.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg
11. Participate in a meting?: ALLOT. You can ALLOTA LOT, but not an ALOT.
12. Garage convenience: DOOR OPENER. Our "convenience" no longer opens and it's on my to do list to fix. Fortunately it was stuck CLOSED, not OPEN!
13. Flip: INVERT.
14. "Friday Night Lights" city: ODESSA. Friday Night Lights is a 2004 American sports drama film co-written and directed by Peter Berg. The film follows the coach and players of a high school football team in the Texas city of ODESSA. The book on which it is based, Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream (1990) by H. G. Bissinger, followed the story of the 1988 Permian High School Panthers football team as they made a run towards the state championship ...
19. Big name in bananas: DOLE.
24. Musical equivalent of two whole notes: BREVE. In music, a double whole note (American), BREVE, or double note
lasts two times as long as a whole note (or semibreve). It is the
second-longest note value still in use in modern music notation. The
longest notated note is the longa, which could be double or triple the length of a breve, although its use is most commonly found in early music.
Alternative Breve notations
25. Film critic Roger: EBERT. See theme introduction.
26. Classic grape soda: NEHI.
27. Oscar winner Guinness: ALEC. Sir Alec didn't win it for this film. At this point he was still waiting for a promotion ...
28. Abate: EBB.
29. 55-Across's country: Abbr.: NOR. Its capital is 55A.
30. Helpful item when it's time to bounce?: TRAMPOLINE.
34. Sheep in the "Wallace and Gromit" franchise: SHAUN. Wallace and Gromit is a British stop-motion animated comedy franchise created by Nick Park and produced by Aardman Animations. It's an acquired taste. Here they are ...
Wallace and Gromit
The spinoff SHAUNthe Sheep
is about an ovine who doesn't follow the flock - in fact, he leads them
into all sorts of scrapes and scraps, turning peace in the valley into
mayhem in the meadow (not unlike Wallace). In this episode from Season 1 entitled Snore Worn Shaun he has to deal with Shirley's sleep APNEA (counting sheep doesn't seem to help) ...
35. Puffin kin: AUK. An AUK or alcid is a bird of the family Alcidae in the order Charadriiformes. The alcid family includes the murres, guillemots, auklets, puffins, and murrelets. The family contains 25 extant or recently extinct species that are divided into 11 genera.
Auks
Apart from the extinct Great Auk, all auks can fly, and are excellent swimmers and divers (appearing to "fly" in water), but their walking appears clumsy.
36. X-ray kin: MRI. Magnetic Resonance Interferometer and a CSO to our magnetic Ray - O. When he gets here he can PUNish us with an outlandish explanation for this complicated device.
37. Goes on and on: RANTS.
39. Paradise: EDEN.
40. Virtual people in a video game: SIMS.
41. Dashboard Confessional genre: EMO. Here's Meatloaf back by popular demand ...
42. Square in a yard: SOD.
45. Cancels, as a launch: ABORTS.
46. 1990s series starring David Cross and Bob Odenkirk:
MR SHOW. Mr. Show with Bob and David, also known as MR SHOW, is an American sketch comedy series starring and hosted by Bob Odenkirk and David Cross.
It aired on HBO from November 3, 1995, to December 28, 1998. These
guys are very funny, but a little edgy. This skit is called "Lie
Detector"... One thing I learned from this clue was how to beep out words that Margaret wouldn't approve of 😀
48. Make good as new: HEAL.
49. River rompers: OTTERS.
51. Wilder role: WONKA. Pure Imagination ...
52. Curved fastener: U BOLT. Not the sprinter, but one of these ...