As it turns out, this was a double-whammy. The new Calamares used a
cryptsetup that defaulted to luks2, which grub2 does not support.
Ubiquity gets around this by using an unencrypted /boot (ewww). However,
you can get cryptsetup to explicitly use one version or the other of
luks rather than relying on whatever the default version is. The library
used to partition, kpmcore, was modified to do exactly this. Problem
fixed:

kpmcore (3.3.0-5) unstable; urgency=medium

  * Use luks1 format only

 -- Jonathan Carter <[email protected]>  Sat, 06 Apr 2019 12:40:05 +0200

** Package changed: calamares (Ubuntu) => kpmcore (Ubuntu)

** Changed in: kpmcore (Ubuntu)
       Status: New => Fix Released

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1822409

Title:
  19.04 lubuntu install - Full disk install with encryption on a EFI
  system without secure boot resulted in gnu-grub

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