| SUNDAES | Days for ice creams, we hear (7) |
| PALMSUNDAY | Ice cream, we hear, on hand for a feast |
| MAKEWAY | Clear the path to remove the cream, we hear (4,3) |
| CONES | On coming back dry, going round for ice-creams (5) |
| WEDDING | Church ceremony, baptism, requires two days for tourist on vacation (7) |
| INFANCY | Early days for fashionable thought (7) |
| TIDDLER | One working overhead about two days for fish (7) |
| OCTOPUS | Work, after 31 days, for organisation with widespread influence (7) |
| VANILLA | A flavouring used for ice cream (7) |
| PUNSTER | One who might say I scream for ice cream? (7) |
| CORONET | Great disappointment for ice cream lover? Topping embellishment (7) |
| TORTONI | Antonia introduced alternative taste initially for ice-cream (7) |
| PARFAIT | What normal French do for ice cream treat (7) |
| WEEKEND | The best two days, for many |
| WEIGHTY | Worrying number of days for famous wager? Under one week |
| LACONIC | Saying little boy almost in shape for ice cream? |
| WAFERS | Slivers, such as adhesive leaves for sealing letters; biscuits or thins for ice cream; discs or hosts of unleavened bread for Communion; or, slices of silicon for microchips (6) |
| TUB | Boat for training novice rowers; container for ice cream; or, an old vat or copper for washing clothes and linen with a dolly or posser (3) |
| SCREAM | What, in the rhyme, we all do for ice cream |
| ABUT | A container for ice cream kept back for neighbour? (4) |