| FLAGEOLET | Member of the fipple flute family with the recorder and the tin whistle; or, a young haricot bean used in French cookery (9) |
| BLOW | Word for a gust or puff of wind; an act of getting some fresh air; a wallop; a display of blossom; a jazz jam or rock session; a blast on a trumpet or whistle; or, a hurried departure (4) |
| FAVA | ___ bean, US name for the broad bean (4) |
| FIPPLE | From Old Norse for "horse's lip", a plug in the mouthpiece of a flageolet, penny/tin whistle or recorder (6) |
| RECORDERS | Instruments in the "fipple flutes" group |
| LOGGERHEADS | Meeting of data recorder and bosses at which there's disagreement (11) |
| RECORDER | Wind instrument of the flute family with a reedy tone quality (8) |
| PIPINGINABLANKET | Playing the tin whistle on a chilly day? |
| TOOTLES | Plays the tin whistle |
| CANNELLONI | From "pipe, reed, stem" and with a similar name to a white haricot bean, a variety of tubular pasta; or, a dish of said rolls stuffed with minced beef and cheese or ricotta and spinach (10) |
| RECORD | From "learn by heart, summon to mind, commit to memory", word for a chronicle, log or other account of facts in writing and one from which a fipple flute derives its name, in the sense "practise a tun |
| WHISTLE | Steam-operated signalling device on an old railway locomotive or a traditional kettle; or, a simple type of fipple flute or flageolet (7) |
| FLAPPER | Informal word for a bob-haired unconventional young woman of fashion and intent in the 1920s; or, a young wild duck or partridge (7) |
| NUT | An acorn, conker, filbert or other such indehiscent fruit; a hard gingery biscuit; a lump of coal; one's head; a sky goddess; or, a young blood (3) |
| BRAT | Dialect for an apron, child's pinafore or an overall; US word for a type of German sausage; or, a young rascal, scamp or tyke (4) |
| KIT | Equipment and attire for a specific sport or pursuit collectively; or, a young ferret or mink (3) |
| HANSCHRISTIANANDERSEN | Author of The Tinderbox and The Tin Soldier, portrayed by Danny Kaye in a 1952 film |
| KITTY | Word for the jack in bowls, a pool of money in poker or a young cat (5) |
| WHIP | Riding crop-like device; a central shaft of a windmill's sail; or, a young single-stem tree (4) |
| TOTO | Dog that traveled with the Scarecrow and the Tin Man |