| RICED | Used a potato gizmo |
| RICER | Potato gizmo |
| HOLE | An aperture, such as an animal's burrow, a cup in a green for a golf ball, a needle's eye or a potato in a sock (4) |
| EARLY | A potato (or a pea) could be an ___, a second ___ or a maincrop (5) |
| PULL | Cut a cabbage! Pick a strawberry! Lift a potato! a carrot! (4) |
| JACKET | Skin of a potato; dust cover of a book; a record sleeve; or, an outer garment (6) |
| PEELER | An old word for policeman; or, a utensil for removing the skin from a potato or a carrot (6) |
| SPUD | Narrow spade for weeding; a potato; or, a hole in a sock (4) |
| TUBER | A thickened underground part of a stem, e.g. in a potato (5) |
| FRY | A single fishling or fingerling; children, froglets, salmon hatchlings or other small young things collectively; a potato chip; or, a dish or meal of food sizzled in hot oil (3) |
| STEW | "There's still plenty of meat on that bone. Now, you take this home, throw it in a pot, add some broth, a potato ... baby, you got a ___ going!": Carl Weathers |
| EYE | Part of a potato or a needle |
| CRISP | Crunchy, like a potato chip or a cracker |
| TEAPOT | Briefly unite a potato container with a spout |
| EYES | Many on a potato or two on a noodle |
| CHIT | Induce (a potato) to sprout by placing it in a cool light place (4) |
| SHAW | An old or dialect word for a copse, thicket or woodland; Scots for the leafy top of a potato/turnip; or, an assumed name of Lawrence of Arabia (4) |
| HULAHOOP | Toy involved in a 1950s craze; a potato and maize crisp |
| ITAPILE | A potato is IT - a pile altogether (Xhosa) (7) |
| EYED | Bumpy, like a potato |