| CREATURECOMFORT | Warmth, food or a soft bed |
| FEDORA | Given food or a soft hat (6) |
| MAMA | Bear with a soft bed |
| PLAYER | Actor gets a soft bed (6) |
| MAMABEAR | She had a soft bed |
| WHISTPLAYER | With hush and a soft bed one expects some tricks (5,6) |
| WRAP | A light dressing-gown, outdoor garment, sarong or shawl; a single turn or fold; clingfilm, foil, paper etc covering/concealing food or a gift; or, the end of a session of filming (4) |
| PECK | Quarter of a bushel; a strike or take of grain with a beak; a perfunctory kiss; a tongue-twisting amount of pickled peppers; food; or, a mickle (4) |
| PANSY | Also known as heart's-ease or three-faces-under-a-hood, a cottage garden viola suitable for crystallising or pressing; or, a soft bluish-purple or vibrant violet colour, reminiscent of said flower's p |
| FLAKE | A chip or sliver; a single crystal of ice or snow; a crumbly chocolate bar; fish food; or, a Stone-Age flint tool (5) |
| PATTY | Word for a little pie; a flat burger or cake of minced beef or other food; or, a US version of a chocolatecovered peppermint cream (5) |
| FUDGE | Word for nonsense; a piece of stop-press news or the box left blankin a newspaper for thus; or, a soft confection flavoured with chocolate, clotted cream, rum or vanilla (5) |
| MESS | Word once used for a portion of food or a set of four served together at a medieval banquet, hence a group of military personnel who eat together or the meal so taken (4) |
| BARM | Word for the froth of fermenting liquor; yeast or leaven; or, with "brack" or "cake", dialect for fruit loaf or a soft bread roll respectively (4) |
| BLENDER | Device with a goblet for mixing or liquidising food; or, a subtle fabric used in quilting or patchwork (7) |
| CRIMP | One of a series of pinches around the edge of a pie crust; or, a soft bead designed to be flattened with pliers in jewellery-making (5) |
| SPEAR | A vegetable or a soft fruit (5) |
| STEAMER | A babycino; or, a soft- shell clam (7) |
| SCRATCH | Poultry food; or, a foul in snooker as a result of a pocketed cue ball (7) |
| POULT | A young chicken, pheasant or other fowl being raised for food; or, a fine corded silk, also called paduasoy (5) |