| OPENERS | Any of various utensils for removing crowns from beer bottles, lids from tin cans or for unfastening envelops (7) |
| CRUSHER | Device for compressing, pulverising or squashing fruit, ice, rocks or tin cans; or, slang for a police officer (7) |
| ZESTERS | Bread-bakers', cake-makers' or cocktail-shakers' utensils for removing fine shreds or twists of peel from lemons, limes, oranges and other citrus fruits (7) |
| EQUALISER | Egalitarian's goal, maybe, removing crown from real squire in revolution |
| CAPS | Bottle lids |
| TINOPENER | Rep in Eton supplying means of removing lids from cans (3-6) |
| REFERENCEYOGURT | Dairy product that hides facts under the lids (from a thicker variety of a dairy product)? |
| CAP | Bottle's 'lid' |
| OPENER | Utensil for removing a crown cap from a bottle or a lid from a tin; first goal in a match; or, a comment used to start a conversation (6) |
| CHURCHKEY | Named after a device for unlocking chapel-like buildings, a utensil for removing the crowns from glass beer/pop bottles (6,3) |
| PEELER | An old word for policeman; or, a utensil for removing the skin from a potato or a carrot (6) |
| SINCIPUT | Front of the skull from the forehead to the crown; from Latin, 'half head' (8) |
| CASE | 24 cans or bottles, typically |
| STONER | Kitchen utensil for removing the pits of cherries (6) |
| SOFTSPOT | Weakness of visiting holy man: crowns from the east (4,4) |
| TIARA | Pope's crown from Ireland's capital in place of Irish kings (5) |
| NACRE | Shiny stuff recovered from beer cans (5) |
| AIL | Sicken from beer, by the sound of it (3) |
| TIARAS | Jewelled crowns from India stolen by rogue around a square (6) |
| POKIES | Cans or jugs |