| TERRACOTTA | Brownish-red, unglazed pottery or earthenware. |
| LOBSTERBISQUE | Bright-red unglazed china? |
| BISCUIT | Form of unglazed pottery; a pale brown colour; or, a food such as a custard cream or a Rich Tea (7) |
| GROG | Unglazed pottery (4) |
| JASPERWARE | Type of unglazed pottery, often in Wedgwood blue |
| COTTA | Terra___, unglazed pottery |
| CRAFT | A skilled trade or its collective artisans; a creative activity involving handiwork such as embroidery or pottery; or, a boat or ship (5) |
| WASH | A bathe, cleanse or rinse in water; a quantity of laundry; lotion; the wake of a ship; a tasteless drink; a thin coat of colour, glaze or slip for painting, pastry or pottery; or, pig swill (4) |
| TURNING | Word for a bend, crossroads, curve or junction; the shaping of a vase or other crock in pottery; or, the action or skill of using a lathe (7) |
| DUTCH | Iron or earthenware container used for cooking stews or casseroles, ... oven |
| PAN | Broad and shallow vessel of metal or earthenware used for cooking or other domestic purposes / suffix meaning 'the whole of' |
| CLOAM | From the Old English for "mud", a provincial Devonshire or Cornish word meaning "made of clay"; or, earthenware collectively (5) |
| JARS | Glass or earthenware vessels used for preserve or pickle items (4) |
| DER | "The" in German or earthenware or : speechless? of Malini to roughly part pray cooking of for (2,2) the us, get enemy in |
| CHINA | High-quality dishware made of porcelain or earthenware (5) |
| CERAMIC | Material such as bone china or earthenware (7) |
| CROCK | Nonsense or earthenware jar |
| JAR | Glass or earthenware pot (3) |
| SHARD | Archaically, a boundary water; dialectically, a gap; vernacularly, a broken piece, crock or scrap of pottery; or, zoologically, from a misunderstanding of Shakespeare, a beetle's elytron or wing case |
| DUTCHOVEN | An iron or earthenware cooking pot with a lid, used for stews, etc; casserole (5,4) |