| FELLOWSHIP | Did some dons bear fruit in the club? (10) |
| GOODNESSME | E.g. some dons suspect my word (8,2) |
| VINE | It bears fruit in a number of ways (4) |
| APPLECART | Helpful software about transport, something that bears fruit in market (9) |
| BRAMBLE | Thorny shrub or vine which bears fruit in late summer/autumn (7) |
| QUINCE | Fruit in the apple family mentioned in Edward Lear's The Owl and the Pussy-Cat (6) |
| GRAPE | Fruit whose name precedes "fruit" in the name of another fruit |
| ORANGE | National colour of the Netherlands; or, a fruit in the genus that includes the pomelo, tangelo and yuzu (6) |
| SPEARS | The fruit in the ship used as weapons (6) |
| BANANAS | Fruits in the jam in the Breakfast Car (7) |
| DOGROSE | With pink flowers signalling an approaching summer, a wild climber found intertwined with brambles in hedgerows and woodland edges or with ripening fruit in the autumn (3,4) |
| APRICOT | Eaten fresh, dried, glaceed or in jam, fruit in the genus that includes nectarines and peaches (7) |
| CHERRY | Wild -; with heavy boughs of white blossom in the spring and edible fruits in the summer, a native tree of woodlands and old hedgerows, also called gean (6) |
| APRICOTS | Fruits in the rose family, traditionally glaceed in France, used to make jam for Sachertorte or baked in tarts with frangipane (8) |
| OLIVE | Important fruit in the Mediterranean diet |
| PARE | Peel fruit in the auditorium |
| ORIGINALSIN | Masters admitted eating fruit in the first place |
| RANGE | Losing old fruit in the cooker |
| APPLE | Tempting fruit in the Biblical Garden of Eden |
| TOMATO | Fruit in the nightshade family with aubergines, potatoes, peppers and chillies (6) |