| HIGHTEA | A light meal the hag organised about one (4,3) |
| ROOMMATE | More Tom organised about one for stable companion (8) |
| OMELETTE | Light meal the French originally shelled out for (8) |
| SALAD | Light meal the daughter, sadly, sent back (5) |
| RETAKEN | More organised about seizing king, kidnapped again |
| MOTORCADE | Procession Democrat organised about first of October |
| SERVICE | A religious ceremony; a good turn; employment; a public utility; a set of crockery for a particular meal; the order of dishes; or, an act of assisting a customer or waiting on a diner (7) |
| EASIEST | Most like a picnic meal, the rest of the afternoon free of shackles |
| GALATEA | Celebratory meal the result of intervention by Aphrodite? (7) |
| BANQUET | Word for a light meal eaten on a small domestic bench originally, now a lavish feast or sumptuous spread (7) |
| HERBTEA | Robert, perhaps, taking a light meal and a drink (4,3) |
| TOOKTEA | Had a light meal, in the U.K. |
| BUSHTEA | Drink or a light meal taken by former US president (4, 3) |
| TEATIME | Occasion for a light meal |
| SWITCHING | Perform a song about the hag converting (9) |
| GRETEL | Storybook sister who pushed the hag into the oven |
| ERIN | Hearing the hag had left the country (4) |
| FEED | An amount of provender for cattle or of sustenance for a baby; a plentiful meal; the rate of progress of a lathe; or, an actor's stooge (4) |
| SWITCHED | Changed the hag and, being non-u, sued all round (8) |
| ERNST | Rudolf ?, painter born in 1854 whose works include The Meal, The Metal Workers and Reading the Koran (5) |