| ROADHOUSE | A pub or restaurant, by the way |
| CABARET | Entertainment at a nightclub or restaurant by singers, dancers etc. (7) |
| BRAISE | Cook belonging to place with famous restaurant by the Thames reportedly |
| PARLOUR | From "speak", an apartment set aside for conversation in a monastery or convent; a family sitting room; a milking shed; a snug in a pub; or, a shop selling ice cream or pizzas (7) |
| INDIAN | Keeling over, said to be legless in pub or restaurant (6) |
| BAR | A counter or room in a pub; or, a block of chocolate or soap (3) |
| OPENMIKE | A session in a pub or club where members of the public are invited to perform comedy or sing (4,4) |
| SNUG | Enclosed area in a pub, or a cosy living room |
| TAPROOM | A bar in a pub or hotel |
| AUNTSALLY | A pub or fairground game (4,5) |
| HOSTELRY | Old-fashioned name for a pub or hotel (8) |
| AROUND | It may be bought in a pub or thereabouts |
| BARMEN | Males who serve drink in a pub or hotel (6) |
| SIGN | A gesture or symbol conveying a meaning; a division of the zodiac; or, a board marking an inn, pub or shop (4) |
| TABS | Tallies of beverages/food ordered in pubs or restaurants, hence "to keep regular checks on"; or, loops for drawing stage curtains, hence the drapes themselves (4) |
| MICHELIN | ____ star, rating awarded to a restaurant by a guide book series first given in 1926 (8) |
| TRONC | Word, from French for "collecting box" or "poor box", for a pool of tips to be divided out among catering, hotel or restaurant staff; or, the system by which this is done (5) |
| ROTISSERIE | From the French for "roast", word for a type of revolving skewer on which to spit-roast beef, chicken or pork; or, a cook shop or restaurant specialising in barbecued meat (10) |
| INNS | Pubs or taverns, each with a sign often bearing a picture of a heraldic beast such as a dragon, eagle, griffin, hart, lion, unicorn or wyvern (4) |
| ARLO | "Alice's Restaurant" by ___ Guthrie |