| GLOBULE | Bit of honey |
| SAMPLE | Bit of honey, e.g. |
| TSP | Bit of honey, perhaps: Abbr. |
| WHIG | Early Liberal puts first bit of honey in syrup (4) |
| CHOCOLATE | Let cocoa, containing a bit of honey, melt to make a sweet (9) |
| ENORMOUSLY | Incredibly sour lemon mixed with last bit of honey |
| GYRATE | Revolve jar containing last bit of honey (6) |
| COTSWOLD | Variety of honey-coloured Jurassic oolitic limestone characteristic of many of the cottages and walls of villages including Castle Combe, Stanton, Bibury and Kingham (8) |
| SWARM | To climb by gripping with one's hands/feet; a throng of honey bees; a mass of bioluminescent krill, visible from space; a shower of meteors; or, a series of earthquakes (5) |
| TUSHINGHAM | Rita ---, Liverpudlian star of the 1961 film adaptation of A Taste of Honey |
| HAYONWYE | Town of Powys, upriver of Hereford (anag. of 'honey way') (3-2-3) |
| SHANGRILA | Drop of honey and bit of lemon put separately into Iberian beverage-paradise! |
| QUEENBEE | The female reproductive leader of a colony of honey-producing apians, essential to the life of the hive (5,3) |
| DYNAMITE | "Get a load of honey bun tonight; I'm speaking of my sweety pie; Only sixty inches high; Every inch |
| BEES | Sounds like a number of grades of honey producers (4) |
| BAKLAVA | Confection of honey and chopped pistachios or walnuts sandwiched between layers of filo pastry (7) |
| DELANEY | Shelagh, author of the 1958 stage play A Taste of Honey (7) |
| TEJ | Kind of honey wine or mead, the national drink of Ethiopia (3) |
| AMBER | Typically in shades of honey-yellow, golden-brown or cognac, a form of fossilised resin derived from ancient trees which is used as a gem (5) |
| MANUKA | New Zealand tree, the source of nectar for bees producing a prized type of honey |