| CONCHE | Chocolatier Lindt's invention of a chocolate mixer or "velvetiser" with an originally seashell-esque tank (6) |
| ALCOHOL | Ruined Lindt's top chocolate etc - removed addictive substance |
| DAMASK | Short word for a form of sword blade steel with a wavy pattern; or, an originally hand-woven reversible brocade-like silk textile with a pattern of animals, flowers, fruit etc (6) |
| SQUARE | A four-sided shape of a chocolate brownie, headscarf, mortarboard, quadrangle or quadrille dance figure; or, a space on a chessboard (6) |
| BEATER | Person employed to rouse game birds from woodland; one of a pair of attachments of a food mixer; or, a percussion mallet (6) |
| HOOK | A sickle; a trap; an advantageous hold; a dough-kneading attachment for an electric mixer; or, a grapnel (4) |
| FRANGIPANE | Named after an Italian marquis or his invention of a plumeria-based fragrance for scenting gloves, a rich almond-vanilla pastry cream, used as a filling for a Bakewell tart, galette des rois or other |
| WHORL | Complete circle in a fingerprint; a single 360degrees tum in a spiral seashell; or, a verticil of leaves or petals radiating from a single point of a plant's stem (5) |
| MOUSE | An originally corded device named for its resemblance to a long-tailed rodent; or, with "potato", in imitation of "couch potato", a person who spends excessive amounts of time sat at a computer, using |
| GINGHAM | One of Dickens's words for an umbrella or a gamp; or, an originally striped fabric, now distinguished by its pattern of checks quintessential of bistro tablecloths and jamjar lids (7) |
| AGITATOR | A churn or mixer; or, an activist, agent provocateur, firebrand, Leveller, rabble-rouser or other stirrer (8) |
| PHEASANT | With a far-carrying crowing call, an originally Asian gamebird living in a social group known as a covey or a nide (8) |
| CALICO | An originally Indian cotton cloth that is known as chintz when glazed or patterned; or, a word for a cat with a tricoloured coat (6) |
| FLANNEL | An originally Welsh woollen textile for clothing; a facecloth; or, from the idea of soft warm fabric, a word for flattery, soft soap or vague talk to avoid a difficult subject (7) |
| SNICKER | Sound of a horse ... requiring almost all of a chocolate bar? (7) |
| DAVY | Cornish chemist whose invention of a firedamp safety lamp decreased the number of fatalities of miners and contributed to the progression of the industrialisation of Britain (4) |
| CONCH | Seashell used to make a musical instrument associated with Triton; half-dome of an apse; or, a word among chocolatiers for a mixer (5) |
| THEATRE | An originally open-air type of building with a stage designed for drama; or, the writing of plays (7) |
| VELVET | An originally imported silk fabric, sometimes with gold or silver threads; or, one of the nicknames of the artist Jan Brueghel the Elder (6) |
| MOLINET | Stirrer for mixing chocolate into the contents of a chocolate pot (7) |