| SCONE | Clotted cream and jam go-with |
| TEA | Beverage traditionally served with scones, clotted cream and jam (3) |
| ONAROLL | Tasting success where jam goes? (2,1,4) |
| ESPRESSO | Jam goes in like that after energy drink (8) |
| RAS | From "head", an Ethiopian prince; a headland; or, with "malai", a kulfi-like sweet Indian delicacy of chenna or paneer, clotted cream and saffron (3) |
| TEATROLLEY | A tiered table of treats from which cakes, cookies, clotted cream and camellia-based cuppas are served on the move (3,7) |
| SCONES | Baked items often served with jam and clotted cream (6) |
| KNIFE | Name, with a silent initial originally said and seen, for the keenest member of a cutlery set or canteen, which can chop, cut, pare, ream and even spread butter/clotted cream like a dream (5) |
| TEAS | Afternoon meals with scones and clotted cream |
| WESTCOUNTRY | Region of England with local specialties including scones, Bath buns, clotted cream, Scrumpy cider, pasties, Cheddar cheese and stargazy pies (4,7) |
| FOOL | Court jester with a belled cap once represented as a watermark on paper; or, a light "trifle" of a pudding based on clotted cream or custard with pureed goosegogs, rasps or other seasonal berries/frui |
| ENGLISH | Like pork pie and clotted cream |
| TEATIME | Occasion for a scone and clotted cream |
| ASPOTOFTEA | What scones and clotted cream might accompany |
| FUDGE | Word for nonsense; a piece of stop-press news or the box left blankin a newspaper for thus; or, a soft confection flavoured with chocolate, clotted cream, rum or vanilla (5) |
| GOOSEGOGS | Dialect for green berries blended or crushed with clotted cream to make the English pudding fool (9) |
| CERAMICS | Initially, clotted cream is used for pottery (8) |
| DEVON | Clotted-cream county |
| COWS | Clotted cream creators |
| CAMERA | Clotted cream spread around one paparazzi's equipment (6) |