| HYBRID | Cross-pollinated fruit such as a boysenberry, clementine, limequat, plumcot, pomato or yuzu (6) |
| TART | Like a limequat |
| POMATO | Cross-pollinated hybrid plant that grows both spuds and certain red fruits |
| APRICOT | A semantically "early-ripening, precocious, bright" plumcot-like drupe related to the gean - an absolute "peach" for ice cream, a jam-maker's dream and a marvel for tajine, but picked when orangey yel |
| HYBRIDS | Cross-pollinated flowers (7) |
| GMO | Plumcot or pineberry, for short |
| CITRUS | General name for a fruit such as a Seville orange, bergamot or Sorrento lemon, used for marmalade, Earl Grey, neroli or limoncello, for example (6) |
| EXOTIC | Description of a tropical fruit such as a guava, mango, pineapple or tamarillo (6) |
| ORANGE | National colour of the Netherlands; or, a fruit in the genus that includes the pomelo, tangelo and yuzu (6) |
| ANTHER | Sometimes buzz-pollinated by a bumblebee, part of a flower's stamen with a filament (6) |
| ACINUS | Any of the small drupes that make up an aggregate fruit such as a blackberry or raspberry (6) |
| CATKIN | Spike bearing many small stalkless unisexual flowers, as on wind-pollinated plants such as the willow, hazel etc. (6) |
| SYRUPS | Maple and boysenberry |
| ORCHID | Plant whose varieties are pollinated by different insects (6) |
| STIGMA | Stain pollinated part of flower (6) |
| CANE | Stem of bamboo, rattan or a plant in the genus Rubus such as the raspberry or boysenberry; or, dialect for a female weasel (4) |
| BLET | Word, from French for "overripe pear", for a state of softness or decay in a fruit such as a medlar or quince (4) |
| BLOOM | A bluebell, daisy, pansy, pink, sweet pea or other inflorescence; the state of flowering; a rosy glow; a time of greatest beauty, freshness, prosperity or vigour; or, powderiness on chocolate or a fru |
| DRUPE | Botanical description of a fruit such as a cherry or a peach (5) |
| BERRY | Fruit such as a blackcurrant; a cereal grain; or, a coffee bean (5) |