| PEAR | Depicted in botanical art, breakfast pieces or still lifes, a pome grown in an orchard or in the espalier-style (4) |
| QUINCE | Sacred to Aphrodite and often depicted in botanical art, a fruit related to medlars and apples, used for membrillo, marmalade or jelly with rose geranium (6) |
| SCRUMP | To steal fruit from an orchard or garden (6) |
| LIFE | Still -; with breakfast piece examples by Pieter Claesz, Willem Claesz. Heda and Georg Flegel, a painting of inanimate objects such as flowers and fruit (4) |
| WILDPEACHES | Fuzzy fruits not grown in an orchard? |
| HOLT | A riverbank burrow or den of an otter; or, an old or poetic word for a copse, orchard or wooded hill (4) |
| PLUG | Bung for a sink or basin; or, a seedling grown in an individual compartment of a tray (4) |
| APPLE | Autumnally bobbed from a bucket of water with one's teeth or placed on a stick and coated in toffee, a pome related to the medlar, pear and quince; or, the wood of said fruit's tree (5) |
| ASPARAGUS | Shoots/spears of "sparrow-grass" called the "king of vegetables" by Louis XIV and often depicted in bundles in banquet pieces or other still lifes (9) |
| VEGETABLE | From the Latin meaning "animating", an edible bulb, leaf, root or stem such as fennel, kale, parsnip or Swiss chard grown in an allotment, potager or victory garden (9) |
| CRABAPPLE | Comtesse de Paris, Gorgeous or Sugar Tyme, a garden, orchard, or hedgerow tree in the genus Malus with pectin-rich fruits used to set jelly or crushed for verjuice (4-5) |
| TREE | Wooden or metal object on which mugs can be hung; or, general word for a large perennial plant grown in an arboretum (4) |
| BIFFIN | Red cooking apple whose name, from "ox for slaughter", alludes to its colour of raw beef; or, such a pome, baked and flattened in the form of a cake as a traditional Norfolk snack (6) |
| CIDERPRESS | A pome crusher, juicer or mill used in the process of making apple-jack scrumpy or other perry-like drinks (5,5) |
| LEMON | Citrus fruit grown in area such as an Italian grove, Mediterranean orchard or orangery (5) |
| DARJEELING | A high-quality black tea grown in an area of West Bengal in North East India (10) |
| COINAGE | The act of striking metal money; the bits, pieces or specie made; or, the invention of a neologism (7) |
| CARAVAGGIO | Artist born Michelangelo Merisi noted for still lifes of flowers and fruit, half-length figures such as The Boy Bitten by a Lizard and Bacchus and for decorating the Contarelli Chapel (10) |
| OMAHA | Life's a beach, said the Yanks, till they landed on it in France! (5) |
| HEATNUGGETS | Directions on how to cook frozen chicken pieces-or the matchup in the 2023 NBA Finals, now underway between Denver and Miami |