| PERPIGNAN | French town, a source of ham and bread (9) |
| PARMA | Source of ham and cheese right for parents to consume |
| EMU | Bird that lays green eggs (but is not a source of ham!) |
| PETERHEAD | Scotland's most easterly town; a large fishing port near Aberdeen (9) |
| HALESOWEN | Large market town, a Welsh one, misrepresented (9) |
| BOWSTRING | London area and South Herts town a must for The Archers |
| ASHBOURNE | Derbyshire town, a southern gateway to the Peak District (9) |
| STAUSTELL | Cornish town, a centre of the china clay industry (2,7) |
| LOURDES | French town, a site of pilgrimage since the Marian apparitions in 1858 (7) |
| ROCHESTER | This British town, a city since 1227, lost its former city status in 1998 through administrative error (9) |
| THESTATES | Country town, a man says (3,6) |
| BARROWBOY | Lad from Cumbrian town, a street trader (6,3) |
| CAEN | French town, a tinned veg centre |
| ALBI | French town, a centre for the Cathars in the Middle Ages (4) |
| CUSH | In Genesis 10:6-9, the eldest son of Ham and father of the great hunter Nimrod (4) |
| MICHIGAN | Mixture of ham and icing, a state! (8) |
| CROQUEMADAME | French sandwich of ham and cheese topped with an egg (6,6) |
| MOVABLE | Like a feast, idiomatically - last of ham and eggs flowed, largely (7) |
| SACK | The plunder/pillage of a captured city or town; a large bag of burlap, gunny or hessian for flour, grain, potatoes or racing in; a woman's loose-fitting gown; or, a train of silk hanging from the shou |
| TAMIL | Follow, eating last of ham, and tongue (5) |