| BAPS | Head of bakery bringing back say Bath buns |
| ABLOOM | Head of bakery poked in bread before turning out |
| BRAISE | Head of bakery to promote cook (6) |
| AUSTEN | Novelist whose authorial mentions of baked apples, Bath buns, picnics, rout-cakes, saddle of mutton, "whipt" syllabub and the like offer a glimpse into the food and dining habits of the Regency era in |
| WESTCOUNTRY | Region of England with local specialties including scones, Bath buns, clotted cream, Scrumpy cider, pasties, Cheddar cheese and stargazy pies (4,7) |
| OLIVER | Physician who invented Bath buns and the unsweetened biscuits for cheese that bear his name (6) |
| NEEDING | Short of bakery job, say (7) |
| SALLYLUNN | Resembling an unfruited teacake or a cross between bread, cake and brioche, the original Bath "bun" (5,4) |
| SARA | Lee of bakery products fame |
| YEAST | Baker's assistant has bearing on closure of bakery (5) |
| OAVES | Output of bakery ignored by fifty fools |
| INSTORE | Sort of bakery coming in the future |
| CAKE | Rich item of bakery |
| SPONGECAKE | Light item of bakery |
| TART | Some prominent art deco type of bakery (4) |
| YEARBOOK | Annual record of bakery scrambling about two eggs (8) |
| PILES | Lots of bakery items left inside (5) |
| BUN | Product of bakery, British one in Paris (3) |
| BIRTHDAYCAKE | Annual production - of bakery I'd chat about? |
| KNIFEEDGE | Critically poised, bats feeding in middle of bakery (5-4) |