| MEATHEAD | I'm a fool to eat ends of French cheese sandwiched between crackers (8) |
| THROUGH | It's hard to eat ends of hair from end to end (7) |
| DOPE | I'm a fool to take drugs (4) |
| SMORE | American snack of toasted marshmallow and chocolate between crackers (5) |
| OWLET | Anything to eat ends in small hole for small predator (5) |
| OMNIVORE | Stuffed, I've room to eat end of chicken -- I'm not a fussy eater (8) |
| EAGLET | Occupant of eyrie beginning to eat end of shoelace (6) |
| NONPAREIL | Unique cat's back to eat end of lemon peel (9) |
| AUTOMATISE | Make habitual errors initially as tout - I'm a fool (10) |
| BRIEFEST | Description of Dante's clues - or a celebration of French cheese? (8) |
| VICTORIA | Queen whose name was given to numerous things including an English plum, a decoration for bravery, an Australian state and a sponge cake sandwiched with jam and cream (8) |
| VIENNESE | Word linking with "whirl" for a biscuit sandwiched with jam and cream, or "waltz" for a dance (8) |
| SLIDER | Word for one who skids or slips through loss of traction; a luger or skater; a gliding door, lever or part; a miniature hamburger; a flat mule or slipper; or, a block of creme glacee, sandwiched betwe |
| ABUNDANT | Thick roll sandwiched by commercial worker (8) |
| BAKLAVA | Confection of honey and chopped pistachios or walnuts sandwiched between layers of filo pastry (7) |
| DOUBLEDOWN | Limited-edition KFC offering in which bacon and cheese are sandwiched between two pieces of fried chicken |
| FABBRI | The Italian gunmaker finds a fabulous bit of French cheese, out east (6) |
| PORTSALUT | A pale, mild type of French cheese originally produced by Trappist monks (4,5) |
| BRIEF | Short of French cheese, only one piece of fromage |
| SLIDERS | Miniature hamburgers; Scottish dialect for blocks of ice cream sandwiched between wafers; one of the words for athletes who race the luge; or, red-bellied terrapins (7) |