| PALMTREE | Its fruit may be dates or coconuts (4,4) |
| PALM | Tree grown for its dates, figs or coconuts (4) |
| BUNCH | Bundle of bananas or coconuts, eg (5) |
| REAPPEAR | After harvest, fruit may be seen once more (8) |
| HEDGEROW | Countryside's botanical border whose seasonal fruits may include crab apples, brambles, sloes, rosehips, bullaces, elderberries, juniper and wild cherry or gean (8) |
| DEWBERRY | Bramble having a bluish bloom on its fruit (8) |
| TAMARIND | Its fruit pulp is an ingredient in Worcestershire sauce |
| CALABASH | Vine grown for its fruit, also known as the bottle gourd (8) |
| MACAROON | Biscuit of egg-white and almonds or coconut |
| MULBERRY | With a national collection of 34 named varieties held by the Queen in the gardens of Buckingham Palace, a tree in the genus Morus and its fruit (8) |
| HAZELNUT | Something obscuring vision given to student teachers? It's fruit! (8) |
| EGGPLANT | Do its fruits have shells on? (8) |
| LEMON | Fruit may be melon |
| INAJAM | Processed fruit may be this awkwardly placed (2,1,3) |
| SATSUMA | Fruit may be an obligation when up (7) |
| CENTRIFUGAL | Fleeing the middle fruit may be in a sort of glance (11) |
| ORCHARD | Wherein the fruit may be almost rock hard? (7) |
| ROASTED | Dates, or how they may be cooked (7) |
| ENIVEPARG | A bunch of fruit may grow on it |
| DRYROT | Starter of dates or try bananas - this can make fruit crumble (3,3) |