| GLUTIN | Part of flour grain insoluble in water |
| LUBRICANTS | Oils (and even parts of flour) can fill us in the UK (10) |
| LIPID | An oily organic compound insoluble in water but soluble in organic solvents. (5) |
| FAT | It's insoluble in water |
| OIL | Liquid insoluble in water |
| RESIN | An adhesive flammable substance insoluble in water secreted by some plants |
| 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 |
| SCOOPS | Exclusive news stories; water bailers for boats and dinghies; or, hand-shovels for taking up chicken feed, flour, grain etc (6) |
| SACKS | Cotton, hessian or linen bags for flour, grain or potatoes (5) |
| RYESEED | What a flour grain may grow from |
| WHEAT | Flour grain (5) |
| SEMOLINA | Hard flour grains used in puddings and pasta (8) |
| SCOOP | Zinc or wooden hand-held utensil for dispensing flour, grain, bath salts or feed for poultry/horses (5) |
| JARS | Glass vessels in which to store jam, pasta, flour, grains and other pantry staples (4) |
| IRIDIUM | The element was discovered in 1803 in the acid-insoluble residues of platinum ores by the English chemist Smithson Tennant. The international prototype standard kilogram of mass is made from an alloy |
| LAKE | Excess of wine; body of water such as Windermere; or, a pigment rendered insoluble or one derived from madder or cochineal (4) |
| PECTATE | A salt of a water-insoluble acid |
| STYRENE | Colourless oily water-insoluble liquid used in making synthetic plastics. (7) |
| SILICA | Refractory insoluble material used in the manufacture of glass and ceramics (6) |
| YTTRIA | White, water-insoluble powder, used in incandescent gas and acetylene mantles (6) |