| WAFFLER | Rambling speaker - loud lady - breaking a biscuit (7) |
| SCHISMATIC | Old lady breaking layered rock, I see, causing splits (10) |
| CRACKER | A biscuit serving as a vehicle for conveying cheese from plate to palate; a prawn-flavoured crisp-like snack; a banger; a beauty; a hacker; or, a snapper once called a bonbon (7) |
| AFGHANI | One is after a biscuit for a person from Kandahar (7) |
| OATCAKE | Doctor ate a little cookie? OK, a biscuit! (7) |
| BOURBON | Whisky a€“ and a biscuit (7) |
| CUSTARD | ____ cream, a biscuit with a vanilla-flavoured cream filling (7) |
| ARNOTTS | Name a biscuit company founded in Australia, and now controlled by a US firm (7) |
| PRETZEL | Dog, perhaps, occupied by right desire without a biscuit (7) |
| LAZARUS | Beggar cut both loaf and a biscuit (7) |
| CRUNCH | Word imitative of a loud champ, chew or chomp of a croquette or bite of a biscuit; a crisis; a credit squeeze; a sit-up; or, the moment of truth (6) |
| CUSTARDCREAM | A biscuit consisting of two layers with a filling of vanillaflavoured paste (7,5) |
| TIN | A can for food or paint; a biscuit caddy; or, a loaf cooked in an item of bakeware of the same name (3) |
| MACAROON | With a similar name to that of a French meringue-based confection, a biscuit of egg whites, ground almonds/coconut and sugar (8) |
| GINGERNUT | After a drink, German enthusiast gets a biscuit (6,3) |
| BATHOLIVER | Give Jamie a wash and a biscuit (4,6) |
| COMMENSURATE | Consistent remark about a biscuit almost raised a point (12) |
| BATH | Give Charles's lad a thorough wash - and a biscuit! (4,6) |
| BRANDY | A drink, but you can snap it like a biscuit! (6) |
| BRANDYSNAP | With a biscuit and a drink, photograph |