| SHUCK | Remove a scallop from its shell |
| GYMP | Scallop from Great Yarmouth many prized for starters |
| CALABASH | A gourd, or a tobacco pipe made from its shell |
| NUT | One may take it from its shell in a minute |
| NICHE | In classical architecture, a recess in a wall for a statue, often with a semicircular apex with fluting in the form of a scallop shell (5) |
| BOTTICELLI | Florentine painter who worked for the Medici family throughout most of his life; his works include Primavera and a depiction of a goddess standing in a scallop shell in The Birth of Venus (10) |
| SANTIAGODECOMPOSTELA | The probable destination of a hiker with a scallop shell on their rucksack |
| SHELLOIL | Its logo is based on a scallop |
| SHELLSTATION | Place to gas up with a scallop as its logo |
| MOLLUSC | It's maybe a scallop or mussel, so a pearl's ignored (7) |
| MADELEINE | Small French sponge cake traditionally of genoise batter baked in the shape of a scallop shell (9) |
| THEBIRTHOFVENUS | Painting by Sandro Botticelli depicting the Roman goddess of love on a scallop shell (3,5,2,5) |
| EYES | A scallop has up to 200 of these |
| EYE | One of up to 200(!) on a scallop |
| CLAM | A scallop (4) |
| CORAL | The orange-pink bit on a scallop |
| COQUILLE | French for "shell", hence seafood served in a scallop's fluted fan-like carapace; a dish or pastry case shaped like said shuck; or, a pat of butter (8) |
| WEASEL | Furtive mustelid whose supposed ability to suck the contents out of an A"uf without breaking its shell gave rise to a term for equivocal or evasive words, used to reduce the force of a concept being e |
| SMACK | A distinct flavour; dialect in parts of northern England for a fried potato scallop; a group of jellyfish; or, an onomatopoeic word for a loud kiss (5) |
| UNICORNMOTH | A lepidopteran whose caterpillar has a spine on the lip of its shell (7,4) |