| SCULLERIES | Small rooms or parts of kitchens where washing up and vegetable preparation were traditionally done (10) |
| SCULLERY | Small room or part of a kitchen where washing up was traditionally done (8) |
| SNACKBAR | Pub on fire, engulfing end of kitchen where food's served (5,3) |
| MASHIE | Old club that's provided vegetable preparation for starter |
| CHOPSKIPANDJUMP | Aerobic vegetable preparation routine? |
| SINK | It will go to the bottom where washing-up is concerned (4) |
| LIBRARIES | Rooms, or sets of rooms, where books and other literary materials are kept (9) |
| LEFT | The bank of the Seine in Paris where the city's artistic and bohemian communities were traditionally |
| SCONE | Medieval settlement where the kings of Scotland were traditionally crowned on the Stone of Destiny (5) |
| PANTRY | Small room or cupboard in which provisions or cooking utensils or are kept (6) |
| CORRIDOR | From "running place", an aisle connecting rooms or compartments in a building or railway carriage; or, a strip of land or airspace, affording travel between two places (8) |
| NAVE | Main body of a church, where its ales were traditionally held (4) |
| BAKERY | A boulangerie, breadery, bun shop, pantry, patisserie or other kitchen where bread, pastries, pies and tarts are cooked and/or sold (6) |
| OVENS | Untidy sorts ignoring small and large features of kitchens (5) |
| LARDER | One of the rooms or areas in a medieval house for storing or preparing food other than a pantry, saucery, spicery or buttery (6) |
| MINCEPIES | Festive dried fruit, spice and pastry confections that were traditionally savoury; the eating of which on Christmas Day, according to a myth about Oliver Cromwell, is illegal (5,4) |
| SALT | The sort of mines in Siberia to which dissidents were traditionally sent |
| EBONY | Hard dark wood of which black piano keys were traditionally made (5) |
| CULINARY | Of kitchens or cookery |
| SUITE | Set of rooms or furniture / entourage of people |