| ECCLESCAKE | Small, round pastry filled with currants and named after a Lancashire town (6,4) |
| ECCLES | Small round pie filled with currants and named after a Lancashire town, _ cake (6) |
| BANBURY | Market town in north Oxfordshire noted for its cakes filled with currants and spices (7) |
| CHELSEABUN | Spiced, spiral-shaped pastry filled with currants (7,3) |
| PIESHELLS | Round pastry crusts |
| LIFEONMARS | BBC drama series set in the early 70s and named after a David Bowie song. (4,2,4) |
| BUN | Dialect for a dry stalk; a chignon or cockernony; a bread roll; a little cake with currants or cream; a pet name for rabbit or a squirrel; or, a hare's scut (3) |
| PEELER | A Lancashire ____ has a fixed blade with no pivot, and a handle wrapped in string |
| PRESTON | A Lancashire town that kept going, one hears (7) |
| TILSIT | A cheese first made in, and named after, a town in East Prussia |
| CHELSEA | A bun is a flat coil-shaped bread made from yeasted dough containing currants and sprinkled with sugar (7) |
| BLACKBURN | Jet stream in a Lancashire town |
| RAISINBROGAN | Heavy work shoe filled with currants? |
| ERBIUM | A soft, silvery metallic element discovered in 1843 and named after a Swedish village (6) |
| TANNAHILL | And 21dn Paisley band formed in 1968 and named after a Scottish poet (9,7) |
| PRAWNER | Boat similar to a shrimper, such as a traditional Morecambe Bay example or a Lancashire nobby (7) |
| DUFF | A thick flour pudding, often flavoured with currants etc. and boiled in a cloth bag (4) |
| CAGE | Hutch or coop; or, a structure for protecting berries, currants and other garden crops from birds (4) |
| PLUMPUDDING | Boiled suet dessert with raisins, currants and spices (4,7) |
| ZEPPELINS | Airships developed by and named after a German count |