| CRUST | The harder part of a loaf of bread (5) |
| HEELS | Ends of a loaf of bread |
| CRUMB | A mixture of cocoa liquor, milk and sugar to make chocolate; a fragment of biscuit, bread or cake; or, the soft inner part of a loaf (5) |
| PLAIT | Word for a fold of cloth originally, later for a braid of hair, ribbon, rope or straw; or, a loaf of bread, such as challah, baked in this form (5) |
| BRICK | Word, thought to have been introduced by Flemish workmen, for a baked, fired or sun-dried building block of clay; a loaf of bread; a toy wooden block thus shaped; or, a red or deep terracotta colour ( |
| CRUSTS | Outer part of a loaf of bread (6) |
| END | Crusty part of a loaf of bread |
| HEEL | Uneaten part of a loaf of bread, often |
| PANEM | A loaf of bread: a pistore ____ petimus, Pl. As. 200 |
| CORGI | Dog breed whose butt resembles a loaf of bread, adorably enough |
| HIPPO | This animal can eat a loaf of bread |
| UNCUT | Without being sliced, as a loaf of bread |
| SLICE | Part of a loaf |
| ENDS | Crusty pieces of a loaf of bread |
| CLIFF | Jimmy ?, musician-actor who starred in 1972 crime film The Harder They Come |
| OMARKHAYYAM | Poet transported to Paradise by a jug of wine, a loaf of bread and thou (but first, a book of verses |
| RUBAIYAT | Source of the line "A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread - and Thou" |
| OMARTHETENTMAKER | "A Jug of Wine, a Loaf of Bread..." writer's name, translated |
| OMAR | "A jug of wine, a loaf of bread..." poet |
| JUG | "A __ of Wine, a Loaf of Bread ..." |