| WAFTERS | With dessert they produce a draught |
| REAP | Get your dessert, they say - some more apple pie? (4) |
| CASTER | The two factories on the outskirts of Stogumber were built by a leading company -- they produce a type of sugar (6) |
| TEETH | Altogether they produce a mouthful (5) |
| GENERATE | How they produce a kind of green tea (8) |
| HOES | They produce a row on the farm |
| COCOON | Once the sperm is deposited they produce a ___ which contains fertilised eggs. |
| MOUNT | Backing or setting for a gem or a painting; a slide used in microscopy; a philatelic stamp hinge; or, a hack as opposed to a draught horse (5) |
| SLUG | Land mollusc or limax studied in limacology; a draught or gulp of liquor; a line of type in Linotype printing; or, a counterfeit coin used in a slot machine (4) |
| DRAY | A cart pulled by a draught horse; a timber sledge; or, the uncommon spelling for a squirrel's nest (4) |
| DRENCH | To drown with drink or to soak with water, once to force a horse a draught of medicine to avoid its slaughter (6) |
| DEATHBLOW | Finish with a draught for a decisive ending |
| SWEETPEA | Vegetable presented with dessert? That's a bloomer |
| TASS | Scots name for a cup, glass or little goblet; a draught/drop of liquor in said vessel; or, a heap, mow or stack (4) |
| ZEBU | Domesticated ox with a humped back used in India as a draught animal |
| YOKING | Taking a liberty in attaching to a draught animal |
| CHUFF | About to take a draught and go like a train |
| VERONAL | Driver on a landau keeping one in a draught? |
| POTION | No! I top it off with a draught |
| CASKALE | Ask to make lace with a draught beer (4,3) |