| Foal : horse :: grig : ___ | 26 |
| Fish with over 100 vertebrae | 28 |
| Fish used in Japanese cuisine | 29 |
| Fish that's slippery | 24 |
| Fish that may be jellied | 24 |
| Fish that is often smoked | 25 |
| Fish served in kabayaki | 23 |
| Fish of the genus Moringua | 26 |
| Fish lacking a pelvic fin | 25 |
| Fish contained in unadon | 24 |
| Fish caught in the Baltic Sea | 29 |
| Exemplar of elusiveness | 23 |
| Escape artist of similes | 24 |
| Elongated reef dweller | 22 |
| Electrifying creature? | 22 |
| Electric fish, perhaps | 22 |
| Dish that may be smoked | 23 |
| Dachshund of the fish family | 28 |
| Cusk ___, snakelike fish | 24 |
| Conger or lamprey, e.g. | 23 |
| Conger of the Atlantic | 22 |
| Common sushi ingredient | 23 |
| Certain wiggly electric fish | 28 |
| Bioelectric sea creature | 24 |
| Amazonian underwater shocker | 28 |
| "Slippery" swimmer | 28 |
| Â Â Slippery sort | 23 |
| Went fishing, in a way | 22 |
| Used a pot on the main | 22 |
| Tried to catch a conger | 23 |
| Fished using pots, perhaps | 26 |
| Fished for morays, e.g. | 23 |
| Fished for grown-up grigs | 25 |
| Caught fish in a pot, say | 25 |
| Sniggler for wrigglers | 22 |
| Sushi restaurant supplier | 25 |
| Spitchcock cook, perhaps | 24 |
| Pot user out on a boat? | 23 |
| Person with a net, perhaps | 26 |
| One who works with pots | 23 |
| One who catches congers | 23 |
| One in search of a moray | 24 |
| Member of the piscatorial set | 29 |
| His catches are slippery | 24 |
| Hand net user, perhaps | 22 |
| Fisherman in the Sargasso Sea | 29 |
| Fisherman in the Sargasso | 25 |
| Chesapeake Bay occupation | 25 |
| More slippery and slimy | 23 |
| Superlatively slippery | 22 |
| Sniggler's activity | 23 |
| Fishing with traps, maybe | 25 |
| Catching some slippery fish | 27 |
| Trap for a fishy slitherer | 26 |
| Conger catcher's device | 27 |
| Certain fisherman's trap | 28 |
| They're caught in pots | 26 |
| Sniggler's catches | 22 |
| Snigglers' wrigglers | 24 |
| Paragons of slipperiness | 24 |
| Lengthy lurkers of the deep | 27 |
| They're slippery when wet | 29 |
| They're slippery and wet | 28 |
| They may slither until smoked | 29 |
| Symbols of slipperiness | 23 |
| Stork's supper, perhaps | 27 |
| Great Barrier Reef denizens | 27 |
| Electrifying swimmers? | 22 |
| Congers and morays, e.g. | 24 |
| What many sushi bars offer | 26 |
| They're trapped in pots | 27 |
| They lack ventral fins | 22 |
| Sushi chef's purchases | 26 |
| Stork's supper, sometimes | 29 |
| Sniggler's pursuits | 23 |
| Members of a wriggly field? | 27 |
| Japanese cuisine staple | 23 |
| High-voltage creatures | 22 |
| Fishes that may shock you | 25 |
| Fish without pelvic fins | 24 |
| Fish that can swim backwards | 28 |
| Fish lacking ventral fins | 25 |
| Bioelectric critters, perhaps | 29 |
| Anguilliform creatures | 22 |
| "Electric" swimmers | 29 |
| Wrymouths' relatives | 24 |
| Wrymouths' cousins | 22 |
| Wriggly, watery critters | 24 |
| Users of electrolocation | 24 |
| Underwater pit residents | 24 |
| They're often smoked | 24 |
| They're into sushi | 22 |
| They're hard to pin down | 28 |
| They may have electric organs | 29 |
| They may be smoked or pickled | 29 |
| They may be charged at sea | 26 |
| Swimmers that don't kick | 28 |
| Swimmers that can shock | 23 |
| Swimmers caught in pots | 23 |
| Swamp ___ (predatory fish) | 26 |