This easy apple crisp recipe is hands-down the best I’ve ever tried. It tastes warm and cozy thanks to the baked cinnamon apples and brown sugar oatmeal crumble topping. Made with fresh apples and simple pantry ingredients – it’s the perfect fall treat.
When it comes to apple desserts – you can’t beat apple crisp. The apples turn sweet and tender as they bake, and are coated in cinnamon sugar goodness. And then the brown sugar oatmeal crumble on top? DIVINE.
(So divine I’m even capitalizing my letters).
What I also so love about apple crisp is that it’s made with easy, simple ingredients that you likely already have around the house. You can throw everything together without any fancy skills, ingredients or equipment – and you end up with the most delicious, comforting, cinnamon filled dessert around.
When I was kid my Mom would often make fruit crumbles and crisps for dessert at Sunday dinner. We always made ours with oatmeal crumble on top, and a hefty dose of cinnamon (could you really have it any other way). And if I was lucky, I might even get the cold leftovers for breakfast the next morning. (The benefits of being the youngest child).
Ok – let’s talk recipe specifics.
What’s the Difference Between an Apple Crisp and Apple Crumble?
Well – that depends on who you ask. A fruit crumble is a baked fruit dessert. The bottom layer is made of fruit (apples, blueberries, peaches, etc), and the top layer is an oatmeal streusel – typically made with butter, flour, sugars, cinnamon & oats. An apple crisp is the exact same thing. Some say that fruit crisps don’t have oats, but I’ve always called it an apple crisp and had oats in my streusel topping.
How to Make an Apple Crisp
If you’ve never made an apple crisp before – there’s absolutely nothing stopping you. To get started, make the topping:
- Whisk together the flour, sugars, cinnamon, salt & oats.
- Cut cold butter into small chunks, then add it into the bowl.
- Work the butter into the flour mixture by either cutting it in with a pastry cutter or fork, or crumbling it in using your fingers.
In the end, you should no longer have chunks of butter and it will be crumbly in texture. If you squeeze it in your palm it’ll stick together, but it definitely won’t resemble a dough per say. Here’s what mine looked like.
Then it’s time to make the apple layer. What kind of apples are best for apple crisp?
Apple crisp really isn’t too fussy of a dessert. Choose an apple that’s slightly tart and firm because the apples will sweeten and soften as the crisp bakes, and a slightly tarter apple really compliments the brown sugar cinnamon flavor. I like to use Granny Smith apples – Honey Crisp or Empire work well too.
Peel the apples and slice into thin slices. Then we make a cinnamon sugar mixture by whisking together melted butter, water, a little flour, cinnamon & sugar. The mixture gets drizzled on top of the apples to coat them evenly. I find this step absolutely necessary because it helps the apples soften and sweeten as they bake without getting too soupy.
The apple mixture is spooned into the bottom of a greased 2-quart casserole dish (a 9×9 inch square pan, 8×8 inch square pan, or 11×7 inch casserole pan work perfectly). Then the crumble topping is crumbled on top. Your pan will definitely look quite full but as the apples bake and soften they take up less volume – so you don’t need to worry about the pan overflowing.
The cinnamon apples end up with this delicious cinnamon coating that has a slight caramel flavor, and the oatmeal crumble is buttery, crunchy and delicious.
Apple Crisp
Ingredients
Crumble
- ¾ cup all-purpose flour
- ⅔ cup packed brown sugar
- ½ cup large flake oats
- ¼ teaspoon cinnamon
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- ½ cup unsalted butter , cut into cubes
Apple Filling
- 6 large apples , I recommend Granny Smith
- 3 tablespoons unsalted butter , melted
- 3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
- 2 tablespoons water
- ⅓ cup white sugar
- ½ teaspoon cinnamon
- ¼ teaspoon nutmeg
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350F degrees. Grease a 2-quart baking dish.
- In a medium bowl stir together the flour, brown sugar, oats, cinnamon & salt.
- Add in the butter and cut it in using a pastry cutter or rub the butter into the dry ingredients using your fingers. At the end it should be crumbly in texture, but no large chunks of butter should remain. Place in the fridge as you make the filling.
- Peel and slice the apples into thin slices about ⅛ - ¼ inch thick.
- Whisk together the melted butter, flour, water, sugar, cinnamon & nutmeg.
- Pour the mixture over the sliced apples and toss to coat.
- Spoon the apples into the greased pan, then crumble the oatmeal crumble overtop.
- Bake in the preheated oven for 30-40 minutes, or until the top is golden brown and you can see the apples bubbling around the edges of the pan.
- Remove from the oven and cool for at least 10 minutes before serving.
Desenho realista
I lovely thanks for sharing
Susan
So delicious! Went so fast I had to make another two days later! Thanks!
Fiona
So glad to hear that everyone loved it! I hope you saved yourself some before it got gobbled up! 😉
Andrea
I must be the only one who failed at this. Mine was dry and not gooey. The only thing I noticed I was I didn’t use large oats- I used instant. I just don’t understand why mine wasn’t gooey. I tossed the apples in that filling.
Fiona
Hi Andrea,
I’m sorry this didn’t turn out for you. Instant oats will definitely perform differently in baking compared to large oats because their texture is much more like flour and therefore makes things a lot drier. As well, if some of the apple filling gets left in the bowl instead of being transferred to the baking pan, this could contribute to crisp being less gooey. Hopefully this helps!
Rhonda
Caramel Apple Crisp
This recipe is absolutely delicious! I modified it a tiny bit as I have Harrelson apple trees ( very small apples) I used 12 of mine and purchased 4 Granny Smith apples kust in case the Harreksons didn’t work. They did!!
I added a good layer of Nestle’s ice cream Caramel syrup on top of the bottom crisp layer then put tbe apples on top of that.
I added a little more caramel syrup on top right before serving.
Fiona
The more caramel the better! So glad you loved the recipe and thank you for reporting back with your results!
Andrea P
Perfection, nothing to tweak or change!
Amy
Are the apples crunchy or soft when the recipe is done? I like a softer Apple so I’m wondering if I should cook the apple mixture first.
Fiona
The apples will soften as they bake. The thinner you slice them, the softer they will be. You can also cook the crisp for longer to soften the apples more. Just place a piece of aluminum foil over the top so the crisp layer doesn’t get too brown. If you’d like the apples to be extra soft with large pieces, you can also cook the apple mixture first. The bake time of the crisp will be quite a bit less then – I’d guess maybe 30 minutes.
Lea
I need to feed ~15 people
Do I need to double recipe?
I have 10 apples…3” diameter
Fiona
I would recommend doubling the recipe then and baking it in a 9×13 inch pan. The bake time would be about the same.
Regina
I took the kiddos apple picking yesterday, so needed to find a recipe to use up some of our apples. Found your recipe, and I’m so glad I did! Made it with my 7 year old daughter, and she had so much fun helping. Only changes I made were using a variety of the apples we picked (Gala, Golden Delicious, Mac, Honey Crisp), and adding a teaspoon of vanilla with the apple mixture. It came out absolutely perfect. Thank you!
Claudette U.
For the crisp part of the recipe I didn’t have the hard butter so I used regular butter will that make a difference? I’m still currently baking so I will have to see for myself if it comes out correctly. Just doesn’t look at crumbly as it should.
Fiona
Melted butter, vs room temperature butter, vs cold butter will absorb flour differently – and therefore can cause different results in baking. The cold butter helps to create the crumbles you’ll see in the recipe. I hope it was still tasty.
Cristina
Amazing. I made this for Thanksgiving dinner and it went fast. Everyone loved it. Thank you so much for sharing this recipe.