Strawberry-rhubarb crisp is the dessert that makes spring official. Tart rhubarb, sweet berries, warm spices, and a buttery oat topping — the whole thing comes together in twenty minutes and bakes while you eat dinner. Use peak-season local fruit, let it cool fifteen minutes to thicken the juices, and serve with a scoop of vanilla ice cream that melts into the edges. It's the recipe that pays off the long wait through winter.
Strawberry rhubarb crisp
Sweet-tart strawberry and rhubarb baked under a buttery oat crumble — the quintessential spring dessert, done right in under an hour.

- Prep
- 20 min
- Cook
- 45 min
- Total
- 1h 5m
- Serves
- 8
Strawberry rhubarb crisp
Makes 1 nine-inch baking dish
Scaled 1×. Ingredients adjusted — but cook time, pan size, and oven temperature don't scale linearly. A bigger batch usually needs a bigger pan and a few extra minutes; a smaller batch often finishes sooner. Trust your eyes, not the timer.
Ingredients (16)
Oat crumble topping
You'll need
- 9-inch square or round baking dish
- Large mixing bowl
- Medium bowl (for crumble)
- Sharp knife
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 serving (about 3/4 cup)What to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Strawberries: Chandler, Albion, or Seascape — large, sweet, hold shape
- Rhubarb: Crimson Red or MacDonald — deep-red stalks stay vibrant when baked
- Rhubarb: Victoria — the classic green-and-pink variety
- Wild strawberries or Alpine — small, intense flavor (use as a garnish if you have them)
- Everbearing strawberries (June-bearing in spring) — reliable for crisps
Ripeness
Strawberries: deeply red all the way to the stem, fragrant, and slightly yielding (not mushy). Rhubarb: firm, crisp stalks with tight ends — no wilted or slimy stalks. Redder rhubarb looks prettier but isn't necessarily sweeter; green rhubarb works fine.
Imperfections are fine
Strawberries with minor blemishes, irregular shape, or slight overripeness are ideal for crisp — they break down beautifully. Rhubarb with rough skin or minor cracks is fine. Trim any soft or rotted parts.
Good substitutions
- All strawberry (no rhubarb) — cut the sugar by 2 tablespoons
- All rhubarb (no strawberries) — increase sugar to 3/4 cup
- Strawberry and raspberry (no rhubarb) — classic summer crisp
- Rhubarb and apple — late-spring combination
- Rhubarb and cherry — dark and intense, add 1 tablespoon kirsch if feeling fancy
In season
US strawberry and rhubarb seasons overlap perfectly in spring — April through June. This pairing exists because they're harvested at the same time on the same farms. Out-of-season versions rarely match the flavor.
How much to buy
1 1/2 lb strawberries (1 quart basket) + 1 lb rhubarb (4 to 5 stalks).
Find your strawberry and rhubarb growers on CollectiveCrop
- In season April – June
- For this recipe 1 1/2 lb strawberries + 1 lb rhubarb
- Freshness Picked within 3 days
- Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
- Diet-friendly vegetarian
- While you're there Vanilla · Fresh mint or basil · Ginger (crystallized or fresh) · Good butter from a local dairy · Rolled oats from a regional mill · Vanilla ice cream
At the market
1 1/2 lb strawberries (1 quart basket) + 1 lb rhubarb (4 to 5 stalks).
Best varieties
- Strawberries: Chandler, Albion, or Seascape large, sweet, hold shape
- Rhubarb: Crimson Red or MacDonald deep-red stalks stay vibrant when baked
- Rhubarb: Victoria the classic green-and-pink variety
Good to know
Tips
- Taste one strawberry and one piece of raw rhubarb before adjusting sugar. If the berries are super sweet, cut the sugar by 2 tablespoons; if the rhubarb is very tart, add 2 tablespoons more.
- A pinch of ground ginger is the secret weapon — you won't taste ginger, but everything in the dish tastes brighter.
- Line the sheet pan under the baking dish with foil for easy cleanup — fruit crisps are notorious overflow risks.
- The topping is improvable — swap in toasted pecans or almonds, add a pinch of cardamom, or spike with orange zest.
- A double batch of just the crumble freezes up to 3 months — always be ready to make a crisp.
- For individual crisps: divide among 8 ramekins; reduce bake time to 25 minutes.
Storage
- Room temperature: 24 hours, loosely covered.
- Refrigerator: 4 days in an airtight container.
- Freezer (baked): 2 months, tightly wrapped.
- Freezer (unbaked): 2 months; bake from frozen, tented with foil, for 60 minutes at 375°F.
Reheating
- Oven: 325°F (160°C) for 10 to 15 minutes — best method, re-crisps the top.
- Toaster oven: 350°F for 8 minutes (individual servings).
- Microwave: 60 seconds on medium — works but softens the topping; finish 2 minutes in a toaster oven to re-crisp.
Make ahead
- Hull, wash, and slice the fruit up to 8 hours ahead; mix with sugar and thickener up to 4 hours ahead.
- Mix the crumble up to 3 days ahead; refrigerate in a sealed container.
- Assemble the full crisp up to 24 hours before baking (refrigerate); add 5 minutes to bake time.
- Double the crumble and freeze half for next time.
Variations
- Ginger strawberry rhubarb: double the ginger and add 2 tablespoons chopped crystallized ginger to the fruit.
- Cardamom version: add 1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom to the crumble in place of cinnamon.
- Almond rhubarb: add 1/2 teaspoon almond extract to the fruit; use sliced almonds in the topping.
- Orange-rhubarb: replace the lemon with orange zest and juice.
- Crunchy coconut: add 1/2 cup unsweetened shredded coconut to the crumble.
- Boozy version: add 2 tablespoons bourbon, amaretto, or kirsch to the fruit.
- Individual ramekins: divide among 8 ramekins; reduce bake time to 25 minutes.
- Breakfast crisp: reduce the sugar by half; serve with Greek yogurt instead of ice cream.
Swaps
- Gluten-free: swap all-purpose flour for a 1:1 GF blend (King Arthur or Bob's Red Mill). Use certified GF oats.
- Vegan: replace butter with cold vegan butter or refrigerated coconut oil; cut into the crumble the same way.
- Nut-free: omit nuts or swap for extra oats or pumpkin seeds.
- Lower-sugar: reduce granulated sugar to 1/3 cup and brown sugar to 1/2 cup; ripe strawberries carry plenty of sweetness.
- No rhubarb: replace with 1 lb tart apples (Granny Smith) or 1 lb pitted tart cherries.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you eat rhubarb raw?
How much rhubarb is too much?
Can I use frozen strawberries or rhubarb?
Why is my crisp watery?
Can I make this ahead?
Can I freeze it?
What should I serve it with?
Is a crisp the same as a crumble?
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