In season now — May through July (peak: June in most northern states)
Dessert Easy American

Easy strawberry dessert

A no-cook layered dessert for when the berries are good enough to lead — ripe strawberries, a soft creamy layer, and something crunchy assembled in minutes.

Clear dessert glasses layered with strawberries, cream, and crunchy crumbs on a wooden table.
Time
15 min
Serves
4

Easy strawberry dessert is what you make when the berries are good enough to lead and you do not want a complicated project — this recipe leans on simple layering rather than baking, making ripe strawberries feel intentional without turning them into something unrecognizable.

Easy strawberry dessert

Serves 4

Ingredients (5)

Layers

Optional Finishing

Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1 layered serving
190 Calories
3 g Protein
28 g Carbs
8 g Fat
3 g Fiber
18 g Sugar
45 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Earliglow — small, intensely sweet, excellent flavor per berry
  • Honeoye — early season, bright red, reliable and sweet
  • Chandler — large, mild, widely grown at farm stands
  • Wild lowbush — tiny, complex, the most intensely flavored when you can find them

Ripeness

Full red color all the way to the hull — no white or green shoulders. Fragrant near the stem end. Softness is fine for this recipe; avoid anything with mold.

Imperfections are fine

Misshaped, small, or unevenly colored berries from a local farm often taste more intensely flavored than supermarket fruit. Surface marks and minor bruising are fine for a macerating dessert — the sugar juice covers everything.

Good substitutions

  • Raspberries or blackberries — no maceration needed, layer fresh
  • Sliced peaches or nectarines — macerate with a little sugar and lemon
  • A mix of stone fruit and berries in late summer

In season

US strawberry season runs May through July; June is peak for northern states. This recipe is worth making only with in-season fruit.

How much to buy

About 1 lb (3–4 cups) of strawberries serves 4. A standard market pint is just right.

From a grower near you

Find your strawberry grower on CollectiveCrop

A supermarket strawberry was picked pale for shipping — it might look red outside, but it's hollow and tart inside. A local strawberry was picked red and fragrant because it only has a day or two to travel. CollectiveCrop is how you find the grower selling them during their short spring window. Most of the sugar this recipe calls for becomes optional when the berry tastes like candy on its own.

  • In season May through July (peak: June in most northern states)
  • For this recipe 1 lb / about 3–4 cups
  • While you're there Local honey · Fresh cream · Ricotta

At the market

About 1 lb (3–4 cups) of strawberries serves 4. A standard market pint is just right.

Best varieties

  • Earliglow small, intensely sweet, excellent flavor per berry
  • Honeoye early season, bright red, reliable and sweet
  • Chandler large, mild, widely grown at farm stands

Good to know

Tips

  • Taste the berries first before deciding how much sweetener they need — ripe ones often need none.
  • Add the crisp element right before serving so it stays crunchy.
  • A small pinch of salt in the cream or ricotta makes the berries taste more vivid.
  • Let the sugared berries sit 10 minutes before assembling to develop a light syrup.

Storage

  • Assembled dessert: best served immediately; does not store well.
  • Sliced, macerated berries alone: refrigerate up to 24 hours (they soften as they sit).
  • Whipped cream: refrigerate up to 4 hours; re-whisk if it weeps.

Make ahead

  • Slice and sugar the berries up to 2 hours ahead; keep refrigerated.
  • Make the whipped cream or ricotta mixture a few hours ahead; keep cold.
  • Assemble just before serving.

Variations

  • Strawberry shortcake: layer with split biscuits instead of cookies.
  • Strawberry fool: fold macerated berries into whipped cream for a lighter, unified dessert.
  • Balsamic strawberries: add a teaspoon of aged balsamic to the macerating berries.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you make easy strawberry dessert ahead of time?

You can prep the berries and cream ahead, but assemble at the last minute.

What can you serve with easy strawberry dessert?

Serve it after grilled meals, simple pasta, or any summer dinner that wants an easy finish.

Can you swap one of the main ingredients?

Yes. The creamy and crunchy components can change depending on what you have.

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