Dessert Easy American

Apple crisp

A forgiving fall dessert that turns six apples and a pantry crumble into something warm and familiar — no pie crust required.

Prep
15 min
Cook
40 min
Total
55 min
Serves
6

This is the dessert for the bag of apples that's gone a little soft, the farmers market haul that was bigger than it looked, or any Tuesday when you want something warm without rolling out pie dough. Six apples, a handful of pantry staples, one dish — that's the whole recipe.

Apple crisp

Makes 1 nine-inch baking dish

Serves 6

Ingredients (9)

Crumble topping

You'll need

  • 9-inch square or round baking dish
  • Mixing bowl
  • Paring knife or vegetable peeler
Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1 serving (about 3/4 cup)
280 Calories
2 g Protein
48 g Carbs
9 g Fat
3 g Fiber
30 g Sugar
55 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Honeycrisp — sweet, holds shape, the all-rounder
  • Braeburn — firm with a little tartness
  • Granny Smith — sharp and structural, great in a mix
  • Pink Lady — balanced, bakes beautifully

Ripeness

Firm to the squeeze with a fragrant stem end. Slightly soft is fine — it will cook down. Avoid any that smell fermented.

Imperfections are fine

Small bruises, russeting, uneven size, and dull skin are all fine. Cut away bruised spots; the rest bakes the same. This recipe is a good home for imperfect fruit that isn't pretty enough to eat raw.

Good substitutions

  • Pears — use firm Bosc or Anjou, reduce sugar by 1 tablespoon
  • Half apples, half stone fruit (peaches, plums) in late summer
  • Add a handful of cranberries or blackberries for color and tang

In season

US apple season runs late August through November, with local storage apples available through early spring.

How much to buy

About 2 lb (900 g) of apples — roughly 5 to 6 medium, or a small market bag.

From a grower near you

Buy apples from a grower near you

Local apples are picked closer to ripe than supermarket fruit, so they taste like something. They also tend to be the varieties that actually bake well — not the ones bred for a three-week truck ride.

  • In season Late August – November (storage apples through early spring)
  • For this recipe 2 lb / about 6 apples
  • While you're there Local butter · Rolled oats from a regional mill · Raw honey (swap for the brown sugar)

At the market

About 2 lb (900 g) of apples — roughly 5 to 6 medium, or a small market bag.

Best varieties

  • Honeycrisp sweet, holds shape, the all-rounder
  • Braeburn firm with a little tartness
  • Granny Smith sharp and structural, great in a mix

Good to know

Tips

  • Mix two varieties for a more interesting texture: one firm, one softer.
  • Cut the butter into the crumble cold — warm butter turns the topping into paste.
  • A tablespoon of cornstarch tossed with the apples will thicken very juicy fruit.

Storage

  • Room temperature, covered, up to 24 hours.
  • Refrigerated in an airtight container, up to 4 days.
  • Freezes well for 2 months — wrap the baking dish tightly.

Reheating

  • Oven: 325°F (160°C) for 12–15 minutes to re-crisp the top.
  • Microwave works but the topping softens — finish 2 minutes in a toaster oven to revive it.

Make ahead

  • Slice the apples and mix with the sugar/cinnamon up to 8 hours ahead; cover and refrigerate.
  • Rub the crumble together and refrigerate in a separate container — it stays in good shape for up to 2 days.
  • Assemble straight from the fridge and add 5 minutes to the bake.

Variations

  • Apple-pear: swap half the apples for firm pears.
  • Berry-apple: replace 1 cup of apple with blackberries or cranberries.
  • Ginger apple: add 1/2 teaspoon grated fresh ginger to the apples.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you make apple crisp ahead of time?

Yes. Bake it up to a day ahead, cool completely, cover, and reheat at 325°F for 15 minutes before serving.

What kind of apples work best?

A mix works well: one firm apple (Granny Smith, Braeburn) for structure and one sweeter apple (Honeycrisp, Gala) for flavor. Avoid Red Delicious — they turn mealy when baked.

Can you use bruised or imperfect apples?

Yes — this is exactly the recipe for them. Cut out any bruised spots and slice what remains. Apples from a local grower often have more flavor than picture-perfect supermarket fruit.
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