Pears are the fruit that always seem to ripen all at once and then disappear into mealy mush if you're not paying attention. A crisp is the perfect safety valve — six pears, a handful of pantry staples, one dish, and fifty-five minutes on the clock. The warm spice and buttery crumble make it feel like a treat; the simplicity makes it a weeknight possibility.
Pear crisp
Ripe pears baked under a buttery oat crumble with warm spices — a forgiving fall dessert that works with fruit too soft to eat fresh.

- Prep
- 15 min
- Cook
- 40 min
- Total
- 55 min
- Serves
- 6
Pear 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 (14)
Crumble topping
You'll need
- 9-inch square or round baking dish
- Mixing bowl
- Paring knife and peeler
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 serving (about 3/4 cup)What to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Bosc — russeted brown skin, dense and firm; the best baker — holds shape beautifully
- Anjou (green or red) — sweet-tart and firm enough to bake; great all-rounder
- Bartlett — classic yellow pear; softer, breaks down more but adds rich flavor
- Comice — buttery and extremely juicy; use mixed with a firmer variety
- Forelle — small speckled pears; gorgeous, hold shape well
Ripeness
Press the neck (near the stem) gently — it should yield slightly. Unripe pears feel rock-hard at the neck; overripe feel soft all the way down. Pears ripen from the inside out, so a firm shoulder can still mean a soft center.
Imperfections are fine
Bruises, russeting (the brown mottling on Bosc and some Anjou), and slight skin blemishes are all fine — they're often signs of a more flavorful pear. Soft spots can be trimmed; the rest bakes beautifully.
Good substitutions
- Apples — direct swap, same technique; classic apple crisp
- Half pears, half apples for complementary flavor
- Pears + cranberries (1 cup) for a holiday version
- Pears + diced crystallized ginger for a spicy twist
- Quince — firmer and more astringent; add 1/4 cup extra sugar and 10 minutes baking time
In season
US pear season runs August through October fresh, with storage pears available well into winter. A Bosc in December from local cold storage still has weeks of life.
How much to buy
About 2 1/4 lb — 6 medium pears, or a small market bag.
Find your pear grower on CollectiveCrop
- In season August – October (fresh); November – February (from local cold storage)
- For this recipe 2 1/4 lb / 6 medium pears
- Freshness Picked within this week
- Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
- Diet-friendly vegetarian
- While you're there Apples · Cranberries (in season) · Local butter · Rolled oats from a regional mill · Walnuts or pecans from regional orchards
At the market
About 2 1/4 lb — 6 medium pears, or a small market bag.
Best varieties
- Bosc russeted brown skin, dense and firm; the best baker — holds shape beautifully
- Anjou (green or red) sweet-tart and firm enough to bake; great all-rounder
- Bartlett classic yellow pear; softer, breaks down more but adds rich flavor
Good to know
Tips
- Ripen pears at home: leave them on the counter 2 to 5 days. Once they yield at the neck, refrigerate to hold for up to another week.
- The lemon juice isn't just for flavor — it keeps the pears from browning between slicing and baking and balances the sweetness.
- For extra-crispy topping, bake a stand-alone pan of the crumble on a second tray for 10 minutes, then scatter over the baked crisp in the last 5 minutes.
- Cold butter matters. Warm butter turns the topping into a paste instead of leaving craggy, crisp pockets.
- Double the crumble topping and freeze half — it goes straight onto any fruit next time.
Storage
- Room temperature: up to 24 hours, loosely covered.
- Refrigerator: 3 days in an airtight container — topping softens but flavor holds.
- Freezer (baked): 2 months, tightly wrapped; reheat from frozen at 325°F for 25 minutes.
- Freezer (unbaked): 2 months tightly wrapped; bake from frozen at 375°F, tented, for 50 minutes.
Reheating
- Oven: 325°F (160°C) for 10 to 12 minutes to re-crisp.
- Toaster oven: 350°F for 6 minutes — excellent.
- Microwave: softens the top but is fine for a quick warm-up; finish 2 minutes in a toaster oven for crispness.
Make ahead
- Slice the pears and mix with the sugar, lemon, and spices up to 6 hours ahead; cover and refrigerate.
- Rub the crumble together up to 2 days ahead and refrigerate in a sealed container.
- Assemble the full dish up to 24 hours ahead; bake straight from the fridge (add 5 minutes to bake time).
Variations
- Ginger-pear: double the ginger and add 2 tablespoons chopped candied ginger to the crumble.
- Pear-cranberry: replace 1 cup of pear with fresh cranberries; add 2 extra tablespoons of sugar.
- Cardamom-pear: use 1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom instead of cinnamon — floral, warming.
- Caramel pear: drizzle 1/4 cup caramel sauce over the pears before adding the topping.
- Boozy pears: add 2 tablespoons bourbon or dark rum to the fruit before baking.
- Individual crisps: divide between 6 ramekins; reduce bake time to 25 minutes.
Swaps
- Gluten-free: swap the all-purpose flour for a 1:1 GF blend (Bob's Red Mill or King Arthur).
- Vegan: replace butter with cold vegan butter or coconut oil; use the fridge for 10 minutes to firm up after cutting in.
- Nut-free: omit the nuts or swap for 1/4 cup extra oats or pumpkin seeds.
- Lower-sugar: reduce brown sugar to 1/3 cup and granulated sugar to 1 tablespoon — ripe pears carry plenty of sweetness on their own.
Frequently Asked Questions
What type of pear is best for crisp?
Can you use overripe pears?
Do I need to peel pears for crisp?
How do I keep the topping from going soggy?
Can pear crisp be made ahead?
Can I freeze pear crisp?
What do you serve with pear crisp?
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