Easy Apple Crumble
Easy Apple Crumble is the kind of dessert I reach for when the house smells like autumn and everyone wants something warm and comforting. The first time I baked this, it was a rainy afternoon, and the kitchen filled with the scent of apples and cinnamon, and I remember my neighbor peeking in because the smell was impossible to ignore. I like how the topping turns crisp while the fruit underneath stays tender, creating a contrast that always makes people smile.
I often make Easy Apple Crumble when I need something that feels homemade without too much fuss. There is a rhythm to slicing the apples, mixing the topping with your fingers, and listening for that satisfying, gentle bubbling as it comes out of the oven. Sometimes I swap the pan size depending on company, but the core of the recipe is always the same, and it never fails to bring people together.
Recipe Snapshot
1 hr 5 mins
20 mins
45 mins
Medium
250 kcal
American
Gluten-Free, Vegan
Desserts
9×13 inch baking dish, Mixing bowl, Spoon, Oven
Why You’ll Love This Easy Apple Crumble
Comforting, familiar flavors
I love that Easy Apple Crumble tastes like childhood without being complicated. The combination of tart and sweet in the apples with a warmly spiced topping is instantly nostalgic, and I find friends and family lean in the moment they take the first bite.
Speed without sacrifice
What thrills me is how quickly you can get decadent results. With straightforward steps and pantry-friendly items like all purpose flour and quick cooking oats, you can go from grocery bag to golden crisp in under an hour, which is a real win when you want a dessert tonight.
Textural contrast
The magic here is texture. Apples become soft and saucy while the topping browns into a crunchy, buttery blanket. That contrast keeps every bite interesting and avoids the one note sweetness many desserts fall into.
Flexible and forgiving
I appreciate recipes that forgive slight mistakes, and Easy Apple Crumble is generous that way. If your slices are uneven or the topping is chunkier than planned, it still bakes up deliciously. That makes it approachable for new bakers and useful when you are improvising with what you have on hand.
Great for gatherings
Lastly, it scales well. I often double it for company or halve it for a small family night. It reheats nicely and pairs well with a scoop of something cold and creamy, making it a go to for casual dinners and cozy holidays.
Recipe Ingredients for Easy Apple Crumble

These ingredients are chosen to create a balance between tender fruit and a crisp, buttery topping. The star is the apples, while the oats and flour build a textured crumb. Sugars and cinnamon add sweetness and warmth, and a touch of butter brings richness and helps the topping brown.
- 8 apples medium, or 10 small apples, peeled, cored and sliced: Provide sliced apples as the fruit base, offering natural sweetness and a tender texture when baked; ensure they are peeled, cored, and uniformly sliced to cook evenly. Combine with sugars and spices to create a juicy filling that softens yet retains some bite under the crumble topping.
- 1/4 cup white granulated sugar: Add sweetness and help macerate the apples, dissolving into juices that enhance the filling’s syrupy consistency. Sprinkle evenly over fruit to balance tartness and contribute to caramelization during baking.
- 2 tablespoons light brown sugar packed: Contribute deeper, molasses-like sweetness and a hint of caramel flavor when packed into measuring spoons; help build complexity in the filling’s taste profile. Use sparingly to avoid overpowering the fruit while improving richness.
- 1 tablespoon all-purpose flour: Thicken fruit juices by absorbing excess moisture released during baking, preventing a runny filling and helping the mixture bind together. Distribute evenly among the apples so the sauce becomes pleasantly viscous without graininess.
- 3/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon: Add warm, aromatic spice to the filling with a subtle earthy sweetness that complements apples; cinnamon enhances perceived sweetness and depth. Blend into the fruit mixture to evenly infuse flavor throughout the filling.
- 1/4 cup water: Supply moisture to the apple mixture to aid in softening the fruit and creating a saucy base as it bakes; helps dissolve sugars and distribute flavors. Use as needed to achieve a tender, saucy consistency without diluting flavors.
- 1 1/4 cup quick-cooking oats or rolled oats for a chewier crumb: Provide a chewy, hearty base texture for the crumble topping, absorbing butter and sugars to create crisp clusters when baked. Choose quick–cooking oats for a tender crumb or rolled oats for more pronounced chew and rustic appearance.
- 1 1/4 cup all-purpose flour: Form the structural component of the crumble topping, combining with oats and butter to create a tender, crumbly texture; contributes gluten for light binding. Measure carefully to maintain a balanced ratio between dry and fat for proper consistency.
- 3/4 cup light brown sugar packed: Impart molasses-rich sweetness and a deeper caramel note to the crumble, enhancing flavor and aiding in browning of the topping. Pack into the measuring cup to ensure consistent sweetness and texture across batches.
- 1/4 cup white granulated sugar: Add granular sweetness to the topping, helping to balance the brown sugar’s deeper notes and promote crisp edges when baked. Sprinkle evenly into the dry mixture so it dissolves into the melted butter and oats.
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon: Introduce warm, aromatic spice to the topping, echoing the filling’s cinnamon note and tying flavors together for a cohesive dessert. Mix thoroughly with the dry ingredients to ensure an even distribution of spice.
- 1/2 teaspoons salt: Enhance overall flavor by balancing sweetness and bringing out other ingredients’ tastes while aiding in gluten development for the topping’s structure. Stir into the dry mix to evenly distribute salinity without creating salty pockets.
- 1/4 teaspoon baking powder: Lightly leaven the crumble so it achieves a slightly lighter, less dense texture by introducing a touch of lift during baking. Blend well with the dry ingredients to ensure even small-scale rising and a tender crumb.
- 3/4 cup unsalted butter melted: Bind fats and dry ingredients by melting into the crumble mixture, providing richness, moisture, and facilitating browning for a crisp, golden topping. Pour over the dry mix and combine until clumps form for an ideal crumbly texture.
How to Cook Easy Apple Crumble

This recipe is straightforward and dependable, and I like to walk through it with calm focus. The baking does the heavy lifting, but attention to sensory cues will make the difference between a merely good dessert and a truly memorable one.
- Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C).: As the oven warms, you should notice a faint hum and then a steady warmth in the kitchen; proper preheating ensures the topping begins to crisp right away, creating a golden surface while the filling cooks through. If you skip preheating you risk an uneven bake, where the crumb is pale and the fruit soggy. A common mistake is setting the wrong temperature, so double check your dial and give the oven at least 10 minutes to stabilize before placing the dish inside.
- Arrange the sliced apples into a 9×13-inch baking dish. Add the sugars, flour and cinnamon over the apple slices. Pour in the water and mix everything through until apples are evenly coated.: When you layer the prepared apples , their cool, slightly crisp scent is apparent, and arranging them evenly helps them soften uniformly; scatter the sugars, all purpose flour and cinnamon on top so the spice and sweetness coat every piece. Even distribution matters because pockets of sugar can caramelize too strongly or leave other pieces bland. An easy error is overcrowding the pan, which can prevent the fruit from softening properly, so keep a single even layer without mounding the slices.
- In a bowl, combine the oats, flour, sugars, cinnamon, salt, baking powder and melted butter. Mix well using a metal spoon or your fingertips, until the butter has soaked through the dry ingredients (about one minute of mixing or less). Sprinkle evenly over the apple filling.: As you pour in the water and work it through the fruit with a spoon, you will feel the juices begin to loosen and hear a soft rustle as slices move against each other; this thin sauce helps the apples cook into tender slices without drying. Mixing also ensures the cinnamon and sugars reach every slice for balanced flavor. Avoid overmixing to the point the fruit breaks down into mush, and watch for one common problem, watery filling, which often comes from using very watery apples or too much liquid.
- Bake in preheated oven for 40 – 45 minutes, or until the crumb is golden and crisp and the apples are cooked to your liking.: When you stir these together, the butter should be warm and glossy, binding the dry ingredients; you will notice a pleasant, fragrant aroma of brown sugar and cinnamon as they mingle. Use a spoon or your fingertips to distribute the butter until the pieces clump slightly, creating varied textures that will brown differently in the oven. A common pitfall is using cold butter, which prevents proper coating and leads to an uneven crumble, so if your butter has solidified, warm it just enough to be fluid.
- Sprinkle topping evenly over the apple filling: As you scatter the crumb, you will see a contrast between the glossy, saucy fruit and the pale, coarse topping; the visual cue to aim for is a fairly even layer with small gaps so steam can escape. The distribution affects browning and texture, so take a moment to smooth larger mounds. A frequent mistake is piling the topping too thick in places, which can leave undercooked pockets beneath; try to keep it balanced for even crisping.
- Bake in preheated oven for 40 to 45 minutes: During baking you will hear a gentle bubbling as the fruit releases juices and the sugars caramelize; the topping will transition from pale to golden brown and the aroma of cinnamon and browned butter will fill the room. That bubbling indicates the filling is simmering and thickening, and the topping should be crisp when tapped lightly. If the top browns too quickly, tent with foil to prevent burning while allowing the center to finish; underbaking leaves the apples firm and the crumb soft, so test that the juices are bubbling at the edge and the topping is crisp before removing.
Ways to Customize

If you want to make the crumble your own, small swaps will create noticeable changes in texture and flavor. Below are practical ideas that keep the spirit of Easy Apple Crumble intact while letting you experiment.
- Swap oats type Use rolled oats for a chewier topping and quick oats for a finer, more tender crumb; the oats also influence how much liquid the topping absorbs, so adjust slightly if you switch types.
- Adjust sugar balance Reduce the white granulated sugar in the filling if your apples are very sweet, or increase brown sugar in the topping for deeper caramel notes.
- Spice it up Add a pinch of nutmeg or a dash of ground ginger alongside the cinnamon to introduce warm, layered spice without overpowering the fruit.
- Change the pan Use a smaller, deeper dish for a taller crumble or a wider pan for thinner filling; baking time may vary, so watch for bubbling juices and a golden top as indicators.
- Make ahead Assemble the crumble up to the point of baking, cover, and refrigerate for a day; bring it to room temperature before baking and add a few extra minutes if chilled through.
How to Serve Easy Apple Crumble
Serving is where the crumble truly shines, and simple additions elevate the experience. Think about temperature contrasts and complementary textures when plating, and consider the occasion to pick the right accompaniments.
- Classic scoop Serve warm with a cold scoop of vanilla ice cream for temperature contrast and a creamy counterpoint to the crisp topping.
- Custard pairing For a cozy evening, pour warm custard over a bowl of crumble to add silky richness that soaks into the fruit.
- Beverage matches Offer hot tea or coffee alongside to complement the cinnamon notes, or pick a lightly spiced cider to echo the apple flavors.
- Portioning for guests Spoon into shallow bowls for immediate serving or plate individual portions on small dessert plates for a neat presentation.
- Occasion ideas This dessert works for casual weeknight dinners, fall gatherings, and holiday tables where you want comfort without fuss.
- Storage tips Refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container for up to four days and reheat gently in a low oven to revive the topping.
- Seasonal pairing In autumn serve with warm spices and cozy drinks, while in cooler months opt for richer accompaniments like custard to add warmth.
FAQ
Conclusion
What makes this recipe special is its comforting combination of tender spiced fruit and a buttery, crisp topping that feels both simple and indulgent. Give Easy Apple Crumble a try when you want something that welcomes company and satisfies sweet cravings without fuss. It’s a forgiving, adaptable dessert that rewards small attentions and brings warm, homey flavors to the table.

Easy Apple Crumble
Equipment
- 9x13-inch Baking Dish
- Mixing Bowl
- Spoon
- Oven
Ingredients
- 8 apples medium, or 10 small apples, peeled, cored and sliced Provide sliced apples as the fruit base, offering natural sweetness and a tender texture when baked; ensure they are peeled, cored, and uniformly sliced to cook evenly. Combine with sugars and spices to create a juicy filling that softens yet retains some bite under the crumble topping.
- 1/4 cup white granulated sugar Add sweetness and help macerate the apples, dissolving into juices that enhance the filling’s syrupy consistency. Sprinkle evenly over fruit to balance tartness and contribute to caramelization during baking.
- 2 tablespoons light brown sugar packed Contribute deeper, molasses-like sweetness and a hint of caramel flavor when packed into measuring spoons; help build complexity in the filling’s taste profile. Use sparingly to avoid overpowering the fruit while improving richness.
- 1 tablespoon all-purpose flour Thicken fruit juices by absorbing excess moisture released during baking, preventing a runny filling and helping the mixture bind together. Distribute evenly among the apples so the sauce becomes pleasantly viscous without graininess.
- 3/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon Add warm, aromatic spice to the filling with a subtle earthy sweetness that complements apples; cinnamon enhances perceived sweetness and depth. Blend into the fruit mixture to evenly infuse flavor throughout the filling.
- 1/4 cup water Supply moisture to the apple mixture to aid in softening the fruit and creating a saucy base as it bakes; helps dissolve sugars and distribute flavors. Use as needed to achieve a tender, saucy consistency without diluting flavors.
- 1 1/4 cup quick-cooking oats or rolled oats for a chewier crumb Provide a chewy, hearty base texture for the crumble topping, absorbing butter and sugars to create crisp clusters when baked. Choose quick-cooking oats for a tender crumb or rolled oats for more pronounced chew and rustic appearance.
- 1 1/4 cup all-purpose flour Form the structural component of the crumble topping, combining with oats and butter to create a tender, crumbly texture; contributes gluten for light binding. Measure carefully to maintain a balanced ratio between dry and fat for proper consistency.
- 3/4 cup light brown sugar packed Impart molasses-rich sweetness and a deeper caramel note to the crumble, enhancing flavor and aiding in browning of the topping. Pack into the measuring cup to ensure consistent sweetness and texture across batches.
- 1/4 cup white granulated sugar Add granular sweetness to the topping, helping to balance the brown sugar’s deeper notes and promote crisp edges when baked. Sprinkle evenly into the dry mixture so it dissolves into the melted butter and oats.
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon Introduce warm, aromatic spice to the topping, echoing the filling’s cinnamon note and tying flavors together for a cohesive dessert. Mix thoroughly with the dry ingredients to ensure an even distribution of spice.
- 1/2 teaspoons salt Enhance overall flavor by balancing sweetness and bringing out other ingredients’ tastes while aiding in gluten development for the topping’s structure. Stir into the dry mix to evenly distribute salinity without creating salty pockets.
- 1/4 teaspoon baking powder Lightly leaven the crumble so it achieves a slightly lighter, less dense texture by introducing a touch of lift during baking. Blend well with the dry ingredients to ensure even small-scale rising and a tender crumb.
- 3/4 cup unsalted butter melted Bind fats and dry ingredients by melting into the crumble mixture, providing richness, moisture, and facilitating browning for a crisp, golden topping. Pour over the dry mix and combine until clumps form for an ideal crumbly texture.
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C).: As the oven warms, you should notice a faint hum and then a steady warmth in the kitchen; proper preheating ensures the topping begins to crisp right away, creating a golden surface while the filling cooks through. If you skip preheating you risk an uneven bake, where the crumb is pale and the fruit soggy. A common mistake is setting the wrong temperature, so double check your dial and give the oven at least 10 minutes to stabilize before placing the dish inside.
- Arrange the sliced apples into a 9×13-inch baking dish. Add the sugars, flour and cinnamon over the apple slices. Pour in the water and mix everything through until apples are evenly coated.: When you layer the prepared apples , their cool, slightly crisp scent is apparent, and arranging them evenly helps them soften uniformly; scatter the sugars, all purpose flour and cinnamon on top so the spice and sweetness coat every piece. Even distribution matters because pockets of sugar can caramelize too strongly or leave other pieces bland. An easy error is overcrowding the pan, which can prevent the fruit from softening properly, so keep a single even layer without mounding the slices.
- In a bowl, combine the oats, flour, sugars, cinnamon, salt, baking powder and melted butter. Mix well using a metal spoon or your fingertips, until the butter has soaked through the dry ingredients (about one minute of mixing or less). Sprinkle evenly over the apple filling.: As you pour in the water and work it through the fruit with a spoon, you will feel the juices begin to loosen and hear a soft rustle as slices move against each other; this thin sauce helps the apples cook into tender slices without drying. Mixing also ensures the cinnamon and sugars reach every slice for balanced flavor. Avoid overmixing to the point the fruit breaks down into mush, and watch for one common problem, watery filling, which often comes from using very watery apples or too much liquid.
- Bake in preheated oven for 40 – 45 minutes, or until the crumb is golden and crisp and the apples are cooked to your liking.: When you stir these together, the butter should be warm and glossy, binding the dry ingredients; you will notice a pleasant, fragrant aroma of brown sugar and cinnamon as they mingle. Use a spoon or your fingertips to distribute the butter until the pieces clump slightly, creating varied textures that will brown differently in the oven. A common pitfall is using cold butter, which prevents proper coating and leads to an uneven crumble, so if your butter has solidified, warm it just enough to be fluid.
- Sprinkle topping evenly over the apple filling: As you scatter the crumb, you will see a contrast between the glossy, saucy fruit and the pale, coarse topping; the visual cue to aim for is a fairly even layer with small gaps so steam can escape. The distribution affects browning and texture, so take a moment to smooth larger mounds. A frequent mistake is piling the topping too thick in places, which can leave undercooked pockets beneath; try to keep it balanced for even crisping.
- Bake in preheated oven for 40 to 45 minutes: During baking you will hear a gentle bubbling as the fruit releases juices and the sugars caramelize; the topping will transition from pale to golden brown and the aroma of cinnamon and browned butter will fill the room. That bubbling indicates the filling is simmering and thickening, and the topping should be crisp when tapped lightly. If the top browns too quickly, tent with foil to prevent burning while allowing the center to finish; underbaking leaves the apples firm and the crumb soft, so test that the juices are bubbling at the edge and the topping is crisp before removing.
Notes
- Swap oats type Use rolled oats for a chewier topping and quick oats for a finer, more tender crumb; the oats also influence how much liquid the topping absorbs, so adjust slightly if you switch types.
- Adjust sugar balance Reduce the white granulated sugar in the filling if your apples are very sweet, or increase brown sugar in the topping for deeper caramel notes.
- Spice it up Add a pinch of nutmeg or a dash of ground ginger alongside the cinnamon to introduce warm, layered spice without overpowering the fruit.
- Change the pan Use a smaller, deeper dish for a taller crumble or a wider pan for thinner filling; baking time may vary, so watch for bubbling juices and a golden top as indicators.
- Make ahead Assemble the crumble up to the point of baking, cover, and refrigerate for a day; bring it to room temperature before baking and add a few extra minutes if chilled through.
