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Easy apple crisp is built for people who believe the streusel topping is the whole point. A oat-brown sugar streusel and a tart, macerated filling keep every bite balanced.

apple crisp in baking dish with ice cream on top.
baked apple crisp being dished.

A Quick Look At The Recipe

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Prep Time

20 minutes

Cook Time

55 minutes

Total Time

1 hour 15 minutes

Servings

12 servings

Difficulty

Easy

Calories *

221 kcal per serving

Technique

Apples macerated with sugar and spice; butter rubbed into oat streusel by hand; baked until topping is golden and filling is bubbling.

Flavor Profile

Tart apple, warm cinnamon, rich brown sugar, buttery oat.

* Based on nutrition panel

I made this for a dinner party and doubled the streusel just like the recipe suggested, and the topping came out perfectly crisp even after sitting for a while. The macerated apples were tender without turning mushy, which is exactly what I was hoping for. I used a mix of Granny Smith and Honeycrisp and it was spot on. This is my go-to from here. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Sarah

Why This Recipe Works

  • Doubled streusel topping with dark brown sugar. The topping is scaled generously so every serving gets full coverage. Dark brown sugar delivers a deeper caramel flavor than light brown sugar because of its higher molasses content.
  • Macerated apples build flavor and juice. Tossing the apples in sugar before baking draws out their natural moisture. That liquid becomes the bubbling, glossy filling that keeps the crisp from baking up dry.
  • Tart apples balance a sweet topping. A mix of honeycrisp, Cripps pink, and granny smith brings acidity that cuts through the richness of the brown sugar streusel. If you lean toward sweeter varieties, the finished crisp will tip into cloying. If you want to try a different fruit entirely, this works beautifully alongside my peach crisp using the same method.

I grew up eating this brown sugar apple crisp. I think at some point my Mom must have doubled the already generous crisp topping because the ratio of apples to topping is 50:50. Possibly more like 40:60!

She and I used to stand in the kitchen impatiently waiting for the crisp to cool enough to take our first bites straight from the dish. After that first spoonful, we would both smile and nod at each other in silent agreement that the crisp topping was the best part. Later, we added a scoop of vanilla bean ice cream and a drizzle of salted caramel sauce.

Ingredients & Substitutions

apple crisp ingredients on marble.
  • Tart Apples: Tart, firm varieties like Granny Smith and Cripps Pink hold their shape under heat and provide the acidity that keeps the crisp from tasting one-note sweet. I always use a combination for the best flavor and texture, avoiding soft varieties like Red Delicious that turn to mush. The same principle applies in my Easy Apple Pie, where apple selection is equally important to the outcome.
  • Granulated Sugar: A small amount of sugar lightly sweetens the apples and draws out their natural juices so a glossy, syrupy filling forms as they bake.
  • Lemon Zest and Lemon Juice: Zest provides aromatic citrus oils that lift the spices’ flavor without adding liquid to the filling. Juice sharpens the apple flavor and keeps the overall crisp from tasting flat or cloying. Zest the lemon before you juice it, and keep to the bright yellow peel only to avoid bitterness from the white pith.
  • Cinnamon
  • Nutmeg
  • Kosher Salt
  • Dark Brown Sugar: Dark brown sugar gives the topping real depth. Its higher molasses content delivers a caramel-like flavor that light brown sugar cannot replicate. Pack it firmly into the measuring cup to avoid air pockets that would under-sweeten the topping.
  • All-Purpose Flour
  • Rolled Oats: Use old-fashioned rolled oats, not instant. Rolled oats retain their shape and structure after baking, giving the topping its signature crisp, nubby texture. Instant oats break down too quickly and turn pasty instead of toasty.
  • Unsalted Butter

See the recipe card for full information on ingredients and quantities.

Variations on This Easy Apple Crisp

  • Different Fruit. Swap the apples for pears or peaches using my peach crisp or cardamom pear crisp as a guide for how those fruits behave under the same streusel.
  • Spice Blend. Replace the cinnamon with apple pie spice, pumpkin spice, or speculoos spice mix; start with a pinch, taste, and add from there since these blends are more complex than cinnamon alone.
  • Salted Caramel Addition. Pour salted caramel sauce over the finished crisp, or stir it directly into the apple filling before adding the topping and baking it in.
  • Reduced Topping Ratio. Halve the streusel to achieve a more traditional filling-to-topping ratio; any leftover topping freezes well for up to two months and works beautifully on individual blueberry raspberry crumbles. If oats are not your preference, a flour-only brown sugar streusel makes a direct substitute, and you can fold in toasted pecans or walnuts either way.
apple crisp in bowl with ice cream and pewter spoon.

Professional Tips

  • Use tart apples and do not skip the lemon juice. Sweet apple varieties push the finished crisp into cloying territory because the topping is already rich with dark brown sugar. Granny Smith, Cripps Pink, and Honeycrisp are the varieties I reach for, and the lemon juice reinforces that acidity throughout the filling.
  • Macerate the apples before baking. Letting the sliced apples sit in the sugar draws out their moisture, which becomes the glossy, syrupy filling as the crisp bakes. Skipping this step is the most common reason a filling bakes up dry rather than saucy.
  • Keep the butter cold when building the streusel. Work quickly by hand, rubbing the butter into the dry ingredients until you have rough, uneven clumps. If the butter warms and smears into the flour before the crisp goes into the oven, the topping will bake up sandy instead of craggy and crisp. For a deeper caramel profile, my Caramel Apple Tart uses the same cold-butter principle with a streusel finish.
  • Bake until the filling is actively bubbling. The crisp is done at 45 to 50 minutes at 325°F convection or 350°F conventional, but pull it only when you can see the filling bubbling in the middle and the topping is a deep golden brown. If you want very soft apples, add another 10 to 15 minutes.

How to Make Easy Apple Crisp

Use these instructions to make the perfect apple crisp every time! Further details and measurements can be found in the recipe card below.

apple crisp filling mixed in bowl.
ingredients for apple crisp topping in bowl.
ingredients for crisp topping mixed in bowl.

Make Filling

Step 1: Macerate the apples. In a medium bowl, combine the sliced apples, lemon juice, lemon zest, granulated sugar, nutmeg, cinnamon, and the pinch of salt. Stir until every slice is evenly coated. Cover the bowl and refrigerate for at least 1½ hours, stirring occasionally. You will notice liquid pooling at the bottom of the bowl as the sugar draws moisture out of the fruit — that is exactly what you want, and it is what keeps the filling juicy rather than dry. I get impatient too, and I won’t pretend I always wait the full 90 minutes! But the flavors genuinely sharpen, and the filling thickens better when you do. (photo 1)

Cut your apple slices to a consistent size before they go into the bowl. There is no single right thickness, but once you pick your size, stick with it so everything bakes at the same rate. Uneven pieces give you a mix of hard chunks and applesauce in the same bite.

Step 2: Preheat the oven. Set your oven to 350°F conventional with the rack in the middle position. There is no convection option for this recipe — convection heat will brown the topping before the filling has time to bubble and thicken properly.

Make Oat Topping

Step 3: Make the crisp topping. In a medium bowl, stir together the dark brown sugar, flour, and oats until combined. Add the cold butter cubes and toss them through the dry mixture to coat. Now use your hands: grab a handful of the mixture, squeeze it firmly, and mash it against your palm with your fingers. Release, grab another handful, and repeat. Keep going until the mixture begins to clump into shaggy chunks, with only a few visible pea-sized pieces of butter remaining. The topping should hold its shape when you press it but still feel crumbly when you break it apart. Work quickly — you want the butter to stay cold so it steams in the oven and creates lift in the topping rather than melting into a greasy layer before baking begins. (photos 2 & 3)

You can also make the streusel topping in a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment.

unbaked assembled apple crisp.
apple crisp in baking dish with ice cream on top.

Assemble and Bake

Step 4: Fill the baking dish. Give the macerated apples one last stir, then pour them into an 8-inch square baking dish along with any liquid that has collected at the bottom of the bowl. That liquid is flavor — do not leave it behind.

Step 5: Add the topping. Scatter the crisp topping over the apples, using as much or as little as you like. There is intentionally more topping than you might expect, so nobody gets cheated on their serving. Press some of the topping firmly down into the apples. That layer softens as it bakes, creating a tender, almost jammy middle layer between the fruit and the crispy top — which I love. Pile the remaining topping loosely over the surface. (photo 4)

Step 6: Bake until bubbling. Bake at 350°F for 45 to 50 minutes. Start checking at 45 minutes. The crisp is done when the topping is a deep golden brown and the filling is visibly bubbling up the sides of the dish. Do not pull it early — a bubbling filling is the sign that the juices have thickened and the apples have fully cooked through. If you want very soft apples, continue baking for an additional 10 to 15 minutes.

If you want a thicker filling, you can use tapioca starch or cornstarch, or pre-cook the apple filling on the stovetop.

Step 7: Cool and serve. Transfer the dish to a wire rack and let it rest for 10 minutes before serving. The filling will be extremely hot straight from the oven and needs a few minutes to settle. Serve warm with a scoop of vanilla ice cream, a pour of salted caramel sauce, or a spoonful of crème anglaise. (photo 5)

Chef Lindsey’s Recipe Tip

In a simple recipe like this one, every ingredient has to carry its weight, and the apples matter most. Choose firm, bright-looking fruit that feels heavy for its size — this signals moisture content, which is what becomes the glossy filling as the crisp bakes. A mixture of at least two tart varieties will give you varied texture and a more complex flavor than any single apple can deliver on its own. Letting the sliced apples sit in the sugar before you even touch the topping is the step most people skip, and it is also the one that separates a dry, forgettable crisp from one with a genuinely saucy, bubbling filling.

Recipe FAQs

What makes an easy apple crisp different from an apple crumble?

Technically, a crisp includes oats in the streusel topping while a crumble does not. People use the names interchangeably, but the oats are what give a crisp its characteristic craggy, toasted texture. If you prefer a flour-only topping, that is a crumble, and my raspberry rhubarb crisp uses that style with a brown sugar streusel.

Why is my easy apple crisp dry and not juicy?

The most common reasons are old apples, wrong varieties, skipping the maceration step, or overbaking. Apples lose moisture over time, so choose firm, heavy fruit and always let them sit in the sugar before baking — that process starts drawing out the liquid that becomes the filling. Different varieties release different amounts of juice, which is why using a mix improves your odds of a saucy result.

What apples are best for easy apple crisp?

Tart, firm varieties like Granny Smith, Cripps Pink, Honeycrisp, Braeburn, and Fuji all hold their shape well and provide the acidity that balances the sweet brown sugar topping. Avoid soft, starchy varieties like Red Delicious, which turn to mush rather than holding a bite. A combination of two or three varieties gives you the most interesting flavor and varied texture.

How do I store leftover apple crisp?

Allow it to cool completely, wrap well in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for up to one week. For longer storage, freeze for up to two months. Reheat in a 350°F conventional oven — not convection, which will burn the topping before the filling warms through.

scooping easy apple crisp.

Favorite Recipes Made With Apples

If you tried this recipe and loved it please leave a 🌟 star rating and let me know how it goes in the comments below. I love hearing from you; your comments make my day!

apple hand pie broken open on parchment paper.
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baked apple crisp being dished.
5 from 49 ratings

Easy Apple Crisp Recipe

A classic apple crisp with a tart cinnamon apple filling and a thick, buttery brown sugar oat topping.
Prep: 20 minutes
Cook: 55 minutes
Total: 1 hour 15 minutes
Servings: 12 servings

Ingredients 
 

Apple Filling

Oat Topping

Makes: 8 x 8inch rectangle

Instructions 

  • Combine sliced apples, lemon juice, lemon zest, granulated sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, and salt in a medium bowl. Stir to coat evenly. Cover and refrigerate for at least 1½ hours, stirring occasionally.
  • Preheat the oven to 350°F with the rack in the middle.
  • In a medium bowl, stir together brown sugar, flour, and oats. Add cold butter cubes and toss to coat. Work the butter into the dry ingredients by hand, squeezing and mashing until the mixture clumps together with only a few remaining butter pieces. Work quickly to keep the butter cold.
  • Give the apples one final stir and pour into an 8-inch square baking dish. Cover with the streusel topping, pressing some down into the apples. Use as much or as little as you like.
  • Bake for 45 to 50 minutes, until the topping is deep golden brown and the filling is bubbling at the sides. For very soft apples, bake an additional 10 to 15 minutes.
  • Cool on a wire rack for 10 minutes. Serve warm with vanilla ice cream.

Video

Notes

Maceration: Letting the apples sit in the sugar for at least 1½ hours draws out moisture and produces a saucy, bubbling filling. Skipping this step is the most common reason apple crisp comes out dry.
Doneness: The crisp is ready when the topping is deep golden brown and the filling is actively bubbling out at the sides. If only the top is browned, keep baking.
Apples: Use tart varieties like Granny Smith, Cripps Pink, or Honeycrisp. Avoid Red Delicious, which turns to mush. A mix of two or three varieties gives the best flavor and texture.
Storage: Cool completely, wrap well in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for up to one week or freeze for up to two months. Reheat in a 350°F conventional oven until warmed through. Do not use convection, as it will scorch the topping before the filling heats.

Nutrition

Calories: 221kcal | Carbohydrates: 37g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 8g | Saturated Fat: 5g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.5g | Monounsaturated Fat: 2g | Trans Fat: 0.3g | Cholesterol: 20mg | Sodium: 56mg | Potassium: 111mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 25g | Vitamin A: 265IU | Vitamin C: 3mg | Calcium: 26mg | Iron: 1mg
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Calories: 221
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Before You Go

If this apple crisp earns a spot in your regular rotation, I hope you find something equally worth making in my Dessert Recipes or make these apple pie cookies next! There is always something new to bake.

Hi, I’m Chef Lindsey!

I am the baker, recipe developer, writer, and photographer behind Chef Lindsey Farr. I believe in delicious homemade food and the power of dessert!

5 from 49 votes (44 ratings without comment)

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54 Comments

  1. You just took apple crisp to a whole new level…I LOVE it! This looks amazing. I just want to dive right into this for breakfast. Peanut butter is the perfect addition and you really nailed this! I always think about eating crisps for breakfast when I have them in the house! This looks fantastic! Love the peanut butter!

  2. I had seen brown sugar apples on TV and looked into it and WOW! I found your recipe for Mom’s Brown Sugar Crisp and thought I’ll give my family a big surprise and make them some….

  3. I made this apple crisp for Easter brunch and it was delicious!! I didn’t add any lemon zest (ran out!), and I doubled the filling with an extra teaspoon of cinnamon, and 1.5x the topping with some roughly chopped pecans. It was SO delicious!! Thanks for this great recipe!
    I also love how easy crisp is to make gluten free, so it’s suitable for everyone!

  4. This is just how I like my crisps! With tons of topping! Your mom’s recipe sounds amazing Lindsey. Can’t wait to try it. 🙂

  5. Oh, boy…this definitely looks like the ultimate apple crisp!! Suddenly I’m feeling the need to break out the ice cream. 😀