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Homemade Apple Crumble

Golden, bubbling, and completely forgiving. The pudding that never lets you down – and let’s be honest – you just can’t beat a proper homemade apple crumble.

A good apple crumble is one of the great joys of British cooking. This one has a rough, craggy, buttery topping – the kind with visible lumps of butter and uneven bits that catch and go deeply golden in the oven – and a warmly spiced fruit filling that works with pretty much whatever you have to hand. It’s the kind of recipe you’ll come back to again and again.

Makes 5 – 6 portions | Prep time: 20 mins | Cook time: 45 mins


How make Homemade Apple Crumble

Ingredients:

For the fruit filling: 6 – 8 apples – a mix of cooking and eating works brilliantly, cinnamon, nutmeg and demerara sugar (to taste), 2 tbsp water

Optional additions: Sultanas, fozen berries

For the crumble topping: 300g plain flour, 150g cold butter (cubed), 150g Demerara sugar, generous pinch of sea salt

To serve: Custard, vanilla ice cream, clotted cream – or all three. No judgement whatsoever.


Method:

Prepare the fruit. Peel the cooking apples and leave the skins on the eating ones for texture. Roughly chop and tip into your baking dish. Next, add any extras – sultanas, frozen berries, whatever you fancy. Sprinkle over the cinnamon, nutmeg and a little Demerara sugar, then add the water and stir until everything is lightly coated. Just remember not to add too much liquid – the fruit will release plenty of moisture as it cooks.

Make the topping. First, rub the cold butter into the flour with your fingertips until it resembles rough, shaggy breadcrumbs. You want lumps of butter still visible, that’s exactly what you’re after. Then stir through the Demerara and salt. Don’t overwork it.

Assemble and bake. Next, roughly scatter the topping over the fruit, keeping it loose and uneven. Don’t press it down – those craggy bits are exactly what you want. Finally, bake at 170°C for around 45 minutes until deeply golden on top and bubbling at the edges. Keep an eye on it towards the end.

Serve warm with custard, vanilla ice cream, clotted cream, or an indulgent combination of all three.


A few notes:

Cold butter is non-negotiable for a good crumble topping – warm butter will make it greasy rather than crumbly. If your kitchen is warm, pop the cubed butter back in the fridge for ten minutes before you start.

The Demerara sugar is worth seeking out over caster. It gives the topping a slightly caramelised crunch that makes a real difference. Leftovers reheat beautifully the next day. If anything, it’s even better.

This recipe is completely forgiving. Pears, rhubarb, frozen berries, sultanas – anything goes. Use what you have, trust your instincts, and don’t stress the measurements on the fruit. Just fill the dish.

And if you’re building the ultimate Sunday menu, you could pair this with my perfect roast chicken recipe and create an indulgent, comforting roast dinner from scratch.

Homemade apple crumble

Homemade Apple Crumble

Golden, bubbling, and completely forgiving. The pudding that never lets you down.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes
Total Time 1 hour 5 minutes
Servings: 6
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: British

Ingredients
  

For the filling
  • 6 – 8 Whole Apples Mixture of cooking and eating
  • 1 tsp Cinnamon
  • 1 tsp Nutmeg
  • 2 tbsp Water
Optional extras
  • Sultanas
  • Frozen berries
For the crumble topping
  • 300 grams Plain flour
  • 150 grams Salted butter
  • 150 grams Demerara sugar
  • 1 pinch Sea salt
To serve
  • Cream, ice-cream or custard

Method
 

  1. Prepare the fruit. Peel the cooking apples and leave the skins on the eating ones for texture. Roughly chop and tip into your baking dish. Add any extras – sultanas, frozen berries, whatever you fancy. Sprinkle over the cinnamon, nutmeg and a little Demerara sugar, add the water and stir until everything is lightly coated. Don't add too much liquid – the fruit will release plenty of moisture as it cooks.
  2. Make the topping. Rub the cold butter into the flour with your fingertips until it resembles rough, shaggy breadcrumbs – you want lumps of butter still visible, that's exactly what you're after. Stir through the Demerara and salt. Don't overwork it.
  3. Assemble and bake. Roughly scatter the topping over the fruit, keeping it loose and uneven. Don't press it down – those craggy bits are exactly what you want. Bake at 170°C for around 45 minutes until deeply golden on top and bubbling at the edges. Keep an eye on it towards the end.
  4. Serve warm with custard, vanilla ice cream, clotted cream, or an indulgent combination of all three.

Notes

Cold butter is non-negotiable for a good crumble topping – warm butter will make it greasy rather than crumbly. If your kitchen is warm, pop the cubed butter back in the fridge for ten minutes before you start.
The Demerara sugar is worth seeking out over caster – it gives the topping a slightly caramelised crunch that makes a real difference.
Leftovers reheat beautifully the next day. If anything, it’s even better. This recipe is completely forgiving. Pears, rhubarb, frozen berries, sultanas – anything goes. Use what you have, trust your instincts, and don’t stress the measurements on the fruit. Just fill the dish.

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