How Do You Make Apple Crisp?

An outstanding, homemade apple crisp starts with the right choice of apple.

"How Do You Make Apple Crisp?" from Make It Like a Man!

You need a baking apple,[1] but within that framework, you have a lot of choices, especially in the fall, when stores are overflowing with fresh apples. It can be hard to choose, but fortunately, you don’t have to single it down to just one. You can choose a couple different varieties if you want, and develop your own signature blend. Choosing large apples will help make your prep quick and easy. Next, you’ll want to add sugar and cinnamon to the apples – how much is really a matter of taste. Finally, the streusel topping: 1-2-3-4: 1 part brown sugar + 2 parts butter + 3 parts flour + 4 parts oats. Some people like lots of topping, other prefer less.

That simple formula is the backbone of the following recipe.

Serves a definite 8 if accompanied by ice cream, 6-8 if not
Ingredients
"How Do You Make Apple Crisp?" from Make It Like a Man!

World’s Best Apple Crisp

3 lbs baking apples (about 7 med-to-large apples), peeled, cored, and cut into ½-inch chunks or thin slices
2 tsp fresh lemon juice
¾ tsp ground cinnamon
½ cup + 2 Tbs granulated sugar
¾-1 cup all-purpose flour[2]
¼-⅓ cup packed brown sugar
½ tsp salt
8 Tbs (1 stick) butter, cold, cut into small cubes
1-1⅓ cups old-fashioned rolled oats (not quick-cooking)

Directions

1. Preheat oven to 375˚F. In large bowl, toss apples with lemon juice, cinnamon, and ½-cup granulated sugar. Transfer to a shallow 2-quart baking dish.[3] Use a rubber spatula to scrape all the juices from the bowl into the dish. 2. Using the same bowl you used for the apples, mix together flour, brown sugar, salt, and remaining 2 Tbs granulated sugar. Cut butter into flour mixture until mixture is the texture of coarse meal. Add oats, and use your hands to toss and lightly squeeze mixture until large clumps form. Sprinkle topping mixture over apples. 3. Bake until the crisp is golden, and the apples are bubbling[4] and offer almost no resistance to a fork, 55 to 65 minutes. Let cool at least 10 minutes before serving.[5]

That’s it! Making apple crisp is that simple. The rest of the information in this post is just food for thought.

Crisp vs. Pie:

"How Do You Make Apple Crisp?" from Make It Like a Man!

Best Apple Crisp Recipe Ever

  1. Most crisps don’t incorporate a thickener into the apples. Hence, you should expect a crisp’s filling to be looser and wetter than pie filling. I vacillate on this point. I love the simplicity of a juicy filling, as well as the way it complements the dry crunch of the topping. But I also love the richness of pie filling and consider oat topping to be a refreshing alternative to pie crust. So sometimes I use a thickener and other times I don’t. When I do, it’s a Tbs of cornstarch, tossed in with the sugar and cinnamon.
  2. Some crisps call for dicing the apples, while pretty much all pies call for slicing.
  3. Spices run the gamut, although there is a general tendency for crisps to use a single spice (almost invariably cinnamon) rather than a blend, and less spice than a pie, putting the flavor focus on the freshness of the apple. I like to go both ways. Three-ways, sometimes: firstly, I think ¾-tsp of cinnamon is perfect. Sometimes, I’ll decrease that to ½-tsp, which results in more of a cinnamon scent than flavor. However, I’ll now and then stick with the ¾, and add ¼-tsp nutmeg and maybe a pinch of clove. The added spices push the crisp into pie territory, and, although I wouldn’t want crisp to establish settlements there, I enjoy the occasional incursion.
  4. Unlike pie crust, apple crisp topping likes to be exclusively on top. But now and then, the apples are, like, “Really? We think we have a headache.” So I take about ⅓ of the topping and spank it onto the bottom of the baking dish (in which case you should butter the dish beforehand). The apple juices wind up baking into this part of the topping in a particularly delicious way.

Improv:

"How Do You Make Apple Crisp?" from Make It Like a Man!

Apple Crisp Dessert with Oatmeal Topping

Making apple crisp from scratch is a simple, straightforward process. It’s easy to imagine it as a platform for improv, if you don’t mind leaving tradition behind. Apple gets along with nearly everything; feel free to replace a few big fistfuls of the apple with rhubarb, cranberries, blueberries, cherries, pear … any fruit that won’t disintegrate in the oven. Oatmeal is equally friendly. You could throw nearly any kind of chopped nut into it. You might even wind up going half nuts. Walnut is a common apple pairing, but consider out-of-the-ordinary options like Brazil nuts. Finally, consider experimenting with the spices.[6] Peruse a variety of baked apple recipes for inspiration. Also consider vanilla, rum, or citrus zest.

Notes:

[1] Baking Apples: Cortland and Honeycrisp are often recommended for crisps. I love them both, but think the Cortland is extraordinary. Empire, Golden Delicious, Granny Smith, Jonathan, and Mutsu (Crispin) are often recommended for pies. But don’t overlook Gala, Michigan Russet, or Orin. I don’t distinguish between “crisp” and “pie” apples, and would use any of these. I especially love a 50/50 mixture of Granny Smith and Honeycrisp.
[2] Apple-to-Crisp Ratio: for the flour, brown sugar, and oats, I’ve given a range of measurements. Use the smaller measurement if you like a greater apple-to-crisp ratio, the greater one if you like more crisp.
[3] 2-Quart Dish: These ingredients seem like too much for a 2-quart dish when the apples are raw, but once they cook down, the dish will be beautifully full. Try not to mound the apples. You might feel that you have to mound the oatmeal mixture at first, but make an effort at pushing toward the edges and leveling the crisp as much as feasible.
[4] Bubbling: using a glass baking dish makes this easy to see.
[5] Serving Temperature: Unlike apple pie, which I love at any temperature and maybe straight from the fridge most of all, crisp is best warm – 2nd best at room temperature. The butter in the crisp is all wrong when cold.
[6] Spices: remember that the spices don’t all have to be in the apple. If you’re going to serve the crisp with whipped cream, it’d be easy to add something like rum or nutmeg to the latter. I wish it were easy to find ice cream flavors like “cinnamon.”

"How Do You Make Apple Crisp?" from Make It Like a Man!

How Do You Make Apple Crisp?

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9 thoughts on “How Do You Make Apple Crisp?

  1. I made this, and it came out really, really well. Thanks for explaining it so well.

    • Thanks, Jaro. I must’ve made three or four of these this fall. It was such a good year for apples. Cheers!

  2. Apple crisp always is a good idea. Indeed, I usually use a blend of apples which introduces a more sophisticated flavor. And only brown sugar (golden is ok too). Thus, this recipe is the perfection in my understanding as well!

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