A variation of my grain-free fruit crumble is featured in my first book UnDiet, called the All Season Fruit Crumble for the very awesome reason that you can literally use whatever fruit is in season to make it – berries, peaches, pears, apples, etc. (Please refrain from experimenting with watermelons.)
This has been a summer staple in my family for ten years. It was actually one of the very first recipes I ever created, if I can even call it creating. Most crumble recipes are very similar. What makes this one super awesome is that it’s simple, hard to get wrong, and uses dramatically less sugar than most common crumble recipes. I don’t consume much sugar at all, and though this recipe does call for some honey in the fruit mix and the crumble topping, I typically omit it completely and just let the fruit do the sweetness dance.
I’ve also provided two versions below – one that is gluten-free, and a gluten-free and grain-free fruit crumble recipe for those of you on the grain-free train.
Five Things I love About Gluten-Free and Grain-Free Fruit Crumble
You can use virtually any combination of fruit and it never fails.
You can make it ahead and either freeze prepped or fully cooked.
You can make it in single serve ramekins or family style in one big dish.
It can double as breakfast served up with yogurt or coconut kefir.
Everyone loves fruit crumble!
I’ll often make this using an assortment of berries (strawberries, blueberries, blackberries, and raspberries) or stone fruits (plums, peaches, apricots). This is also a great one to mix in some wild foraged berries like mulberries.
In the fall, rocking it out with pears and/or apples with ginger and cinnamon offers your crumble a fall vibe.
Popular Crumble Combinations
Apple Cranberry: 5 cups of thinly sliced apples, 1 cup of fresh/frozen cranberries
Apple Berry: 3 cups of apples, 3 cups of mixed berries
Strawberry Rhubarb: 3 cups of each (strawberries halved)
Strawberry Pear: 3 cups of each
Peach Crumble: 6 cups of sliced peaches
Summer Berry Crumble: 2 cups each of strawberries, blueberries, and raspberries
Easy Gluten-Free and Grain-Free Crumble Baking Wins!
Of course, another rockstar quality of this dessert is that it’s an easy gluten-free winner. Baking gluten-free muffins, cookies and cakes is doable, but takes practice. If this is your first time out of the gates experimenting with gluten-free desserts, this will guarantee you a winner.
Now to modify my own recipe: in my book, I suggest adding a 1/2 cup of honey to the fruit mix, but personally, I prefer to skip that one. This much fresh, seasonal fruit doesn’t need any assistance in the sweetness department in my opinion.