Some desserts are hard to improve on.
Cherry crumble is one of them. Jammy fruit underneath, a golden buttery topping, and a smell from the oven that is genuinely difficult to walk past.
Below is the full vegan recipe, plus three variations worth keeping in rotation.
The Story Behind Cherry Crumble
The crumble as a dessert is widely believed to have originated among home cooks in Britain during World War II.
Rationing made pastry nearly impossible – no excess butter, no elaborate techniques.
Home cooks worked with what they had: flour, fat, sugar, fruit. That was it.
What started as a practical workaround became one of the most enduring British desserts — which says something about simplicity done right.
Best Cherries to Use for Cherry Crumble
The cherry you choose matters more than most people think.
Different cherries bring different sweetness, tartness, and moisture levels to the filling. And each needs slight adjustments.
Fresh Cherries: Best when in season. Morello and sour cherries work especially well; their sharpness cuts through the buttery topping nicely.
Frozen Cherries: A solid choice all year round. Just add an extra half teaspoon of cornflour; frozen cherries release more liquid as they bake.
Sweet vs. Tart Cherries: Sweet cherries give a rich filling. Tart ones add acidity. For the best result, mix two-thirds sweet and one-third tart.
How to Make Vegan Crumble
alt text: Close up of a scoop being taken from a warm cherry crisp topped with oats and pecans in a white baking dish on a rustic wooden surface
Cherry crumble adapts well to a vegan version.
The swap from butter to cold coconut oil or vegan butter changes very little about the final texture, provided it goes in cold.
Ingredients that You’ll Need
| For Cherry Filling | Quantity | For Vegan Crumble Topping | Quantity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresh or frozen cherries, pitted | 800g | Plain flour (or gluten-free blend) | 180g |
| Coconut sugar | 2 tbsp | Cold coconut oil or vegan butter, cubed | 90g |
| Cornflour | 1 tbsp | Rolled oats (certified vegan) | 75g |
| Vanilla extract | 1 tsp | Coconut sugar or light brown sugar | 80g |
| Lemon juice | 1 small squeeze | Flaked almonds or chopped walnuts | 40g |
Step 1. Prepare Your Cherries
Pit your cherries and toss them with the coconut sugar, cornflour, vanilla, and lemon juice.
I always make sure every cherry gets a good coating, and the cornflour thickens those gorgeous juices into a sauce rather than a watery puddle at the bottom of the dish.
Pour the mixture into a baking dish.
Step 2: Make the Crumble Topping
Add the flour, cold coconut oil or vegan butter, oats, sugar, salt, and nuts into a large bowl.
Rub the fat into the dry ingredients with your fingertips until the mixture resembles coarse, uneven breadcrumbs.
Keep some bigger pieces in there. Those are the bits that go properly crunchy on top.
Step 3: Place the Topping Over Crumble
Scatter the topping over the cherry filling.
Keep it loose — a packed topping bakes unevenly and loses the open, crunchy texture that makes a crumble worth eating.
It feels instinctive to press it flat. Resist that. Loose and uneven is always better here.
Step 4: Bake
Bake at 190°C (375°F) for 35–40 minutes.
Look for a deep golden topping and cherry juices bubbling up at the edges. I always go by color rather than the clock.
Pale crumble means underdone, and underdone means soft and a bit stodgy.
Aim for that topping to be the color of a digestive biscuit, maybe slightly darker.
Step 5: Let it Rest and Serve
Pull it out of the oven and leave it for at least ten minutes before serving.
Most people want to go straight in, but letting it rest allows the filling to settle and cool to a temperature that actually lets you taste it properly.
Serve with coconut cream, dairy-free ice cream, or on its own.
Three Cherry Crumble Variations
It fits perfectly with a little alteration.
There are a few variations I keep coming back to, and they are simple enough to try on any given weekend.
Cherry and Almond Crumble
alt text: Close up of bubbling cherry crisp topped with oat crumble, whole almonds, and sliced almonds overflowing slightly from a white ramekin
Add a small splash of almond extract to the cherry filling and scatter flaked almonds through the topping.
The nuttiness balances the tartness of the cherries in a way that feels like it was always meant to be there, not a modification, just a better version of itself.
Cherry and Dark Chocolate Crumble
alt text: Close up of a warm cherry and chocolate crumble topped with toasted oats, served in a rustic white baking dish
Chop some dark chocolate (70% or above works best) and fold it into the cherry filling before adding the topping.
It bakes into something rich and fudgy underneath the crumble, with the bitterness of the chocolate cutting through the sweetness of the cherries.
Hard to stop at one serving.
Morello Cherry Crumble
alt text: Warm morello cherry crumble topped with vanilla ice cream sits in a white fluted dish on a rustic wooden surface next to a silver spoon
Morello is worth trying at least once
Morello cherries are tart. Properly tart. That sharp, almost wine-like quality they carry is exactly what makes them so good in a baked crumble.
It cuts right through the buttery, golden topping.
The filling runs a deeper, darker red than you’d get with sweet cherries — and that intensity carries through to the flavor.
Worth making at least once before you settle on a preferred version.
Final Thoughts
Cherry crumble is one of those recipes that don’t ask much effort and give back a lot.
Be it the classic version on a Sunday afternoon or trying the vegan twist on a weeknight, the result is always the same.
Something comforting, homemade, and satisfying.
What I find most lovely about it is that it hasn’t needed reinventing. Trends come and go, but a golden crumble straight from the oven still catches the eye of dessert lovers.
And that’s a rare thing.
Frequently Answered Questions (FAQs)
1. What is the Secret to a Good Crumble Topping?
Cold butter, rubbed in roughly. Look for uneven, clumpy pieces, not fine crumbs. Those bigger bits are what turn golden and crunchy in the oven. Don’t overwork it.
2. What are the Common Mistakes When Making Crumble?
Skipping cornflour in the filling, using room-temperature butter, pressing the topping down flat, and pulling it out of the oven too early. All easy fixes once you know.
3. Does Cherry Crumble Need to be Refrigerated?
Yes. Once cooled, cover and refrigerate. It keeps well for up to three days and reheats nicely in the oven at 160°C for around 15 minutes.



