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Apple crisp (US, or apple crumble in the UK and Canada) is a dessert made with a streusel topping. Ingredients usually include cooked apples, butter, sugar, flour, and cinnamon. The earliest reference to apple crisp in print occurs in 1924. Other similar desserts include apple Brown Betty, apple cobbler, apple pan dowdy, apple pie, and Eve's pudding.
Apple crisp with a scoop of vanilla ice cream | |
| Alternative names | Apple crumble |
|---|---|
| Region or state | Everybody's Cookbook: US |
| Main ingredients | |
Recipe
editAn apple crisp dessert is made with a streusel topping.[1] In the US, it is also called apple crumble, a word which refers to a different dessert in the UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.[2][3][4]
Ingredients usually include cooked apples, butter, sugar, flour, cinnamon, and often oats[5] and brown sugar, ginger or nutmeg.[1] One of the most common variants is apple rhubarb crisp, in which the rhubarb provides a tart contrast to the apples.[citation needed]
History
editApple crisp is a relatively modern dish. It is notably absent from the first edition of the Fannie Farmer Cookbook (1896), which is a comprehensive collection of American recipes. Variations of this dish are much older, for example, a recipe for apple pandowdy is in Miss Corson's Practical American Cookery, 1886.[6]
An early reference to a crumble-style topping was a recipe for apple crumble in the Canadian Farmer's Magazine in February 1917.[7] The earliest reference to apple crisp specifically in print occurs in 1924, with a recipe in Isabel Ely Lord's Everybody's Cook Book: A Comprehensive Manual of Home Cookery.[8] Apple crisp also made an appearance in a newspaper article in the Appleton Post Crescent on December 9, 1924.[9]
The related British dish, apple crumble, developed separately. British chef and food writer Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall describes crumbles as a "national institution" that became popular in the United Kingdom after World War II, the crumble topping a simpler practical alternative to the pastry required for apple pie.[10]
Despite their relatively recent invention, apple crisp and apple crumble have each become culinary traditions in their respective countries, particularly during autumn when apples are plentiful.[citation needed] Both dishes are also popular in Canada, especially in areas where berries and fruit are readily available.[citation needed] While apple is the most common filling, the format lends itself to a wide variety of fruits depending on the season, including rhubarb in spring, soft fruits such as gooseberries, raspberries and blackberries in summer, and plums and pears in autumn.[11]
Similar dishes
editMany other kinds of fruit crisps are also made, these may substitute other fruits, such as peaches, berries, or pears, for the apples. There are a number of desserts that employ apples with sweet toppings, but none of them are the same as apple crisp, making them not so much variants, but instead other related apple desserts.
- Apple Brown Betty (or apple pudding) consists of alternating layers of apples and sweetened buttered bread crumbs or crackers, often with a sauce.
- Apple cobbler (also known as apple slump, apple grunt, and apple pandowdy) is an old recipe in which the baked apples are topped with a cobbler crust formed of batter, pie crust or baking powder biscuit dough. The topping may be dropped onto the top of the apples in clumps, which have a 'cobbled' appearance, thus the name. A 'grunt' is a cobbler cooked on top of the stove and a 'slump' is fruit and biscuit dumplings which is turned upside down after being baked so that the fruit is slumped into the fruit with a fork.[12]
- Apple crumble is a British pudding similar to the apple crisp. The crumble topping is made of butter, flour, and brown sugar rolled together so that it resembles breadcrumbs. Care must be taken to balance the correct amount of crumble with the fruit, or else the filling may seep through and spoil this crust. Crumble is traditionally served with custard, but today it is sometimes served with cream or ice cream. Crumbles made from apples, and sometimes other fruits, are also common in Australia, New Zealand and Ireland.
- Apple pan dowdy most commonly features a pie crust, which is broken ("dowdied") before serving: it is a pie, not a cobbler.
- Apple pie is a pie in which the principal filling is apples. It is generally double-crusted, with pastry both above and below the filling, though may have a crumble or streusel topping.[13][14]
- Eve's pudding is a British dessert that is essentially a sponge cake atop the apples. The name may originate from the biblical reference to Eve and the apple in the Garden of Eden.
See also
editReferences
edit- 1 2 Leggett, Liz (3 May 2011). "Apple Crisp". Canadian Living. Retrieved 24 July 2024.
- ↑ Ezinearticles.com Jason McDonald, December 29, 2008[full citation needed]
- ↑ Fong, Irene (August 2015). "Plum and Nectarine Crumble". Canadian Living. p. 103. Retrieved 30 January 2025.
- ↑ Grunes, Barbara J. (1991). Puddings and Pies. Yankee Books. pp. 136–137. ISBN 0-89909-329-9.
- ↑ "Apple Crisp | Traditional Dessert from United States of America | TasteAtlas".
- ↑ Corson, Juliet (1886). Miss Corson's Practical American Cookery. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company. p. 485. Retrieved 30 January 2025.
- ↑ "The Month's Recipes – Apple Crumble". Farmer's Magazine. Vol. X, no. 4. Toronto: MacLean Publishing Co. Ltd. February 1917. p. 53. Retrieved 2 June 2023 – via the Internet Archive.
- ↑ Lord, Isabel Ely (1924). Everybody's Cook Book: A Comprehensive Manual of Home Cookery. New York: Harcourt Brace and Company. p. 239.
- ↑ "Appleton Post Crescent". Appleton, Wisconsin. December 9, 1924.
- ↑ Fearnley-Whittingstall, Hugh (18 October 2008). "Simply the best". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 14 April 2010.
- ↑ Smith, Delia. "The Best Ever Apple Crumble". Delia Online. Retrieved 19 April 2026.
- ↑ Grunes, Barbara J. (1991). Puddings and Pies. Yankee Books. p. 134. ISBN 0-89909-329-9.
- ↑ "Dutch Apple Pie". Stemilt. 17 October 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
- ↑ "Dutch Apple Pie". Brown Eyed Baker. 15 September 2010. Archived from the original on 8 January 2012. Retrieved 5 November 2013. Adapted from Baking Illustrated.
External links
edit
Media related to Apple crisps at Wikimedia Commons
Apple Crisp at the Wikibooks Cookbook subproject- Food Timeline history Notes: Apple Pie