Banana Crumble — The Easiest Warm Dessert You’ll Make All Year

Servings: 6 Total Time: 35 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Warm caramelized bananas, a buttery oat crumble, and a scoop of ice cream — this is comfort dessert at its finest.
Overhead close-up of golden banana crumble topped with a melting scoop of vanilla ice cream in a white ceramic baking dish pinit

You know that moment when you’re staring at a bunch of overripe bananas on your counter and you’re trying to decide whether to make banana bread — again — or just toss them? Yeah, I’ve been there more times than I can count. This time, I did something better. I made banana crumble, and honestly, I’m a little annoyed it took me this long to figure it out.

This dessert is everything. Warm, caramelized bananas on the bottom, a buttery golden oat crumble on top, and a scoop of vanilla ice cream that melts into every crack and crevice the moment it hits the dish. It’s the kind of dessert that makes people think you put in way more effort than you actually did. And I’m completely fine with that.

If you’ve never made a crumble before, this is the one to start with. Simple ingredients, one baking dish, and about 35 minutes between you and one of the best desserts you’ll make all year.

Why you’ll love this recipe

It rescues those overripe bananas sitting on your counter. You know the ones. Spotted, soft, and getting more questionable by the hour. Those are actually the perfect bananas for this recipe. The riper they are, the sweeter and more flavorful your crumble will be. Consider this their redemption arc.

It’s on the table in 35 minutes. No chilling, no resting, no complicated techniques. You prep the filling, mix the crumble topping, layer everything in a baking dish, and let the oven do the rest. It’s genuinely one of the fastest warm desserts you can make from scratch.

The ingredient list is short and simple. Everything in this recipe is a pantry staple. Oats, butter, brown sugar, cinnamon, flour, and bananas — that’s the core of it. No specialty ingredients, no grocery store scavenger hunt. You probably have most of this already sitting in your kitchen.

You don’t need any special equipment. No stand mixer, no food processor, no bain-marie. A mixing bowl, a fork, and a baking dish. That’s it. This is the kind of recipe that proves you don’t need fancy tools to make something that tastes genuinely impressive.

It’s a crowd-pleaser every single time. Whether you’re making this for a weeknight family dessert or bringing something to a dinner party, this crumble delivers. Warm fruit desserts with a crunchy topping and ice cream have a near-universal approval rating. IMO, it’s basically impossible to go wrong here.

It’s incredibly easy to customize. Want to add a handful of blueberries or sliced strawberries to the banana base? Go for it. Prefer walnuts over pecans in the topping? No problem. Like things a little spicier? Add a pinch of nutmeg or cardamom. This recipe is a solid foundation that welcomes your own twist.

Ingredients with key notes

For the banana filling:

  • 4 to 5 ripe bananas, sliced into rounds — The riper the better here. You want bananas that are heavily spotted or even fully brown. They’ll be sweeter, softer, and much more flavorful once baked. Firm, yellow bananas won’t give you the same depth of flavor.
  • 2 tablespoons brown sugar — This helps the bananas caramelize beautifully as they bake. You can reduce this slightly if your bananas are very ripe and already very sweet.
  • 1 tablespoon melted butter — Just enough to coat the bananas and encourage that golden caramelization on the bottom.
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract — Don’t skip this. It rounds out the sweetness and adds warmth to the banana filling.
  • 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon — Cinnamon and banana are one of those combinations that just make sense. It adds a gentle spiced warmth that runs through every bite.
  • A pinch of salt — Salt in a dessert recipe always raises eyebrows, but it’s essential. It sharpens all the other flavors and keeps the sweetness from feeling flat.

For the oat crumble topping:

  • 1 cup rolled oats — Use old-fashioned rolled oats, not instant oats. Instant oats will turn mushy in the oven. Rolled oats give you that satisfying crunch that makes a crumble worth eating.
  • 1/2 cup all-purpose flour — This binds the crumble topping together and helps it crisp up in the oven. For a gluten-free version, a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend works well here.
  • 1/2 cup brown sugar, packed — Packed brown sugar gives the topping its chewy, slightly caramel-like sweetness. Don’t swap this for white sugar — you’ll lose a lot of the flavor complexity.
  • 1/3 cup cold butter, cubed — Cold butter is the key to a good crumble topping. It needs to stay in small pieces as you work it into the dry ingredients, creating that crumbly, uneven texture once baked. If your butter is too warm, the topping will bake flat instead of crumbly.
  • 1/2 cup chopped pecans — Pecans add a nutty richness and extra crunch to the topping. Walnuts work just as well if that’s what you have. If you’re nut-free, just leave them out — the crumble is still excellent without them.
  • 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
  • A pinch of salt

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1: Preheat and prep your dish

Preheat your oven to 375 degrees F / 190 degrees C. Lightly grease a medium baking dish (an 8×8 or similar size works perfectly) with butter or a quick spray of cooking oil. This prevents the banana filling from sticking to the bottom and makes serving a lot easier.

Step 2: Make the banana filling

Slice your bananas into rounds about half an inch thick and add them to a mixing bowl. Add the brown sugar, melted butter, vanilla extract, cinnamon, and a pinch of salt. Toss everything together gently until the bananas are evenly coated. Pour the mixture into your prepared baking dish and spread it out into an even layer.

Step 3: Make the crumble topping

In a separate mixing bowl, combine the rolled oats, flour, brown sugar, cinnamon, chopped pecans, and a pinch of salt. Add the cold cubed butter and use your fingertips to work it into the dry ingredients. You’re pressing and rubbing the butter into the mixture until it starts to come together in uneven clumps. It should look rough and crumbly — that’s exactly what you want. Don’t overmix it or try to make it look uniform.

Step 4: Assemble and bake

Scatter the crumble topping evenly over the banana filling. Don’t press it down — you want it loose and uneven so it bakes up with plenty of craggy, crunchy bits on top. Place the dish in the preheated oven and bake for 25 minutes, or until the topping is deep golden brown and the banana filling is bubbling around the edges.

Step 5: Rest and serve

Let the crumble sit for 5 minutes out of the oven before serving. This gives the filling a moment to settle so it’s not completely liquid when you spoon it out. Serve warm, straight from the baking dish, with a generous scoop of vanilla ice cream on top. Watch the ice cream melt into the crumble and try not to eat it straight out of the dish. No promises it’s easy. :/

Serving suggestions

This banana crumble is honestly great on its own, but here are a few ways to serve it that take it to the next level:

  • Vanilla ice cream — This is the classic pairing and for good reason. The cold, creamy ice cream against the warm crumble is one of those combinations that’s hard to beat. Get a good quality vanilla here because it matters.
  • Whipped cream — A generous dollop of freshly whipped cream keeps things a little lighter than ice cream while still adding that creamy contrast the crumble needs.
  • Caramel sauce drizzle — A drizzle of salted caramel sauce over the top turns this from a simple weeknight dessert into something that feels genuinely indulgent. The salt cuts through the sweetness beautifully.
  • A sprinkle of toasted coconut — If you want to add a little tropical twist, a handful of toasted coconut flakes scattered on top works surprisingly well with the banana base.
  • With a cup of coffee or tea — For a low-key dessert moment, a warm bowl of banana crumble with your evening coffee or tea is a genuinely underrated combination. Cozy doesn’t even begin to cover it.

Storage tips

At room temperature: If you plan on finishing this the same day — which, let’s be honest, you probably will — you can cover the dish loosely and leave it at room temperature for up to 8 hours.

Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days. The topping will soften slightly overnight as it absorbs moisture from the filling, but the flavor stays great.

Reheating: Reheat individual portions in the microwave for 30 to 45 seconds, or warm the whole dish in a 350 degree F oven for about 10 minutes. If you want to bring some of the crunch back to the topping, the oven is your best bet — the microwave will soften it.

Freezer: This crumble can be frozen, though the texture of the topping changes a bit after thawing. If you do freeze it, let it cool completely first, wrap it well, and freeze for up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge and reheat in the oven.

Make-ahead tip: You can prep the crumble topping and the banana filling separately up to a day in advance and store them in the fridge. When you’re ready to bake, just assemble and pop it in the oven. Great if you’re making this for guests and want to minimize last-minute kitchen time.

A quick note before you go

Some of the best recipes aren’t complicated. They’re just honest — a few good ingredients treated with a little care, baked until golden, and served warm to people you love. This banana crumble is exactly that.

It started as a way to use up bananas I was about to toss, and it turned into one of the most requested desserts in my kitchen. That’s the thing about simple food done right — it has a way of sticking around.

Make it this week. Serve it warm. Don’t skip the ice cream.

With gratitude, Kip

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 10 mins Cook Time 25 mins Total Time 35 mins
Servings: 6 Estimated Cost: $ 9
Best Season: Fall, Winter

Description

This Banana Crumble layers sweet, soft bananas with a crispy golden oat and pecan topping, baked until bubbling and served warm with vanilla ice cream. It comes together in 35 minutes using pantry staples you already have, making it the perfect last-minute dessert that tastes anything but last-minute.

Ingredients

For the banana filling:

For the oat crumble topping:

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees F / 190 degrees C. Lightly grease a medium baking dish.
  2. Slice bananas and toss with brown sugar, melted butter, vanilla, cinnamon, and salt. Pour into the prepared dish and spread evenly.
  3. In a bowl, combine oats, flour, brown sugar, cinnamon, pecans, and salt. Work in the cold cubed butter with your fingertips until the mixture forms rough, uneven clumps.
  4. Scatter the crumble topping evenly over the banana filling. Do not press it down.
  5. Bake for 25 minutes until the topping is deep golden brown and the filling is bubbling at the edges.
  6. Rest for 5 minutes before serving warm with vanilla ice cream.
Keywords: banana crumble, easy banana dessert, banana crisp, oat crumble recipe, quick banana dessert, warm dessert recipe, overripe banana recipe, banana crumble with ice cream
Did you make this recipe?

Tag #recipesbykip and #deliciousrecipesbykip if you made this recipe. Follow @recipesbykip on Instagram for more recipes.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:

What type of bananas work best for this recipe?

Overripe bananas are your best friend here. You want ones that are heavily spotted, soft to the touch, and almost past the point where you'd eat them fresh. The more ripe the banana, the sweeter and more intensely flavored your filling will be. Firm, barely-ripe bananas don't have enough natural sugar or softness to caramelize properly in the oven, and the filling will end up tasting flat.

Can I make this crumble gluten-free?

Yes, and it's a straightforward swap. Replace the all-purpose flour in the crumble topping with a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend. Also make sure your rolled oats are certified gluten-free since standard oats are sometimes processed in facilities that handle wheat. Everything else in the recipe is naturally gluten-free, so those two substitutions are all you need.

 

Can I make this ahead of time?

You can prep everything in advance and store the filling and topping separately in the fridge for up to 24 hours. When you're ready to serve, assemble the dish and bake as directed. This is a great approach if you're making this for guests — you get all the freshness of a just-baked crumble without any last-minute stress in the kitchen.

Can I add other fruits to the banana base?

Absolutely. Banana pairs really well with a number of other fruits. Blueberries, sliced strawberries, diced mango, or even thinly sliced apples all work beautifully alongside the banana base. If you add a firmer fruit like apple, just make sure to slice it thin so it has enough time to soften fully during the 25-minute bake. Softer fruits like berries can go straight in without any adjustments.

Do I have to use pecans in the topping?

Not at all. Pecans add a great nutty richness and crunch, but the crumble topping works perfectly without them too. Walnuts are a great substitute if that's what you have on hand. If you need a nut-free version, just leave them out entirely — the oat and butter crumble is still delicious and plenty crunchy on its own.

A self-taught Cook, Filmmaker, and Creative Director

Most days you can find me in the kitchen experimenting with new recipes or behind my camera capturing the stories food tells. What I’m most passionate about is creating dishes that are quick, comforting, and surprisingly healthy—and sharing them with you.

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