Blueberry white chocolate blondies — the fruity twist on a classic bar you never knew you needed

Total Time: 40 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Chewy, Buttery, and Bursting with Blueberries and White Chocolate in Every Bite
A close-up overhead view of golden blueberry white chocolate blondies cut into squares showing jammy blueberry pockets and white chocolate chips throughout the crackly golden surface pinit

I did not think blondies needed improving. I really did not. They are already one of my favorite things to bake — simple, chewy, deeply satisfying in that brown sugar butter way that never gets old. But then I started folding blueberries and white chocolate chips into the batter and suddenly everything I thought I knew about blondies needed to be reconsidered.

The blueberries do something genuinely magical in the oven. They burst and become jammy and create these little pockets of sweet, slightly tart fruit throughout the chewy batter that contrast with the creamy sweetness of the white chocolate in a way that is honestly kind of hard to describe. You just have to taste it. It is the kind of combination that sounds a little unconventional until you take one bite and then it makes complete sense.

These are the bars I bring when I want to show up somewhere with something that feels a little different from the usual chocolate chip situation. People always ask what is in them. They always go back for a second one. And they always leave having asked me for the recipe. That is all I need to know about a recipe.

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • Chewy buttery blondie base with jammy blueberry pockets and creamy white chocolate in every single bite
  • The blueberry and white chocolate combination is unexpected, elegant, and completely addictive
  • One pan, one bowl, and under 40 minutes from start to finish
  • Works with fresh or frozen blueberries so you can make these year-round
  • The golden crackly top looks beautiful and completely bakery-worthy with zero extra effort
  • Simple enough for a weeknight bake but impressive enough to bring to any gathering

For the blondies:

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour — spoon and level carefully to avoid packing in more flour than needed
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 3/4 cup unsalted butter, melted and slightly cooled — melted butter gives you that signature dense, chewy blondie texture
  • 1 1/2 cups packed light brown sugar — pack it firmly; loosely measured brown sugar significantly changes both the flavor and texture
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 1 cup fresh or frozen blueberries — if using frozen, do not thaw them first
  • 1 cup white chocolate chips — divided between the batter and the top

Key notes:

  • Do not thaw frozen blueberries before adding them to the batter. Thawed blueberries release too much liquid and turn your batter purple and wet. Frozen blueberries go straight in from the freezer and hold their shape much better through baking, creating distinct jammy pockets rather than bleeding into the entire bar.
  • Fold the blueberries in last and do it gently with a rubber spatula using as few strokes as possible. Aggressive mixing will crush the berries and streak the batter purple which affects both the appearance and the texture of the finished bars.
  • White chocolate chips can go from perfectly melted to scorched fairly quickly during baking so keep an eye on the bars in the last few minutes. The top should be golden and crackly but not deeply browned.
  • Melted butter instead of softened butter is the right choice for the chewy, dense texture that makes blondies so satisfying. Let it cool for about 5 minutes before adding the eggs so the heat does not scramble them.
  • The golden crackly top that forms on these blondies is a signature feature of a well-made blondie and it comes from the brown sugar caramelizing during baking. Do not skip the proper mixing of butter and brown sugar at the start — this step contributes to that beautiful surface.

Step-by-step instructions

Step 1: Preheat your oven and prepare your pan

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F. Line a 9×13 inch baking pan with parchment paper leaving enough overhang on all sides to use as handles later, and spray lightly with cooking spray. The parchment overhang makes lifting the entire slab out of the pan clean and effortless once the blondies have cooled.

Step 2: Whisk the dry ingredients

In a medium bowl whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt until evenly combined. Set this bowl aside. Whisking the dry ingredients separately ensures they are evenly distributed before they go into the batter and prevents any uneven pockets of leavening.

Step 3: Combine the butter and brown sugar

In a large mixing bowl whisk together the melted butter and packed brown sugar until the mixture is smooth, thick, and glossy. This takes about 60 to 90 seconds of good whisking. The mixture should look uniform with no streaks of unincorporated butter. This step is important — properly combined butter and brown sugar is the foundation of the chewy texture and the crackly top.

Step 4: Add the eggs and vanilla

Add the eggs and vanilla extract to the butter and brown sugar mixture and whisk until everything is fully incorporated and the batter looks smooth and slightly lighter in color. This takes about 1 minute of whisking. Scrape down the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula to make sure nothing is sitting at the bottom unmixed.

Step 5: Fold in the dry ingredients

Add the flour mixture to the wet ingredients and use a rubber spatula to fold everything together until just combined. The batter will be thick and slightly sticky. Stop folding as soon as the flour disappears completely — a few extra folds at this stage develops gluten and moves you away from that chewy fudgy texture toward something tougher and denser in the wrong way.

Step 6: Fold in the white chocolate chips

Reserve about a third of a cup of white chocolate chips for pressing onto the top. Fold the remaining white chocolate chips into the batter with a few gentle strokes until evenly distributed. The batter is thick so take your time working the chips through it evenly.

Step 7: Gently fold in the blueberries

Add the blueberries to the batter and fold them in with the most gentle hand you can manage — three to four slow, deliberate folds is all you want here. The goal is to distribute the blueberries without crushing them. A few broken ones are inevitable and completely fine but you want most of them whole going into the pan.

Step 8: Spread the batter into the pan

Transfer the batter into your prepared pan. Use a lightly greased spatula to spread it out into an even layer all the way to the edges and corners. The batter is thick and will need a little coaxing — take your time and work it into an even layer so every bar bakes consistently.

Step 9: Top with reserved white chocolate chips

Scatter the reserved white chocolate chips evenly across the entire surface of the batter and press them down very gently. This gives the finished bars that beautiful white chocolate studded top that looks as good as it tastes and ensures white chocolate in every single bar.

Step 10: Bake

Bake for 25 to 28 minutes until the top is golden and crackly and the edges are set and pulling slightly away from the sides of the pan. The center should look just done — it will still have a very slight give if you press it gently with a finger. A toothpick inserted in the center should come out with a few moist crumbs but not wet batter. Remember that the bars continue cooking from residual heat after the pan comes out of the oven.

Step 11: Cool completely before slicing

Let the blondies cool completely in the pan on a wire rack before slicing — at least 45 minutes to an hour. This is genuinely important with blondies. Cutting into them warm gives you a gooey mess that will not hold its shape. Once fully cooled, use the parchment overhang to lift the entire slab onto a cutting board and slice into bars with a sharp knife.

Serving suggestions

These blueberry white chocolate blondies are excellent on their own but here are some ways to enjoy them even more:

  • Serve a bar slightly warm with a dollop of fresh whipped cream and a few fresh blueberries on top for a dessert that looks completely composed with almost zero extra effort
  • Pair with a cup of earl grey or chamomile tea for an afternoon treat that feels genuinely elegant without trying too hard
  • Serve alongside vanilla ice cream for a fruit and cream dessert combination that hits every note you want from a summer dessert
  • Cut into smaller squares and arrange on a platter with fresh blueberries scattered around for a beautiful, easy dessert display at a brunch or gathering
  • Dust the top lightly with powdered sugar just before serving for a simple but beautiful finishing touch that makes them look bakery-level polished
  • Pack individual bars in lunchboxes or wrap in parchment for an elevated snack that travels well and holds up at room temperature all day

Storage tips

Room temperature: Store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days. Because of the fresh fruit in the batter the shelf life is slightly shorter than a standard blondie. Place parchment paper between layers if stacking to prevent sticking and to protect the surface of the bars.

Refrigerator: These blondies actually keep very well in the refrigerator for up to 5 days. The cool temperature firms them up slightly but they come back to a great texture after 10 to 15 minutes at room temperature or a quick 10 second warm in the microwave. Refrigerating is actually recommended if your kitchen runs warm since the blueberries can make the bars more perishable at room temperature in hot weather.

Freezer — cut bars: Wrap individual cooled bars tightly in plastic wrap and place in a freezer safe bag or container. Freeze for up to 2 months. Thaw at room temperature for about 30 minutes before serving. The texture holds up well and the blueberries stay good through the freeze and thaw cycle.

Freezer — uncut slab: Wrap the entire cooled uncut slab tightly in plastic wrap followed by a layer of foil. Freeze for up to 2 months and thaw overnight in the refrigerator. Bring to room temperature before slicing for the cleanest cuts.

Before you go

Blueberries in a blondie sounds like a small thing until you actually taste it and realize it was exactly what the classic blondie recipe was missing all along. The fruit, the white chocolate, that golden crackly top — it all comes together into something that is genuinely greater than the sum of its parts.

One bowl, one pan, and 40 minutes is genuinely all it takes to have something on your counter that looks and tastes like you spent your whole afternoon baking. Make these once and you will understand why they become a go-to for every occasion from a lazy weekend bake to a last minute gathering contribution.

Give them a try and let me know what you think. And if you manage to let them cool the full 45 minutes before cutting in — you are a stronger person than I am.

With gratitude, Kip

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 12 mins Cook Time 28 mins Total Time 40 mins
Estimated Cost: $ 11
Best Season: Spring, Summer

Description

These blueberry white chocolate blondies take the classic chewy buttery blondie base and elevate it with jammy blueberry pockets and creamy white chocolate chips baked right in. The result is a bar that is simultaneously familiar and completely surprising — golden and crackly on top, soft and chewy inside, and packed with sweet fruit and white chocolate in every single bite. One pan, simple ingredients, and ready in under 40 minutes.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line a 9x13 inch pan with parchment paper and spray with cooking spray.
  2. Whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in a medium bowl. Set aside.
  3. Whisk melted butter and packed brown sugar together in a large bowl until smooth and glossy.
  4. Add eggs and vanilla extract and whisk until fully combined and smooth.
  5. Fold in the flour mixture with a rubber spatula until just combined.
  6. Fold in two thirds of the white chocolate chips. Reserve the remaining third.
  7. Gently fold in the blueberries with three to four slow, careful folds.
  8. Spread batter evenly into the prepared pan with a greased spatula.
  9. Scatter reserved white chocolate chips over the surface and press gently into the batter.
  10. Bake for 25 to 28 minutes until the top is golden and crackly and the edges are set.
  11. Cool completely for at least 45 minutes before lifting out and slicing into bars.
Keywords: blueberry white chocolate blondies, blueberry blondies, white chocolate blondies, blueberry dessert bars, easy blondie recipe, fruit blondies, white chocolate blueberry bars, chewy blueberry bars
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Frequently Asked Questions

Expand All:

Can I use frozen blueberries instead of fresh?

Yes and this is actually my preferred method for making these year-round. The key is to add them straight from the freezer without thawing first. Thawed blueberries release a significant amount of liquid which makes the batter wet and turns everything an unappetizing purple. Frozen blueberries go in cold and hold their shape through mixing and baking, creating those gorgeous distinct jammy pockets throughout the finished bars.

Can I use milk chocolate or semi-sweet chocolate chips instead of white chocolate?

You can but the flavor profile changes significantly. White chocolate has a creamy, almost vanilla-like sweetness that pairs with blueberries in a particularly elegant and complementary way. Semi-sweet or milk chocolate chips will make the bars taste more like a traditional blondie with fruit — which is still good, just different. If you want to try a different chocolate, milk chocolate is the closer substitute since it is sweeter and creamier than semi-sweet.

Why did my blondies turn purple throughout?

This almost always happens from overmixing the blueberries into the batter. Crushed or broken blueberries release their pigment into the surrounding batter and streak it purple. To avoid this, fold the blueberries in last with the gentlest hand you can manage — three to four slow folds maximum. Using frozen blueberries also helps since they are firmer and more resistant to breaking during folding than fresh ones.

How do I get that beautiful crackly golden top?

Two things create the crackly top on blondies — properly combined butter and brown sugar, and not overbaking. Make sure you whisk the butter and brown sugar together thoroughly at the start until the mixture is completely smooth and glossy. The sugar needs to be fully incorporated into the fat to caramelize properly during baking. Also pull the bars from the oven when the center still looks just barely set — continuing to bake past that point dries out the surface before it has a chance to develop that characteristic crackle.

 

Can I add other mix-ins to this recipe?

Absolutely. Lemon zest added to the batter along with the vanilla is a particularly wonderful addition that brightens the blueberry flavor significantly. A handful of chopped macadamia nuts adds great texture and pairs beautifully with the white chocolate and blueberry combination. Dried cranberries mixed in with the blueberries give you a slightly more complex fruit flavor. Just keep the total amount of mix-ins to around one and a half cups so the batter is not overwhelmed.

Can I make these in a smaller pan for thicker bars?

Yes. A 9x9 inch square pan gives you significantly thicker, fudgier bars with an even more pronounced chewy center. Reduce the baking time and start checking at the 22 minute mark. The edges will be golden but the center will take a little longer to set due to the increased thickness. These thicker bars have an incredible soft, jammy center and are worth trying if you love a really indulgent blondie.

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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