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Raspberry Crumble Bars!
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Fruity and delicious raspberry crumble bars with an oaty crumble base, raspberry filling, and even more delicious crumble on top!
Say hello to some of the most delicious bits of heaven you will ever eat… these raspberry crumble bars. They are HEAVENLY and just so incredibly moreish and scrumptious. Just one thing to know before you start, you do need to let them cool and then chill before slicing, and that little bit of patience is the secret to neat bars that hold together beautifully rather than crumbling apart!

Traybakes
So yeah, another traybake to add to my never ending roster of bakes that I am always in love with. Honestly, if you have followed me for a while you will know that a traybake related bake is one of my favourite things ever and that’ll never change.
Traybake can come in many a form, such as brownies, blondies, cookie bars, flapjacks and so on. These raspberry crumble bars are a new one to add to the list of goodness.
All of my traybake recipes, if I can help it, are made into a 9″ square tin. This is for ease, and so that I reduce the amount of bits and bobs you need to buy! I always use this traybake tin.

Crumble
So we all know what a crumble is right? Its one of the most iconic classic things you can ever consume. I have varied crumble related bakes on my blog such as my apple crumble traybake, or even my apple crumble cupcakes.. but this one? Oh this is on another league.
It isn’t quite ‘crumble’ to the idea of a classic dessert – but its a crumble like oaty delicious mixture of ingredients that create the best base and topping for these bars.
- Oats – for this bake, I wanted an oaty flavour to come through to compliment the raspberries and also create a more textured crumble.
- Flour – an obvious one, but plain flour is a must!
- Sugar – I decided to use light brown soft sugar, but this would work well with other sugars such as caster sugar, or even dark brown soft sugar.
- Raising agents – this one may sound a little odd, but trust me – you want the tiny lift from the baking powder!
- Butter – I use unsalted butter as always, but a salted butter would work well also. I would avoid any baking spreads of margarines as they are too soft for the crumble mixture.

Raspberries
The main part right? The raspberries! A delicious sweet and sharp mixture of heaven. I decided to not just add in some raspberries and hope for the best, and I didn’t just want to do a layer of jam as some recipes do… I wanted to level it up and make a mixture!
- Raspberries – So for ease, I would recommend fresh berries. You need to be able to mash them up and frozen would make this too hard. You can try thawing frozen berries, but you would need to dispose of any excess liquid before using them.
- Jam – A raspberry jam – a classic! Seedless, with seed, smooth, lumpy… whatever!
- Lemon – The lemon is needed to cut through the sharpness of the raspberry but also bring out the flavour wonderfully.
- Cornflour – A thickening agent in this case. Please use it, it’s much better than just using plain flour.
It may sound silly in the method, but honestly the best way I found to make this filling was to add the ingredients to a bowl and mash them slightly with a potato masher. It meant I still had texture, but everything had mixed in well enough.
Quick word on fresh versus frozen raspberries, because it really does matter here. Fresh is my first choice every time as they mash up easily and keep the filling lovely and thick. You can absolutely use frozen if that is what you have in, you just have to thaw them fully and drain off all that excess liquid first, otherwise the filling goes far too wet and your bars end up loose rather than holding together. I have popped the full little routine for frozen just below!

Fresh vs Frozen Raspberries for Raspberry Crumble Bars
I get asked about this a lot, so here is exactly how I would handle it. Fresh raspberries are ideal, but frozen work brilliantly too as long as you prep them properly first. Here is the routine I would follow:
- Thaw them fully. Let them defrost completely at room temperature, or overnight in the fridge, so there are no icy bits left.
- Drain off the liquid. Tip them into a sieve and let all of that reddish liquid drain away. This is the bit that saves your bars!
- Give them a gentle press. Press them lightly with the back of a spoon to squeeze out any liquid still hiding in there, but don’t mush them to a purée, you still want some texture.
- Then mix as normal. Add them to the bowl with the jam, lemon and cornflour and mash slightly, exactly like you would with fresh.
The whole point of the draining is getting rid of that extra water. Skip it and the filling goes too wet, which stops the bars setting and leaves you with a soggy middle. A couple of minutes over the sieve and you are golden!

Assembling the bars
As you can see from the photos there are layers to these raspberry crumble bars. It’s fairly simply though – a majority of the crumble mix goes into the lined 9×9″ square tin and you press it down firmly. I found 500g of the crumble mix was perfect for this layer after some experimenting with ratios.
Then, you top the base with the mashed raspberry mix and spread evenly, and then sprinkle over the rest of the crumble mix. This part of the crumble mix doesn’t need pressing down as it would turn into a raspberry mush.

Baking the bars
For a bake like this, and basically any bake ever unless stated otherwise, you need a preheated oven. Here are the temperatures so you can find yours at a glance:
- Fan: 180ºc
- Conventional: 200ºc
- Gas mark: 6
- Fahrenheit: 400ºf
(I have a fan oven so I always bake this one on the fan setting, and I have honestly never baked in a gas oven myself!)
The temperature is slightly higher compared to other traybake recipes I have done, but you want the extra warmth to really start toasting and baking the crumble mix and it really helps.
Now, how do you know when they are actually done? Two things to look for. First, the crumble on top wants to be golden brown all over, not still pale and blonde in the middle. Second, the raspberry filling should look visibly thickened and be bubbling away at the edges rather than sitting there loose and watery. When the top is properly golden and the filling is bubbling, you are there. Do remember they firm up a LOT as they cool and chill, so a slightly soft middle straight out of the oven is completely normal and nothing to worry about!

Tips and Tricks
So when it comes to making a bake like this, it is surprisingly easy, but there are ways to help make sure it works wonderfully. When making the crumble mix I simply use a large bowl, add the ingredients, and rub them together with my fingertips. This means you can still have the wonderful texture of the oats in the crumble without accidentally destroying them in a food processor or mixer.
For the raspberry mix, I genuinely just use another bowl and a potato masher – but a large spoon or fork works well, it just takes a bit longer. You don’t want to over mix this either as you want texture to the mixture.
As mentioned above, I use this traybake tin as its the perfect size.
One last thing, and honestly it is the most important tip for neat bars: give them proper time to cool and set before you slice. I let mine cool completely in the tin first, and then I pop the whole thing into the fridge for at least 2 to 3 hours (overnight is even better!). Warm bars will squish and crumble the second you cut into them, but a properly chilled slab cuts into lovely clean, sharp squares every single time. Use a sharp knife and wipe it clean between cuts, and you will get those neat edges you see in the photos.

Raspberry Crumble Bar Recipe
Fruity and delicious raspberry crumble bars with an oaty crumble base, raspberry filling, and even more delicious crumble on top!
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Servings: 16 pieces
Ingredients
Crumble
- 175 g rolled oats
- 200 g plain flour
- 150 g light brown soft sugar
- 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 175 g unsalted butter (cold and cubed)
Filling
- 400 g raspberries
- 150 g raspberry jam
- 1 tbsp lemon juice
- 1 tbsp cornflour
Instructions
Crumble
- Preheat the oven to 200ºc/180ºfan and line a 9×9" square tin with parchment paper.
- In a large bowl, add the rolled oats, plain flour, light brown soft sugar, baking powder and unsalted butter.
- Rub the ingredients together with your fingers until the mixture resembles bread crumbs and there are no large lumps of butter left.
Filling
- In a new bowl, add the fresh raspberries, raspberry jam, lemon juice and cornflour.
- Mash the ingredients together until they are combined, but still leaving some texture to the raspberries.
Assembly
- Pour 500g of the oaty crumble mix into the lined tin and press down firmly.
- Pour the filling onto of the oats, and spread.
- Sprinkle over the rest of the crumble mix
- Bake the raspberry crumble bars in the oven for 30+ minutes, or until golden and beautiful.
- Leave the bars to cool fully before portioning. Refrigerating them can sometimes make this easier.
Notes
- These beauties will last for 4-5+ days, best in the fridge, but fine at room temperature on a cool day
- Freeze these bars in an airtight container once full cooled. Allow them to thaw at room temperature for a few hours or overnight in the fridge
- I use this tin for this bake
- The raspberries can be swapped to other berries such as blackberries, blueberries, strawberries etc, or a mixture of.
Storage and Freezing Raspberry Crumble Bars
Right, let’s talk about keeping these beauties, because they store really well and freeze like an absolute dream.
At room temperature: they are fine in an airtight container at cool room temperature for a day or so, but because of the fresh fruit filling I honestly prefer to keep mine in the fridge.
In the fridge: pop them into an airtight container and they will keep happily for up to 4 to 5 days. The cold also keeps them lovely and firm, which makes them even easier to slice and eat.
In the freezer: these freeze brilliantly! Once they are fully cooled and sliced, freeze the bars in an airtight container, layered with a little parchment so they don’t stick together, for up to 3 months. To eat, just let them thaw at room temperature for a few hours, or overnight in the fridge, and they are as good as fresh. This is exactly why I love making a big batch, you always have a little raspberry something waiting for you!
I am going to make these but with a mincemeat filling as xmas is coming.
Can I make/assemble this the day before and leave in fridge before cooking?
Could I use tinned cherries? Thank you
I made these but with blackberries… I cooked the blackberry mixture on the hob first for about five mins because the berries were really juicy and I was worried the mixture was too wet, but it thickened up and then assembled and put in the oven. They came out great. Really enjoyed them! Thank you!
If you change the fruit do you use matching flavour jam and still add the lemon juice?
Yes! x
Made these and theyre delicious but won’t be able to eat them all over a few days. Are they okay to freeze?
Yes, they freeze well!
I baked the base for 10 minutes before adding topping etc. Delicious!!! Also added flaked almonds on top before baking.
These were a firm favourite as was the rubarb ones i also made them with tinned apricots so simple so tasty thank for the loverly recipes chicken leek pie and creamy chicken went down a storm looking forward to you new book keep up the goo work
Please may I ask how much rhubarb & what did you substitute the jam with.
Did you cook the rhubarb first? TIA Fiona
Can I use custard and jam inside these
I made these yesterday and have just tucked in to my first one, they are very tasty!
I had been looking for different ways to use sloes rather than making gin or vodka, so I made a sloe syrup and replaced 100g of jam with 100ml of the sloe syrup. I baked the crumble base for 10 minutes first, to prevent it from absorbing the berry mixture, as the syrup added a lot more liquid.
I also added some sweet cinnamon, ground almonds and lemon zest to the crumble mix.
I’d definitely make these again! I’m sure they’d be lovely with or without the sloes.
Thanks Jane for a fab recipe. =)
Hi Jane, to make this vegan, could I use Stork block instead of butter? Thankyou x
Hiya! I would always using block (plant) butter for this otherwise it may be a tad oily! hope this helps! x
Could I substitute the raspberries for blueberries?
Hiya! Yes this should be fine! x
I made these with frozen mixed berries as fresh raspberries were so expensive as it’s winter. I drained the liquid and they worked perfectly, everyone loved them
Can lemon curd be used instead of raspberry/raspberry jam. I want this but as a lemon crumble instead. Would it work?
Yes this should be fine! Enjoy! x