Easy Double Chocolate Cherry Crisps
This is my kind of dessert: rustic, chocolate-forward, tart-sweet cherries tucked under a crunchy, buttery oat topping that sings when you spoon it warm into a bowl. It’s not fussy — more like a forgiving hug you can bake in a shallow dish, share with friends, or eat straight from the pan at midnight. Double chocolate means cocoa in the filling and chocolate chunks or chips folded into the topping, so every bite has that melty, bitter-sweet thing my brain can’t resist.
My little family officially worships this. My husband calls it “the reason to do dishes” because he’ll volunteer to clean if I promise to make it again. Our kidlets have convinced themselves it’s breakfast when paired with yogurt, and my in-laws request it for birthdays because is there anything more unpretentious than a crisp that looks charmingly chaotic? Once, I brought it to a potluck and someone asked if it was store-bought — which I took as the highest compliment and a crime against honesty. Now it’s a staple whenever we need something that feels homemade without me having to psych myself up.
Why You’ll Love This Easy Double Chocolate Cherry Crisps
– It’s ridiculously chocolatey without being cloying — tart cherries cut the sweetness and make it actually taste adult.
– The topping is crunchy and buttery, with pockets of melted chocolate that make forks disappear into the pan.
– Forgiving to make: use fresh or frozen cherries, swap butter for coconut oil, or throw in nuts if you’re feeling frisky.
– Great hot out of the oven with cold vanilla ice cream, but just as good the next morning for a messy, decadent breakfast.

Kitchen Talk
I learned early that cherries release a lot of juice, which is both a gift and a small betrayal. A tiny dusting of cornstarch in the fruit keeps the filling from turning into a syrupy puddle. Also: I once forgot to stir the butter into the topping and ended up with sad clumps — so yes, mix it until it’s crumbly, not sandy. Frozen cherries are a lifesaver in the off-season; no need to defrost fully, just toss them in and bake. And if you like drama, sprinkle a pinch of flaky salt over the top right before serving — it catapults the chocolate.
Oh man, these Easy Double Chocolate Cherry Crisps are a game-changer—super simple to whip up with stuff I already had in the pantry, and the topping tastes just like a warm oatmeal chocolate chip cookie on top of gooey cherry goodness.[1][2][5] The chocolate-cherry combo is pure heaven, like a chocolate-covered cherry meets crisp perfection, and they disappeared so fast my family begged for more.[3][5] Honest to goodness, this one's going on my regular rotation!
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Shopping Tips
– Baking Basics: Keep plain flour and a small bag of brown sugar on hand — they’re the backbone of the topping and help with that caramel note.
– Fats & Oils: Use real butter if you can; it gives the topping that rich, toasty flavor, but coconut oil works fine for a dairy-free swap.
– Chocolate: Pick good-quality dark chocolate or chips for the pockets of melty goodness; avoid cheap candy melts if you want depth.
– Fruit: Fresh bing cherries are dreamy, but frozen pitted cherries are a brilliant, budget-friendly stand-in.
– Nuts & Seeds: Toasted almonds or pecans folded into the topping add crunch and heft — skip them only if someone in your house has an open-mouth allergy situation.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Pit cherries and toss them with cornstarch the day before; store in a covered container in the fridge so they’re ready to go.
– Make the crumble topping ahead and keep it chilled in the fridge; you can spoon it over the fruit right before baking.
– Keep prepped fruit and topping in labeled containers so weeknight baking feels like assembly rather than chaos.
– If you want to freeze, put a fully baked crisp in an airtight container — thaw and reheat in the oven to revive the crunch.

Time-Saving Tricks
– Use frozen cherries straight from the bag to skip pitting and washing in the off-season.
– Grate cold butter into the oats and flour instead of chopping — it speeds up mixing and gives a super-flaky topping.
– Microwave a slab of chocolate briefly and stir to melt for an instant molten layer if you’re impatient.
– Don’t rush the cooling a little after baking — it helps the filling set so it’s easier to scoop.
Common Mistakes
– Putting raw, wet fruit straight in without a thickener — I did this once and ended up serving cherry soup; a little cornstarch is your friend.
– Overbrowning the topping while the filling is still undercooked — cover loosely if the top is golden before the fruit is bubbling.
– Using ultra-sweet chocolate and more sugar than needed — balance matters; cherries bring acid and bite that sugar will drown.
– Forgetting to check for pits — one rogue pit is a crunchy betrayal, I speak from painful experience.
What to Serve It With
– Vanilla ice cream or a scoop of crème fraîche for richness and tang.
– A simple espresso or strong coffee to cut through the sweetness.
– Quick lemony mascarpone on the side for a grown-up touch.
– A bowl of plain yogurt and granola if someone at the table insists on calling dessert “breakfast.”
Tips & Mistakes
– Use a shallow baking dish so you get more crispy topping and less fruit stew.
– Salt is flavor; don’t be scared to add a pinch to the topping.
– If your topping seems dry, dot a few extra pats of butter on top before baking.
– If you over-sweetened the filling, a squeeze of lemon brightens and rescues it.
Storage Tips
Store leftovers in the fridge in an airtight container. It keeps for a few days, and eating it cold for breakfast is zero-judgment delicious. To revive the crunch, warm single portions in the oven or toaster oven — the microwave will warm it but make the topping soft. You can also freeze fully baked portions; thaw and re-crisp in the oven before serving.

Variations and Substitutions
– Swap cherries for mixed berries or sliced peaches in season — the topping works with almost any fruit.
– Use oats plus a bit of almond flour for a nuttier, gluten-free-ish crumble (check labels if you need certified GF).
– Replace some sugar with maple syrup for a different depth of sweetness; reduce other liquids slightly.
– Fold chopped pecans or walnuts into the topping for extra texture, or throw in chocolate-covered espresso beans for a caffeinated crunch.
Frequently Asked Questions

Easy Double Chocolate Cherry Crisps
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 5 cup pitted sweet cherries fresh or thawed frozen
- 0.33 cup granulated sugar
- 2.25 tbsp cornstarch
- 1 tbsp lemon juice
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 0.13 tsp fine salt
- 0.25 cup semisweet chocolate chips for the cherry filling
- 1 cup old-fashioned rolled oats
- 0.75 cup all-purpose flour
- 0.4 cup light brown sugar packed
- 3 tbsp unsweetened cocoa powder
- 0.5 tsp instant espresso powder optional, boosts chocolate flavor
- 5 tbsp unsalted butter, cold and cubed
- 0.25 cup semisweet chocolate chips for the topping
- 0.33 cup chopped pecans optional
- 0.25 tsp fine salt for the topping
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Heat oven to 350°F. Lightly butter an 8-inch square dish or six 8-ounce ramekins.
- Toss cherries with granulated sugar, cornstarch, lemon juice, vanilla, and a pinch of salt. Fold in 1/4 cup chocolate chips and spread into the dish.
- Combine oats, flour, brown sugar, cocoa, espresso powder, and remaining salt in a bowl.
- Cut in the cold butter with a pastry cutter or fingers until moist clumps form. Stir in remaining chocolate chips and pecans, if using.
- Cover the cherry layer with the crumble, leaving a few gaps for steam. Set the dish on a sheet pan to catch drips.
- Bake until the filling bubbles at the edges and the top looks set and crisp, 32–38 minutes.
- Cool 10–15 minutes to thicken the juices. Serve warm with vanilla ice cream or whipped cream.
Notes
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