• Home
  • About
    • Privacy Policy
    • Work with Me
    • Media Kit
    • Evolv Health: Valerie’s Story
    • Personal Stories
    • Press
    • Year in Review
  • Thermomix® Independent Consultant
    • Thermomix® Independent Consultant
    • Client Testimonials
    • Recipes Developed by Valerie
  • Projects
    • Cheesepalooza
      • Cheesepalooza Challenges
      • Cheesepalooza Participants
      • Preparation for Cheesepalooza!
      • Basic Ingredient and Supply List
      • Ingredient and Matierial Suppliers
    • Dueling Daughters Project 2014
    • Eat Alberta
    • Gramsy Glimpses
      • Gramsy Glimpses Vignettes
    • Project 2019: Valerie’s Personal Evolv Health Story
    • Project 2017: Cooking in the Kitchen With….
      • Completed Project 2017 Posts: Cooking in the Kitchen With….
      • Project 2017: Cooking in the Kitchen With… PARTICIPATE
      • Project 2017: Cooking in the Kitchen with….Schedule
    • Slow Food Edmonton Tastings
      • Participate!
    • The Canadian Food Experience Project
      • Participate!
      • Participants
      • Challenges and Round Ups
      • Canadian Food Heroes Series
  • Events
    • Baby Shower
    • Food Blogger Meetings
    • Promotions
    • Restaurant Reviews
    • Reviews (Products, Books, and Events)
  • Philosophy
    • In a Nutshell
    • Local Produce/Producers
    • Slow Food
    • Teaching
  • Travel
    • Bosnia
    • British Columbia
    • California
    • Croatia
    • Culinary Tourism
    • Farmer’s Markets
    • France
    • Greece
    • Hawaii
    • Italy
    • Louisiana
    • Maritime Provinces
    • Massachusetts
    • Mexico
    • Montenegro
    • Nova Scotia
    • Prince Edward Island
    • Quebec
    • Serbia
    • United Kingdom
    • Utah
  • Trends
  • Store
  • Privacy Policy
  • Privacy Policy for A Canadian Foodie
  • Valerie’s Image

A Canadian Foodie

Canadian Food Recipes; Preserving Canadian Food Practices

  • A La Carte
    • Appetizers
    • Drinks
    • Evolv Health Reboot Recipes
      • Reboot Phase 1 Mains
    • Garnishes
    • Salads
    • Sauces Dressings Rubs
    • Sides
    • Soups and Stocks
  • Breakfast & Brunch
  • Cheese
    • Blue/Stinky
    • Firm
    • Fresh
    • Hard/Pressed
    • Cheesepalooza Challenge
    • Cheesepalooza Round Up
  • Desserts
    • Cakes
    • Cookies, Bars and Squares
      • Christmas Cookies
    • Ice Cream, Sorbets and Frozen Yogurt
    • Icings/Frosting and Pastry Creams
    • Other
    • Pies and Tarts
    • Puddings
    • Sweets and Treats
  • Doughs and Crusts
    • Biscuits
    • Bread Buns and Flatbread
    • Crackers
    • Donuts, Frybreads and Such
    • Dumplings etc
    • Pasta
    • Pastry
  • Mains
    • Beef
    • Casseroles
    • Chicken/Duck/Goose/Turkey
    • Marinades and Rubs
    • Pasta Dishes
    • Pork
    • Potluck
    • Savory Pies Pastries
    • Seafood and Fish
    • Stews
    • Vegetarian
    • Veal
    • Wild Game
    • Wraps Pizzas Casual Food
  • Seasonal
    • Autumn
    • Spring
    • Summer
    • Winter
    • Holiday
      • Christmas
  • Gardens
    • Foraging
    • My Garden and From My Garden
    • Preserves
    • Zone Three Harvest
  • Tastings
  • Kids
  • Canadian Food
    • Atlantic Provinces
    • Canadian Aboriginal Food
    • Canadian Berries
    • Canadian Cakes
    • Canadian Doughs
    • Canadian Drinks
    • Canadian Fish
    • Canadian Food Heroes
    • Canadian Food Main
    • Desserts
    • Grandma Maude’s Family Recipes
    • Mom Helen’s Famous Family Recipes
    • Canadian Products
    • Sunday Suppers
    • Wild Food

Sour Cherry Crisp

February 2, 2016 by Valerie Lugonja 20 Comments

Sour Cherry Crisp with my famous ACF Homemade Sour Cherry Pie Filling!

1 Sour Cherry Crisp

Sunday Suppers since dad has passed are a ritual that I wish I had insisted upon while dad was still with us. And my sister. Dad passed 2 years ago January 27. My sister one year ago this coming February 9. Oh, how I “should have” insisted upon Sunday Suppers while the entire family was thriving and together. We certainly celebrated our holidays together,  but this weekly ritual with mom, Ragan, Vanja and I is important. I look so forward to it and I like to think they do, too. It certainly keeps us closer!

2 Sour Cherry Crisp

I do enjoy making desserts, but not when I am making a big meal as the focus. And the meal is always my main focus every Sunday, but I have definitely noticed how mom enjoys her dessert, and certainly Vanja does, but his repertoire is apple pie, apple pie and apple pie.

3 Sour Cherry Crisp

l have so many pitted sour Evans cherries in my deep freeze every year from my own tree, that I am always thinking of how to use them and have developed many Sour Cherry recipes. Thankfully, Vanja enjoys them! Not like apple pie, but “he will eat it.” So, last night, thinking of a simple dessert, I remembered I wanted to make my sour cherry pie filling again and the idea of a good old Canadian prairie crisp came to mind: Sour Cherry Crisp it is! Why had I never done this before?

4a Homemade Sour Cherry Pie Filling4b Homemade Sour Cherry Pie Filling4c Homemade Sour Cherry Pie Filling

The pie filling recipe is so easy and so many people have commented positively on the recipe post since I last made it that I have wanted to make it again for quite some time, so perfect idea! I just had to adjust the recipe to align mathematically with the juice I gleaned from one package of my frozen berries. It worked perfectly.

5b Sour Cherry Pie Filling 5c Sour Cherry Pie Filling

And I used to think that canned filling was not nutritious. Of course, it cannot compare to the homemade kind, but this pie filling is super delicious and not too much sugar at all!

6 Sour Cherry Crisp Topping

I made up one batch of my crisp topping recipe knowing full well I would need only 1/4 to 1/3 of it for this small amount of crisp made with only one cup of cherries.

7 Sour Cherry Crisp without topping8 Sour Cherry Crisp Unbaked

I froze the rest for another small crisp to use another Sunday.

9 Sour Cherry Crisp Baked

I was tickled. Doesn’t it look vibrant and flavourful! It was so tasty! The tart cherries coupled with the buttery crunchy topping was really a triumph.

10 Sour Cherry Crisp

I would usually serve this tart Sour Cherry Crisp with vanilla ice cream, but somebody ate it all! (me!) So whipping cream was lovely with a little basil leaf!

11 Sour Cherry Crisp

Let me know if you try my new Sour Cherry Crisp. What a treat to grow this lovely fruit right outside my back door!

Sour Cherry Pie Filling

Crisp Topping

Print

Sour Cherry Crisp



A great contrast of sweet and sour in a crunchy dessert with lovely lush fruit. A true Canadian staple with apples and the homemade cherry pie filling is perfect for this.
Course Dessert
Cuisine Canadian
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 45 minutes
Total Time 1 hour
Servings 12
Author Valerie Lugonja

Ingredients

  • One batch of homemade cherry pie filling
  • One batch of crisp topping

Instructions

  1. Make filling and place in an oven proof casserole dish
  2. Sprinkle topping over pie filling particularly around edges
  3. Bake at 350F for 45 minutes to one hour
  4. Serve with vanilla ice cream while still warm

Tweet
Pin136
Share
136 Shares

Filed Under: Desserts, My Garden and From My Garden, Puddings, Winter Tagged With: Brown Sugar, Butter, Cherries, Cornstarch, Evans Cherry, Flour, Oatmeal, White Sugar

About Valerie Lugonja

Like what you see? SUBSCRIBE TO A CANADIAN FOODIE
Educator, Writer, Gardener and Traveler who believes in buying and eating locally, and most importantly cooking at home! As a brand new Gramsy, so be prepared to hear a lot about this new role in her life!
Please connect with Valerie to buy a Thermomix Machine!

« February 2016: Thermomix Incentive
Homemade Quark Cheese »

You might also enjoy...

Garlic Schnitzel
Minute Steak Series: Vanja’s Garlic Schnitzel is a Weeknight Favourite
Fruit Bread
Fruit Bread: Helen’s Famous Canadian Holiday Fruit Bread
Keto Almond Bread
Keto Almond Bread: Project 2019 Evolv Health Total Reboot
Sour Cherry Slab Pie
Sour Cherry Slab Pie: A Simple Twist on a Traditional Recipe
Strawberry Charlotte

Comments

  1. Tunya Pyne says

    February 2, 2016 at 2:58 pm

    Looks delicious! Another one to add to my “to make” list 🙂

    Reply
    • Valerie Lugonja says

      February 2, 2016 at 7:16 pm

      Hi Tunya!
      I must admit that when I went to the web a few years back to research sour cherry pie recipes, there just were not any at that time. I was stuck. So many sour cherries from my tree! Two years ago, from one tree, 50 pounds of pitted sour cherries. But I am not complaining. So many recipes I love to make with them. However, sour cherry pies need that perfect balance of sweet and tart. And, who doesn’t love that canned pie filling, eh? Because it was thick and translucent and the cherries were so artificially red, I just assumed it was one of those fast food artificial recipes full of preservatives. And, well – the canned stuff may well be just that, but after a lot of reading, research and experimenting, I got the pie filling recipe just right. It is so easy, so delicious and really, not a truckload of sugar in it. I am so proud of my self! (hahahaha!)
      So, hope you do make it sometime and let me know if you enjoy it. The crisp topping is my mom’s old tried and true Canadian prairie recipe – everyone’s mom has it, but – you know – no one’s mom makes it as good as mine!
      Hugs,
      Valerie

      Reply
      • Katharina says

        February 8, 2016 at 3:36 am

        Hi Valerie, it looks delicious. I too have a sour cherry tree and harvest the cherries each year. My aunt used to work in a bakery in Germany as a you girl, and she shared a wonderful sour cherry torte recipe ( Kirsche Torte) ) with me as we made one together. It also is so tasty and can also be made with rhubarb as they’re both tart.

        Reply
        • Valerie Lugonja says

          February 8, 2016 at 8:22 am

          Katharina
          Wonderful to “meet” you! Please share your aunt’s recipe with me! I would love to make that! I make homemade Kirsche, too! YUM!
          Hugs,
          Valerie

          Reply
      • Diana Strable says

        January 3, 2024 at 8:20 am

        Does it matter the kind of tart cherries you use? I picked a bunch last summer froze them . I know their are different kinds cherry trees I didn’t know if it affected the taste at all. I am going to try this recipe as I am not good at baking, looks easy enough. I love cherries. Not baked with tart before. Thanks it looks yummy.

        Reply
        • Valerie Lugonja says

          January 29, 2024 at 9:32 am

          Hi Diana,
          This recipe will work for any kind of sour cherry.
          🙂
          Valerie

          Reply
  2. Bonnie says

    February 2, 2016 at 10:34 pm

    Hi Valerie,
    Thank you for sharing this very yummy & delicious Sour Cherry crisp. Im not much of a baker i occasionally make Apple Crisp & i love cherry pies so something 4 me to try as a crisp since I bake very little lol

    Beautiful photos by the way. Makes me more hungry looking at them.

    Reply
    • Valerie Lugonja says

      February 3, 2016 at 9:20 am

      Bonnie!
      Thank you so much for chiming in! I find baking so much easier than cooking, as one MUST follow the recipe to a T… and with cooking, many of the most delicious meals are made with one’s imagination! Haha! But, if the recipe is not written clearly, baking can be torture. I have had some of those experiences – plus, one has to be motivated. I remember a girl friend saying to me once, “I could never do this!” and I just looked at her and said, “Of course you could! Don’t be silly. You just aren’t that interested.” And she looked at me with a litte “a-ha” moment on her face, grinned and said, “You know, you are right!” We both enjoyed that moment.
      Hugs,
      Valerie

      Reply
  3. Esme says

    February 8, 2016 at 10:44 pm

    this looks so delicious. I adore cherries and everything that is made with them.

    Reply
    • Valerie Lugonja says

      February 15, 2016 at 8:46 pm

      The thrill for me is that I grow them in my own yard. It is such a delight to have so many of these jewels tucked in my freezer every fall to create delicious dishes with!
      🙂
      Valerie

      Reply
  4. The teacher cooks says

    February 16, 2016 at 8:03 pm

    What I would give to have all those cherries! I love cherry pie and yours looks delicious. Wanda

    Reply
    • Valerie Lugonja says

      February 17, 2016 at 9:21 pm

      Thanks, Wanda!
      Lovely to hear from you! Hope you are well and thriving. I retired from teaching 2 years ago and am busier than ever. Miss cooking with the kiddies, though!
      Hugs,
      Valerie

      Reply
  5. plasterer bristol says

    February 17, 2016 at 2:13 am

    This sounds absolutely delicious. Thank’s for sharing this recipe.

    Simon

    Reply
    • Valerie Lugonja says

      February 17, 2016 at 9:22 pm

      Let me know if you make it, Simon.
      🙂
      Valerie

      Reply
  6. Shannon says

    August 3, 2017 at 10:03 am

    I’m missising something… no links to the original filling and topping recipes?

    Reply
    • Valerie Lugonja says

      August 4, 2017 at 8:32 am

      Thank you so much for letting me know, Shannon. I imported a new recipe plug in and it didn’t download the links with it – nor can I get it to right now, so I added them above the recipe.
      🙂
      Valerie

      Reply
  7. Zureen says

    August 30, 2017 at 9:06 am

    I have two Evans cherry trees in my back yard and have harvested a bazillion (that’s the official number) of cherries in the last two days. I froze most of them but I’m wondering how to use the fresh cherries in a crisp. I love crisps and usually make an apple crisp or apple wild blueberry crisp using fresh apples and frozen blueberries. Can the sour cherry pie filling be made with fresh cherries or could I substitute the cherries for the blueberries in my regular crisp recipe? Alternatively, what changes would I need to make to use fresh Evans cherries in a crisp? My cherries are overripe and quite soft.

    Reply
    • Valerie Lugonja says

      August 30, 2017 at 12:05 pm

      Hi Zureen,
      I would just add more flour to the fresh berries in the crisp recipe to ensure the filling is not so runny. You can make either recipe with fresh or frozen berries, as a rule – but if they are overripe, there will be extra juice that will need thickening with cornstarch or flour.
      Have you seen my preserved cherries recipe? It is THE BOMB when you have a bazillion cherries!
      Hugs,
      Valerie

      Reply
      • Zureen says

        August 30, 2017 at 12:32 pm

        Hi Valerie, Thanks for the quick reply. Do you mean cornstarch or flour? The original recipe calls for cornstarch in the filling and flour in the topping so should flour be added to the filling or should I add additional cornstarch to the filling?

        Reply
        • Valerie Lugonja says

          August 30, 2017 at 11:02 pm

          Make the filling according to instructions and add extra corn starch if it needs it… you will tell by the photos and your own mixture.
          Make sense?
          🙂
          Let me know how it goes.
          🙂
          V

          Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Search

Thermomix® Independent Consultant; Executive Team Lead Alberta

Weekly Newsletter

Saturday Morning News

Thermomix Green Thai Curry Paste

More Thermomix Recipes etc »

Preserved Evans Cherries

Sour or Tart Preserved and Dried Evans Cherries: A Canadian Foodie Original

More ACF Famous Recipes or Specialties»

Classic Meatloaf Wrapped in Double Smoked Bacon

More Winter Recipes »

Helen’s Famous Homemade Peanut Brittle

More Recipes from my mom Helen »

Connect With Me!

  • Bloglovin
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
projects

My Post Archives

Come On In And Kiss the Cook

Educator, Writer, Gardener and Traveler who believes in buying and eating locally, and most importantly cooking at home! [Read More …]

Connect With Me

  • Bloglovin
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
Lunenburg Pudding, Sausage and Tancook Sauerkraut

Lunenburg Pudding, Sausage and Tancook Sauerkraut

More Canadian Recipes »

Lifetime Achievement Award

Canadian Web Blog Award 2013 www.acanadianfoodie.com FIRST

Vote-for-me
Best in Food NEW
This error message is only visible to WordPress admins

Error: No feed found.

Please go to the Instagram Feed settings page to create a feed.

Copyright © 2025 · Website by PoundPig