Bursting Blueberry Crumb Cake! Think – blueberry crumble meets warm lemon cake with a crunchy buttery streusel topping and melty scoop of vanilla ice cream. It tastes even better than it sounds!
Bursting Blueberry Crumb Cake
I’ve done my fair share of blueberry desserts but I’ve always wanted to do a cake with an outrageous amount of blueberries in it. As in, BURSTING with blueberries. Not just studded. I dreamed of a blueberry crumble, except in cake form. (Yes, these are the thoughts that occupy my mind at night).
The question really was just how much blueberries I could bake into a cake without weighing down the sponge so much it became dense.
I peaked out at 500g (1lb). That’s almost double the typical amount used in most Blueberry Crumb Cakes.
And with extra blueberries comes extra streusel, that crumbly crunchy caramel top. I guess sometimes dreams can come true!!
Ingredients in Bursting Blueberry Crumb Cake
Here’s what you need to make this.
The blueberries
The blueberries are tossed in a little flour and sugar so it forms a jam-like layer that mostly suspends on the surface of the cake. The lemon is used to provide wetness to make some of the flour stick to the blueberries.
You will find that not all the flour sticks to the blueberries. Be sure to scatter it all across the blueberry layer. We need the full 3 tablespoons of flour to ensure the blueberries don’t sink. Initial versions of the cake only used 1 tablespoon and the blueberries dispersed a little too much for my liking.
Frozen blueberries will work too! Use frozen because they bleed a lot when thawed.
The Crumb Topping
This is called a streusel in baking. It’s a mixture made with flour, sugar and butter combined to make a lumpy mixture that is used to add a terrific crunchy topping on the surface of cakes, muffins, bars etc.
No unusual players here. The only one worth noting is sugar. I prefer using caster sugar (superfine sugar) because the grains are finer so I can be confident that I won’t end up with sugar grains in the streusel. However, if you don’t have it, just substitute with regular sugar.
Lemon Cake
The Lemon Cake is adapted from the batter I use for my classic blueberry yogurt cake. However, the batter is a little sturdier built to withstand the combined 700g / 1.4lb of blueberries and streusel that we pile on top and still come out lovely and springy at the end.
PS I know that 700g/1.4 lb sounds like an insane amount of blueberries and streusel, but we do lose weight in liquid evaporation as it bakes.
Flour – just plain / all purpose flour. It’s best to use plain flour and add baking powder rather than self raising flour. Cakes just never rise as well.
Baking powder – This is what makes the cake rise. If yours is old, it’s best to check it’s still active!
Sour cream – This helps make the sponge lovely and moist because it adds wetness into the batter but it’s thicker than milk. So we can use less flour for the same volume of batter. Ensure the sour cream is at room temperature, ie not fridge cold, else it will not incorporate properly into the batter (eg it can make the melted butter solidfy. Yup, been there, done that!).
Milk – Full fat is best though low fat will work fine too. As with the sour cream, ensure it’s not fridge cold. Take it out 30 minutes prior, or microwave for 10 seconds.
Eggs – Use large eggs which are ~55 – 60g / 2 oz each (they come in cartons labelled “large eggs”) at room temperature. See here for what this means, and a quick way to de-chill fridge cold eggs!
Melted butter – Once melted, let it cool for a bit. It can still be warm, we just don’t want it to be super hot.
Lemon zest – Zest the lemon before you squeeze out juice to coat the blueberries! It’s impossible to properly zest a lemon once it’s been squeeze of juice. We only use the zest because it adds lovely lemon flavour. The juice, on the other hand, mainly just adds sourness.
Vanilla extract – Better flavour than imitation vanilla essence. I personally don’t use vanilla bean or vanilla bean paste in cakes because I think it’s wasted. Save it for things like Crème Brûlée and Flan Pâtissier!
Salt – Just a touch, to bring out the other flavours in the cake. Standard baking practice these days.
How to make Blueberry Crumb Cake
Streusel first (it’s a quick mix), then toss the blueberries, then make the batter last.
1. How to make Streusel
Mix the dry ingredients (flour, sugar, cinnamon and salt). Then add the melted butter and vanilla, and mix using a fork just until all the flour is wet but the mixture is still clumpy.
This is what you’re after. Lots and lots of lumps!
2. zest lemon fiRst, then toss the blueberries
Zest the lemon then keep it for the batter. Do this before juicing the lemon for the blueberries because it’s impossible to zest a lemon that’s been squeezed of juice!
Toss the blueberries in lemon juice first to wet the surface. Then toss with the flour and sugar. Then set aside until required.
3. The lemon cake batter
Line a 20cm / 8” springform cake pan with baking / parchment paper. See here for my easy way of doing it – no pencil required!
It needs to be a springform pan so the cake can be removed without inverting (which would cause the crumbly topping to fall off!)
Whisk dry – Whisk the dry ingredient in a bowl (flour, baking powder and salt).
Whisk wet – Then in a larger bowl, give the sugar, vanilla, zest and eggs a good whisk for about 15 seconds until the surface is a bit foamy. Add the melted warm-not-hot butter and sour cream, then whisk until smooth.
Add flour in 3 batches – Add one third of the flour then use a rubber spatula to fold it through. Once mostly incorporated, add half the remaining flour, fold through, then the remaining flour and fold through.
Milk last – When you can no longer see flour, add the milk and mix until incorporated. If you see tiny bits in the batter, it will be the zest not flour lumps!
Batter thickness – This is what your batter should look like. Pourable but not super thin like my Chocolate Cake and not super thick like a muffin batter.
4. ASSEMBLING AND BAKING
Pour the batter into the cake pan and smooth the surface.
Top with blueberries. For the most even spread, start from the outer edge then work your way in. If you start in the middle, the weight of the blueberries pushes the batter out and up the walls of the pan. But, don’t get too hung up on this step! This is a rustic cake, and the blueberry layer is always a bit of a pot-luck situation in terms of spottiness / jammy patches / how neat the line is (it is not, ever!).
Use residual flour – Make sure you tip the residual flour and sugar at the bottom of the blueberry bowl over the blueberries. We need all the flour to ensure the blueberries don’t sink (I had problems when I used slightly less flour).
Streusel – Then cover the top with the streusel, using your fingers to make nice big lumps across the surface. Aim for around 85% coverage – it’s nice to have some jammy blueberries peeking through the golden brown crumbly topping!
TIP: If you have powdery streusel at the bottom of the bowl, just clench a pile of it in your fist to make it clump together. Then break up into clumps and scatter!
Bake for 65 minutes at 200°C/400°F (180°C fan-forced), rotating halfway to ensure the streusel browns evenly.
Note on oven temperature: it’s a little higher than the usual temperature for baking cakes because the blueberries and streusel add a thick protection layer so we need an extra blast of heat to cook the cake through. At the typical 180°C/350°F (160°C fan), the cake was taking 75 – 80 minutes and the sponge rose a smidge less.
Cool for 10 minutes in the pan to give it a chance to stabilise. Then unclip the sides and use a spatula to slide the cake onto a cooling rack. Cool for a further 10 minutes before slicing to serve warm (so the ice cream melts!), or fully cool and serve at room temperature.
Warm vs room temperature serving
If you want to be a normal, this cake can be served at room temperature, with optional ice cream or whipped cream on the side. That’s the normal way Crumb Cakes are served. It is delicious and the way this cake was originally intended to be.
But, for the ultimate Blueberry Crumb Cake experience, serve it warm with a scoop of melty vanilla ice cream on top. It is just such a comforting combination – the warm blueberries that burst in your mouth mingling with the cool creamy ice cream, the crunchy bits of caramel-y streusel topping and the soft cake (which gets softer when warm!) with the hint of fresh lemon flavour.
I am firmly planted on the warm-serving side. Try it once, and I think you will be too! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.
Bursting Blueberry Crumb Cake
Ingredients
Crunch crumb (Streusel):
- 2/3 cups flour , plain/all-purpose
- ½ cup caster sugar (superfine sugar)
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon powder
- 1/8 tsp cooking/kosher salt
- 60g / 4 tbsp melted butter
- 1/4 tsp vanilla extract
Lemon vanilla cake:
- 1 1/3 cups flour , plain/all-purpose
- 2 tsp baking powder (if old, check it’s still active)
- 1/4 tsp cooking/kosher salt
- 3/4 cup caster sugar (superfine sugar)
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 tbsp lemon zest
- 2 large eggs , at room temperature (what this means)
- 90 g / 6 tbsp unsalted butter , melted then cooled slightly (don’t use piping hot)
- 1/3 cup sour cream , at room temperature (sub plain yogurt)
- 1/3 cup milk , at room temperature (full fat best, low fat ok)
Blueberries:
- 500 g / 1 lb fresh blueberries (Note 1 for frozen)
- 2 tsp lemon juice
- 2 tbsp caster sugar (superfine sugar)
- 3 tbsp flour , plain/all-purpose
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 200°C / 400°F (180°C fan-forced). Line a 20cm springform pan with paper (here's how I do it).
- Crumb – Put the flour, sugar, cinnamon and salt in a medium bowl and mix together with a fork. Then add the butter and vanilla, and use the fork to mix until all the flour is wet, then stop mixing. We want it lumpy and crumbly!
- Zest the lemon first and put it aside for the batter before measuring out juice for the blueberry tossing.
- Blueberries – Toss the blueberries with lemon juice to wet the surface. Sprinkle with sugar and flour, toss to coat. Set aside.
Lemon vanilla cake:
- Whisk dry – Whisk the flour, baking powder and salt in a small bowl.
- Whisk wet – In a larger bowl, whisk the sugar, vanilla, zest and eggs until the surface is a bit foamy (~ 15 sec by hand). Add the butter and sour cream, whisk until smooth.
- Combine wet and dry – Switch to a rubber spatula. Add the flour in 3 batches, folding in between until the flour is mostly incorporated. Then add the milk and stir until combined. Some small lumps is ok!
- Assembling – Pour the batter into the pan. Scatter blueberries on top. Sprinkle any leftover flour at the bottom of the blueberry bowl on top of the blueberries. Cover with chunks of crumb, aiming for ~85% coverage. If necessary, enclose powdery bits in your fist to press them into clumps!
- Bake for 65 minutes, rotating the pan halfway, until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean (blueberry smear is ok!).
- Cool 10 minutes in the pan. Remove the cake from the springform pan then cool for at least another 10 minutes before cutting to serve.
- Serving – For the best blueberry crumble-cake experience, serve warm with a scoop of vanilla ice cream! Otherwise, be normal and serve it at room temperature. Ice cream or cream also welcome here.
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
Life of Dozer
Me: in Brisbane, at the final Good Food & Wine Show for the year. Dozer: at the Golden Retriever Boarders’ house. She’s always a little offended because Dozer gives her husband a more enthusiastic greeting than she gets.
She is a vegetarian. Her husband is a carnivore. Dozer is not subtle.
This is a photo she sent me yesterday of Dozer waiting at the gate to greet her husband when got home from work!
Gayathiri says
Beautiful recipe, Nagi. I substituted the caster sugar with brown sugar for the streusel topping. When I make this recipe in the future, I’ll probably add some lemon juice to the cake batter to tone down the sweetness just a bit.
Jenny stokes says
Had this for desert when the family came over and oh boy was it good. I used frozen blueberries as I grow them and needed to use them up before my next lot come on. If you haven’t tried this I would highly recommend.
Eliza says
10/10 the BEST crumb cake you’ll make. I served this with jersey cream & it was a hit!
I used frozen blueberries & needed to increase cook time by 25mins, but it still came out beautifully moist.
joan says
I just made this fantastic blueberry cake. I followed the recipe and it came out looking and smelling wonderful. I added walnuts to the crumbs. Can’t wait to eat it. Thanks again. Have a wonderful Holiday and kisses to Dozer.
Danika says
Made this for hubby’s birthday. It was absolutely delicious. I will definitely make this again. Served it warm with vanilla ice-cream. YUMMY!!
Indy says
So delicate and delicious! We served it warm with some ice cream and absolutely loved it. The next day it’s equally as nice heated or eaten at room temp.
It has the perfect balance of textures and the blueberries literally burst in your mouth. Will be making this on repeat!
Kelli says
Yummm! This was a winner. Delicious heated a little with ice cream. Would be a great cake for entertaining.
Margaret Nowacki says
OMG thankyou Nagi. This cake /dessert is amazing. Now the favourite for our family. I will be making it for our Christmas event, have lots of blueberries frozen, so I will not be caught short
Helen says
My cake part didnt rise much at all. Not sure what I did wrong??
Emma says
Maybe the baking powder wasn’t active cause that is the rising ingredient. Possibly just a guess
Janice says
Can I make this with mangoes?
Lorraine says
Wow Nagi, this cake was spectacular and thoroughly enjoyed by everyone! I must add that even without the video, your instructions and photos were very helpful and well written. Thanks for taking so much time to share this recipe with us all.😊
Anna says
Since you released the blueberry crumb cake I have made it 4/5 times – a hit every time. I have also substituted gluten free flour with no issues. I have just made it today with tinned apples instead of blueberries (as that’s all I had) and upped the cinnamon a bit and it is soooooo yum! Thank you Nagi for this and all your recipes – they all seem guaranteed to be a success. You are my go to now when I am looking for a recipe 😀
Heidi Graham says
Made this twice now. So, so good! My one complaint is —I had a very black bottom and the sides were a quite dark too—with both attempts. I easily cut the darkened areas away, and then enjoyed the mega awesome flavour and crumb topping 👍
I live in Canada not sure if oven temp should be decreased? (Help???!) Most cake recipes I’m familiar with are asking for 350F…
Will try again, but would really like it be less dark.
Thank you so much.
HG
Verena says
This is so good and very forgiving. I added the sugar to the dry ingredients. I forgot to add the sour cream and butter to the liquids. I threw it all in afterwards and the cake still worked out anyway. This is definitely a keeper!!
Danika says
Hubby loves blueberries so guess who’s getting one for his birthday.
Katrina says
Delicious…especially with freshly picked blueberries from the garden.
Loved by all. Will definitely make it again.
Gillian says
Nagi, my hero! This cake is worth the effort. I’m not usually into sweet food, but the fresh blueberries persuaded me to give this a try. So glad I did. So is my husband. Great crunch too. Definitely make again! Also made yumikos stuffed chicken wings. Out of this world. Thanks to you both, and gorgeous dozer. ❤
Amy says
This is an absolutely amazing easy recipe. I only had greek yogurt so the batter was a bit tough so I added some milk to loosen it up. It was so delicious. It also a lighter cake then pound cake. Perfect with coffee!
Heather says
I’m wondering if I could sub yogurt for the sour cream?
Heather says
Ha! I think I might have answered my own question! I couldn’t wait to try this yummy cake, so I went for it in trying yogurt! It seemed to turn out fine… Delicious and beautiful! Of course, I don’t know exactly what it is like with sour cream, but considering I only had yogurt in the house, I think it turned out pretty good! 😋💖
Sandra says
I would love to know the answer to this question too, if anyone can help.
Donna Blyth says
It says in the recipe now, that you can sub with plain yoghurt.
Ron says
Ok so I messed this one up….Living in Morroco has it’s culinary challenges …namely baking powder that is packed in these little packs that have no measurement to them….so I didn’t put in enough an I ended up with upside down Blue berry Crumble….but it was gooood…:)