Serving as a sequel to my cranberry bars and lemon strawberry crumb bars, today’s strawberry rhubarb bars are seasonally fresh with hints of orange zest and vanilla. What I love most—and what you’ll find wonderfully convenient—is that all of my crumb bars feature a delicious crust and crumb topping that are made from the same dough. Portion it out, add the layers, and bake. Dessert doesn’t get much easier than this.
These Strawberry Rhubarb Crumb Bars Are:
Quicker than most—no pre-cooking the filling Crumbly, yet moist (don’t over-bake!) Stuffed with rhubarb and juicy strawberries Wonderfully sweet and buttery Easy to slice, serve, eat, and freeze
Ingredients You Need for Strawberry Rhubarb Crumb Bars:
All-Purpose Flour: Flour is the base of this recipe. Granulated Sugar: Sugar sweetens the crust/crumble and the strawberry rhubarb filling. Baking Powder: Baking powder keeps the crust/crumble on the lighter side. Without it, the texture would be a little too hard and dense. Salt, Cinnamon, & Vanilla: Each add flavor. Cold Butter: Just like pie crust, biscuits, scones, and even the crumb topping for coffee cake, cold butter is necessary. We’re cutting the butter into the dry ingredients to create a deliciously flaky and crumbly texture. The texture would completely change if we used softened butter. Egg: 1 egg helps binds the crust/crumble ingredients together. Milk: Milk also helps bind the crust/crumble ingredients together. I use this combination in my cranberry crumble bars too. Strawberries & Rhubarb: You can use fresh or frozen berries/rhubarb. Cornstarch: We’re essentially making a jam as the filling, so cornstarch is necessary to keep the fruit combined. Orange Zest: Strawberries are pretty soft, so I don’t add additional liquid (like orange juice) to this filling as I do with the cranberry version. However, flavor from a little orange zest is definitely welcome. I use orange in my strawberry rhubarb pie too—it brightens up the flavors.
Crust & Crumble Topping
It’s so convenient that the crust and crumble topping come from the same bowl. Combine the dry ingredients together, then cut in the cold and cubed butter. If you don’t have a pastry cutter or if you don’t want to make it by hand, you can use a food processor to gently cut in the butter. By hand it takes a good 5 minutes to get that flour completely coated with butter. Photo below on the right shows this mixture. The photo below shows the mixture after we add the wet ingredients: egg, milk, and vanilla extract. Don’t be alarmed if this takes you awhile to mix together and/or if doesn’t totally come together. The mixture will have the texture of moist sandy crumbles. You’ll have about 6 cups of crust/crumble mixture. Reserve 2 cups for the topping, then press the rest into a lined 9×13-inch baking pan. Just use your hands or a spatula to flatten. Again, don’t be nervous if things are crumbly:
Strawberry Rhubarb Filling
And now for the most difficult part in the recipe: add all of the filling ingredients to a bowl and mix them together. 😉 No pre-cooking. Simply spread it all over the crust. Add the remaining crust/crumble on top. For extra texture, add a handful of oats. I recommend this little addition because it helps cover up the fruit filling. If desired, replace with sliced almonds, your favorite chopped nuts, or you can skip it completely.
More Recipes Like This
I love serving bars like this because they’re handheld and easy to eat, great for freezing or transporting, and the recipe yields a nice big batch. It tastes like you’re eating pie, but with half the work getting there. And I have plenty more flavors and variations, too!
Apple Pie Bars (with Salted Caramel!) Lemon Strawberry Crumb Bars Raspberry Streusel Bars Pecan Pie Bars Lemon Bars Cranberry Crumble Pie Bars Blueberry Pie Bars Cherry Pie Bars