large-batch-apricot-and-cherry-slab-pie-with-oat-crumb-topping

Large Batch Apricot and Cherry Slab Pie with Oat Crumb Topping

Food

This apricot cherry slab pie features an easy-to-make oat crumb topping and can feed a crowd, making it perfect for a large gathering!

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A slice of cherry and apricot slab pie, with two more slices of pie behind it.

I look forward to stonefruit season every year. The minute they start to arrive in my store, I buy bags of them, eating plums, cherries, and peaches until my stomach protests. But one of the few stonefruits that I prefer to cook and bake with, instead of immediately eating are apricots. If you can source fresh, tree-ripened apricots, they’re a joy to eat out of hand. But most of the apricots I can get are still a bit underripe.

But once they’ve been baked, like in my apricot frangipane tart, apricot braided bread, apricot blueberry cake, or apricot berry cobbler, even the underripe apricots turn into the most marvelous and succulent fruit. And as I am often the go-to dessert person when my friends invite me for dinner, I made this large batch apricot cherry slab pie for a particularly large group dinner. It’s ideal for a group picnic or large dinner party but feel free to cut the recipe in half if you want to make something slightly smaller. But honestly, it’s also awesome as a breakfast pastry, so no need to halve it!

What is a slab pie?

A large apricot and cherry slab pie with plates and fresh apricots and cherries next to it.

If you’ve never heard the term “slab pie” before, it could be confusing. Most traditional pies are round, baked in a pie pan or pie tin. I have plenty of more traditional pie recipes baked this way, like blueberry pie, strawberry rhubarb pie, and my blueberry rhubarb pie. But slab pies are made in a sheet pan, typically either a quarter sheet pan (9 x 13 x 1-inch) or in a half sheet pan (13 x 17 x 1 inch). 

Not only does this large flat pie offer more crust to filling ratio, as the pie is thinner, but it also means it’s easier to serve. Unlike a traditional round pie, where it’s challenging to cut thin slices, the slab pie can be sliced into smaller pieces, as well as allows folks to cut different size pieces for those folks who prefer larger or smaller pieces. For this reason, slab pies are a great option to make a dessert for a large crowd.

How to make this slab pie

A slice of apricot cherry slab pie on a plate, with the remaining slab pie next to it. There are fresh cherries and an apricot next tot he plate, along with a blue lined cloth napkin.

Making a slab pie is similar to making a regular fruit pie, so if you’re familiar with that process, you can easily make a slab pie. But even if you don’t, don’t be intimidated by the process. Here’s an overview of what you will be doing. 

First make the crust by combining flour, butter, and salt in a large bowl. Break up the butter into small flat bits by smashing them with your hand, and then drizzle water over the mixture until a dough forms. Divide the dough into two pieces, then flatten and wrap in plastic wrap. Place in the fridge and let chill for an hour or overnight.

Left image is a tablespoon drizzling ice cold water into flour and butter in a glass bowl. Right image is pie dough formed at the bottom of a glass bowl.

While the dough is filling, make the crumb topping. Pulse some rolled oats until they’ve broken down a bit, then add flour, white sugar, brown sugar, and spices like cinnamon, ground ginger, and ground nutmeg. Pulse again to combine. Drizzle melted butter into the mixture, pulse again until they start clumping up, mix in more rolled oats and coarse Turbinado sugar, and then refrigerate the entire mixture to help it solidify.

Left image is melted butter being poured into ingredients to make a crumb topping. Right image is the crumb topping, after being tossed with the melted butter and clumping up.

Then assemble the whole pie and bake! First roll out one of the chilled dough into a rectangle, and then roll out the second dough in the same manner. I divide the dough like this because it’s easier to handle and roll out half a dough than a whole dough sheet. Fit them both into the half sheet pan, making sure some of the dough overhangs the edges. Press them together and decoratively crimp the side of the dough around the pan.

Left image is half the pie crust rolled out and placed in a half sheet pan. Right image is the second pie crust rolled out and placed in the pan, covering the entire bottom and sides of the half sheet pan with pie crust.

Make the filling by combining pitted, sliced apricots and pitted cherries with lemon juice, vanilla and almond extra, sugar, tapioca starch (or cornstarch), a grated apple, crystallized ginger, cinnamon, ground ginger, nutmeg and salt.

Pour the fruit filling into the pan and bake it for 25 minutes. Pull the oat topping out of the fridge, and sprinkle it all over the partially baked fruit and then continue to bake for another 35 to 30 minutes. Let it cool completely before serving.

Left image is fruit filling in the unbaked pie crust. Right image is a hand sprinkling crumb topping over the fruit filling.

How to store this slab pie

You can store this pie like any other pie on the countertop for up to 2 days. Make sure to cover the pie with plastic wrap or foil first. If you want to extend the life of the pie, you can freeze slices of the pie for up to 2 months. Just slice the pie, place it on a baking pan, and put it in the freezer for 2 hours or until frozen solid. Then move it to a container or a resealable Ziploc freezer bag. Thaw the pie on the counter for 2 hours before serving, or warm it up in a 350° oven for 15 to 20 minutes or until the pie is fully warm. 

A slice of apricot cherry slab pie on a plate, with the remaining pie behind it.

If you like this apricot cherry slab pie, check out some of these other slab pies

  • Cherry slab pie
  • Peach slab pie
  • Brandy Apple and Prunes slab pie
  • Rhubarb and mixed berry slab pie

And here are some other summer fruit recipes

  • Southern Peach cobbler
  • Bellini Peach Cobbler with Strawberry Biscuits
  • Peach and caramel upside down cake
  • Blueberry galette
  • Swedish Blueberry Cake
  • Cherry Plum Peach Cobbler
  • Plum Galette
  • Plum Crisp
  • Cherry Almond Muffins
  • Peach and Blueberry Coffee Cake
Two slices of apricot cherry slab pie with crumb topping on different plates. There is a blue lines cloth napkin next to the plates.
A slice of cherry and apricot slab pie, with two more slices of pie behind it.

Print

Large Batch Apricot Cherry Slab Pie with Oat Crumb Topping

Unlike some of my other slab pies, this particular slab pie doesn’t have a double crust. Instead, the top of this pie is a crumb oat topping which gives it lovely counterpoint crunch and texture to the warm soft apricot and cherry filling. If you can’t find apricots, try swapping out peeled peaches or nectarines for them. This recipe makes a half sheet pan pie, 13 x 17 inches. You can easily cut the recipe in half if you want to make small slab pie, using a 9 x 13 inch quarter sheet pan.
Prep Time 1 hour
Cook Time 1 hour
Servings 24
Calories 420kcal
Author Irvin

Ingredients

Crust

  • 3 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1 1/4 cup cold unsalted butter 285 g or 2 1/2 sticks
  • 3/4 cup ice cold water more if necessary

Streusel topping

  • 1 1/2 cups rolled oats divided 165 g
  • 3/4 cup all-purpose flour 105 g
  • 1/2 cup white sugar 100 g
  • 1/4 cup packed dark brown sugar 55 g
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter melted 115 g or 1 stick
  • 2 tablespoons Turbinado sugar or other coarse sugar, optional

Filling

  • 1 pound apricots pitted and sliced
  • 1 1/2 pounds sweet cherries pitted and halved
  • 1 tablespoon lemon juice
  • 2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/2 teaspoon almond extract optional but recommended
  • 1/2 cup white sugar 100 g
  • 6 tablespoon tapioca starch or cornstarch 65 g
  • 1 apple peeled, cored, and grated through the big hole in a box grater
  • 6 tablespoon crystallized ginger 75
  • 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1/8 teaspoon nutmeg
  • 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt

Instructions

  • Make the pie crust by placing the flour and salt in a large bowl. Cut the butter into 1/2-inch cubes and sprinkle it over the dry ingredients. Using your fingers, smash and break up the butter into flat pieces, about the size of peas.
    Left image is cubed cut-up butter in a bowl of flour and water. Right image is a hand smashing the cubed butter into flat pieces.
  • Drizzle the water over mixture, tossing with a fork as you do. Continue to mix and toss the water and dry ingredients together until a shaggy dough forms.
    Left image is a tablespoon drizzling ice cold water into flour and butter in a glass bowl. Right image is pie dough formed at the bottom of a glass bowl.
  • Dump the mixture onto a clean surface and then fold and massage it until it forms a dough. Divide in half, flattening each half into a 1-inch disk, then wrap tightly with plastic wrap. Refrigerate for 1 hour or overnight. (see note below on why I divide the dough in half)
    Left image is the dough being divided into two parts. Right image is the half dough formed into two disks, each wrapped in plastic wrap.
  • While the dough is chilling, make the streusel topping by placing 1 cup of the oats in a food process and pulse until the oats have been broken down into small bits. Add the flour, white sugar, brown sugar, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and salt. Pulse 7 or 8 times or until the oats start to break down a bit. Dump the topping into a bowl and add the remaining 1/2 cups of oats along with the Turbinado sugar (if using).
    Left image is crumb topping ingredients in a food processor. Right image is processed ingredients along with a few more ingredients to make the crumb topping.
  • Drizzle the melted butter over the ingredients, tossing together until the butter it absorbed and clumps start to form. Dump into a bowl or a Ziploc bag place in the fridge to chill.
    Left image is melted butter being poured into ingredients to make a crumb topping. Right image is the crumb topping, after being tossed with the melted butter and clumping up.
  • When the dough is chilled preheat the oven to 375°F. Make the filling by combining the apricots, cherries, lemon juice, vanilla and almond extract, sugar, tapioca starch/cornstarch, grated apple, crystallized ginger, cinnamon, ground ginger, nutmeg and salt in a large bowl. Toss to coat the fruit.
    Left image is all the pie filling ingredients in a glass bowl. Right image is all the ingredients tossed together.
  • Roll out half of the dough into a rectangle, roughly 13 x 9 inches.
    Left image is half the dough on a floured marble surface. Right image is the dough rolled out into a 9 x 13 inch sheet, with a rolling pin on top of it.
  • Fit the dough sheet into a 11×17 inch half-sheet pan, with the dough overlapping slightly in the middle. Repeat with the second half of the dough, rolling it out into a 9 x 13 inch rectangle and laying out into the other half the half sheet pan, overlapping the first dough. Press down in the middle to seal the dough together and then crimp the sides of the dough, making sure the dough is anchored to the sides of the pan.
    Left image is half the pie crust rolled out and placed in a half sheet pan. Right image is the second pie crust rolled out and placed in the pan, covering the entire bottom and sides of the half sheet pan with pie crust.
  • Pour and spread the fruit filling into the crust and bake it in the oven (without the topping) for 25 minutes.

    Remove from the oven and sprinkle the streusel topping over the fruit filling. Break up any super large boulder sized chunks but leave the topping mostly chunky. Return to the oven and bake for an additional 25 to 30 minutes more, or until the topping is golden brown and the filling is bubbling thick in the center.

    Let cool completely on a wire rack before serving.

    Left image is fruit filling in the unbaked pie crust. Right image is a hand sprinkling crumb topping over the fruit filling.

Notes

1. You can keep the dough in one piece if you want. Just roll the whole dough out to a large 13 x 18 sheet and fit it into the pan. But I find that working with half the dough is easier to roll out and move to pan.

2. This recipe can easily be cut in half and baked in a quart sheet pan, 9 x 13 x 1-inches. If you only have a taller 9 x 13 x 2 inch pan (the kind you bake brownies in), you can spray the pan with cooking oil, line with parchment paper, and then proceed with the half recipe as directed. Once baked, just lift the entire pie out of the pan by grabbing the sides of the parchment paper and move it to a serving plate.

Nutrition

Calories: 420kcal | Carbohydrates: 81.3g | Protein: 3.6g | Fat: 7.4g | Saturated Fat: 4.2g | Cholesterol: 16mg | Sodium: 3286mg | Potassium: 236mg | Fiber: 4.7g | Sugar: 31.9g | Calcium: 84mg | Iron: 3mg
Top image is three slices of apricot cherry slab pie with crumb topping. Bottom image is a slice of apricot cherry slab pie with crumb topping on a plate, with the remaining pie and fresh cherries and an apricot next to the plate.

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