Asian Pear Crisp with Coconut and Ginger Recipe - Pamela Salzman Skip to content

Asian Pear Crisp with Coconut and Ginger Recipe

Photography by Erica Hampton

I am so frustrated that my website has been having difficulties the last few days.  Thank you for your patience!  To reiterate what I’ve been saying on social media, the site is not down, but just reeeallllly slow.  Keep trying to refresh the page you want and it will load eventually.  I am doing my best to get the issue resolved.  In the meantime, let’s have some fruit crisp!

Do you need another fruit crisp recipe?  As far as I can tell, crisp is not a dessert people tire of.  What isn’t to love about warm and juicy seasonal fruit buried underneath a sweet and crumbly topping?  I know I always say that desserts are not a food group with which you should be hanging out a lot, but who can live a life without them entirely? Not me!

Although I love a classic fruit crisp, this one is a little different.  First, I am using Asian pears, which is not a classic fruit in desserts.  In my opinion, the taste is like a cross between a sweet apple and a pear with the crunchiness of a juicy apple.  The flavor is very delicate, and lightly sweet.  I also love Asian pears in salads.  They are delicious and only in season around this time of year.  If you can’t find Asian pears where you are, any seasonal fruit will do because this topping goes with everything.

The topping is what makes this crisp slightly different from the norm.  It still has a base of rolled oats, but I have included some coconut flakes and candied ginger, as well.  I am crazy for ginger in any form. It just adds a nice zing to this dessert.  You can find crystallized/candied ginger at Whole Foods and Trader Joe’s. In addition, this crisp topping uses no grain flour at all, but instead incorporates almond flour.  

Overall, this is not a high-sugar dessert and that is what I keep talking about in my classes.  Let’s not just use minimally processed sweeteners, but let’s also use less of them.  That is how you create a lower glycemic dessert.  Try to train your palate to be accustomed to less sugar, even if it’s maple syrup. It can be done pretty quickly!

Another reason I love making crisps for entertaining is that you can make the topping months in advance and freeze it.  Or you can make it several days ahead and refrigerate it.  I usually bake a fruit crisp at least several hours in advance so the juices can settle and thicken a bit.  If you are lucky enough to have leftovers, how good is a crisp the next day for breakfast with some yogurt??  I approve!

5.0 from 4 reviews
Asian Pear Crisp with Coconut and Ginger
Serves: 6-8
 
Ingredients
  • 4 Asian pears (about 2 ½ lbs), quartered, cored and sliced crosswise ¼ -inch (peeling is optional)
  • Juice of half an orange
  • 1 Tablespoon pure maple syrup (either Grade A or Grade B)
  • 2 teaspoons arrowroot powder or ½ Tablespoon of a flour of your choice
  • Topping: (or see pamelasalzman.com for a more classic crisp topping)
  • 8 Tablespoons cold unsalted butter or Earth Balance, cut up into 1-inch pieces or unrefined coconut oil
  • 6 Tablespoons coconut palm sugar, brown sugar, or cane sugar or a combo
  • 1 cup old fashioned rolled oats (for GF, look for labels GF oats)
  • ⅓ cup sliced almonds
  • ⅓ cup unsweetened flaked coconut
  • 6 Tablespoons blanched almond flour or almond meal
  • ½ teaspoon sea salt
  • 3 Tablespoons diced candied ginger (my preference) or ¼ teaspoon ground ginger
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  2. Toss the pears with orange juice, maple syrup and arrowroot (or flour) and transfer to an 8x8 baking dish.
  3. In a bowl of a mixer pitted with the paddle attachment, combine all of the topping ingredients and blend until the mixture resembles small peas. This can also be done by hand with a pastry blender. Squeeze with your hands to create small clumps.
  4. Arrange topping over fruit to cover.
  5. Place baking dish on a cookie sheet and bake for 50-60 minutes or until bubbly and topping is golden brown.
  6. Serve warm or at room temperature with vanilla ice cream, if you like.
  7. To make crisp in a 13 x 9 –inch baking dish, double all ingredients and bake for at least 1 hour. If the topping starts to get too dark before the fruit softens, cover loosely with a piece of foil.

 

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Comments

16 Comments

  1. This was so delicious. Everyone loved the less-sweet topping with the ginger, coconut, and nutty goodness topping. I didn’t have almond flour so I whirled some whole almonds in my blender and it worked very well. Thanks so much.

    • Very resourceful! I also like desserts that aren’t too sweet. Glad you enjoyed this one.

  2. Wow this was SO good. The crumble topping – omg. Will definitely be making this again.

    • I love this recipe! The ginger really elevates the topping. I’m thrilled to hear you enjoyed it!

  3. This was bomb! The crystallized ginger takes it over the top. Got rave reviews. Thanks for sharing!

    • Completely agree! The ginger adds a nice zing to this dessert. I’m thrilled you gave this recipe a try!

  4. Hello Pamela
    I was given an abundance of Asian Pears and searched and your recipe popped out. Just my kind of a Dessert Friend. light on the sweet side. I didn’t have maple syrup so I used coconut sugar in place. Great Potluck Dessert!
    Thank you

    • So happy to hear that! Total winner.

  5. I would appreciate having the recipe for the toping you make for this crisp.
    I appreciate your help with this.

  6. Hi Pamela,
    I found this recipe when I was searching for apple crisp with Asian pears. So I made it today with 2 Asian pears and 2 Gala apples, as that was all I had. I had no ginger, so I substituted the ginger with craisins. It was delicious, and my 4 other guests love it too with ice cream and Bailey’s!

    • Yum yum!!

  7. This recipe was delicious! Thank you so much! I normally have to find ways to substitute certain ingredients to make an interesting recipe lower carb or gluten free, but this was nearly perfect as-is! I used coconut flour instead of arrowroot (much lower carb), grass fed butter, (but I plan to try it with coconut oil at some point), and I used ginger powder instead of candied ginger. I felt the recipe had just the right amount of sweetness for my palate, not too overpowering, whereas most traditional desserts are way too sweet for me as a low-carb-eater. Thanks again!

    • Oh, I’m delighted to hear this! Yes, I am a not-too-sweet dessert person too. 🙂

  8. This was delish! Relatively easy to make and great dessert to serve when having people over.

    • Great! I agree — perfect dessert when you’re having guests. Thanks for letting me know 🙂


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I come from a large Italian-American family with 28 first cousins (on one side of the family!) where sit-down holiday dinners for 85 people are the norm (how, you might ask – organization! But more on that later …).

Some of my fondest memories are of simple family gatherings, both large and small, with long tables of bowls and platters piled high, the laughter of my cousins echoing and the comfort of tradition warming my soul.

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