Sun-warm peaches, buttery crumbs, and a hint of cinnamon—these bars don’t just taste like summer, they feel like it. One bite, and everything slows down, just a little.
This recipe keeps things simple: a shortbread base, juicy peach layer, and a golden crumble on top. It’s calm, confident dessert energy, the kind that makes a weekday feel like a picnic.
Credit goes to Elly for the spirit of this bake—cozy, unfussy, and wildly lovable. Now let’s make a pan that disappears faster than you can say, save me one.
When Do These Bars Taste Their Absolute Best?
Fresh, ripe peaches carry the show—soft, fragrant, and a little drippy is perfect. Bake on days when the fruit smell takes over the kitchen, because that’s the sign.
Serve the bars fully cooled for clean slices; chilled bars taste brighter, like the sweetness got sharper overnight. Warm is nice, cold is neater; choose your mood.
Ingredients Needed for the Recipe (use list and use of them)
Each ingredient works for texture, flavor, or structure—nothing fussy. Keep it simple, and the peaches do the heavy lifting.
Unsalted butter, 1 cup, softened — for a rich, tender shortbread and sandy crumble.
Granulated sugar, 1/2 cup — sweetens the base without making it tough.
All-purpose flour, 2 cups — structure for the crust; keeps it sturdy but delicate.
Salt, 1/4 teaspoon — sharpens the buttery flavor; don’t skip.
Fresh peaches, 3 cups (about 4–5) — sliced; juicy center stage, skins on for color.
Cinnamon, 1/2 teaspoon (optional) — a whisper of warmth; adjust to mood.
For topping: flour 1/2 cup, sugar 1/4 cup, cold butter 1/4 cup — a quick, crisp crumble.
Special gear: 9×13-inch pan, mixing bowls, pastry cutter or fork — that’s it.
Everything here plays nice together. Butter binds, flour supports, peaches sing—simple harmony, big payoff.
Can I Swap Ingredients Without Losing the Magic?
Peaches not quite ready? Use nectarines (no peeling needed), or a half-and-half mix with berries for a little zing. Canned peaches work too—drain very well, then pat dry.
Out of cornstarch? Use 2 tablespoons of quick-cooking tapioca or 2–3 tablespoons flour. No brown sugar? Use white sugar plus a teaspoon of maple or honey for depth.
How to make Heavenly Summer Peach Bars?
Make this recipe yours—just save it to your Pinterest board!”
Preheat and Prep the Pan
Set oven to 350°F (175°C). Grease a 9×13-inch baking pan, making sure corners get love.
Line with parchment, if you like drama-free lifts. A little overhang doubles as handles.
Mix the Shortbread Base
In a bowl, mix 1 cup softened butter, 1/2 cup sugar, 2 cups flour, and 1/4 teaspoon salt. Stir until crumbly, like wet sand.
Press the mixture into the pan—firmly but not aggressively—so it bakes into a cohesive, tender crust.
Par-Bake the Crust
Bake the pressed base for 10 minutes. It won’t be browned, just set and lightly matte.
This pre-bake stops sogginess later and gives the peaches a solid stage to shine.
Toss the Peach Filling
In a clean bowl, combine 3 cups sliced peaches with 1 tablespoon cornstarch, 1/4 cup brown sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla, and 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon (optional).
Toss gently; the slices should glisten, not sit in a pool. If peaches are extra juicy, add a teaspoon more cornstarch.
Layer the Peaches Evenly
Spoon the peach mixture over the warm crust and spread to the edges. Try for one even layer to help the bars cut neatly.
Keep the liquid in the bowl if it looks excessive; the fruit should bubble, not swim.
Make the Crumble
Mix 1/2 cup flour and 1/4 cup sugar, then cut in 1/4 cup cold cubed butter until pea-sized bits form. Keep it cool; cold butter equals crisp crumbs.
Want texture? Add a small handful of chopped pecans or almonds, just enough to crunch without stealing the show.
Top and Bake
Scatter the crumble over the peaches, letting pockets of fruit peek through. Pretty counts.
Bake 30–35 minutes, until the top is golden and the filling is bubbling at the edges. That bubbling is your yes.
Cool, Chill, Slice
Let the pan cool completely on a rack. Patience here equals clean edges later.
For ultra-neat bars, chill 45–60 minutes, then slice with a sharp knife, wiping between cuts. Share or don’t—no judgment.
Tips
Use very ripe peaches for sweetness and aroma; firm fruit can taste shy. If they’re tart, add 1–2 teaspoons extra sugar.
Chill the crust ingredients slightly before mixing to encourage a crisp base with fewer crumbs. Cold butter, crisp bite.
Add a squeeze of lemon to the filling for brightness; it wakes everything up, softly. Zest too, if you’re feeling sunny.
If your kitchen is warm, refrigerate the assembled pan for 10 minutes before baking to keep the crumble perky.
Let the bars rest fully; warm slicing looks rustic, cold slicing looks polished. Choose the vibe.
What’s the Best Way to Store and Serve Later?
Refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The crust holds, the peaches stay plush—still dreamy.
For longer storage, freeze up to 2 months; thaw overnight in the fridge. Serve chilled, or bring to room temp for softer edges.
Three Ways to Make Them Your Own (Without Breaking the Recipe)
Brown-butter the crust: melt and lightly toast the butter, then chill until firm, and proceed as written—nutty, deeper flavor. Tiny step, big glow-up.
Ginger kiss: add 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger to the filling or 2 tablespoons minced candied ginger to the crumble—bright warmth, no fuss.
Crunch crown: swap 2 tablespoons of the crumble flour for finely ground almonds or oats. Texture turns cozy, like a little sweater for the top.
Pairing Ideas That Make Each Bite Sing
Serve with lightly sweetened whipped cream and a pinch of cinnamon sugar. Or, a scoop of vanilla bean—classic, timeless.
For drinks, pour iced tea with lemon, bubbly water with peach slices, or a not-too-sweet prosecco. Weekend energy, even on Tuesday.
How to Avoid Soggy Bottoms (and Other Little Annoyances)
Always par-bake the crust and let steam escape; moisture is the sneaky villain. Don’t drown the base in extra juices.
Use enough thickener for the fruit and watch for edge bubbling. If peaches are extra ripe, give cornstarch a tiny bump.
Hosting? Here’s a Smart Make-Ahead Plan
Day 1: bake, cool, chill, and slice; store covered in the fridge. Day 2: plate, dust with confectioners’ sugar, pretend it just happened.
If you need them warm, reheat slices on a baking sheet at 300°F for 8–10 minutes. The edges perk right up.
Can I Use Canned or Frozen Peaches and Still Win?
Yes. For canned, drain extremely well and pat dry; the less syrup, the cleaner the slice. Taste and reduce sugar a touch if needed.
Frozen peaches should be thawed and blotted. If they seem watery, add another 1/2 tablespoon cornstarch to keep the filling bright.
Little Touches That Make Them Look Bakery-Ready
Cut into tidy rectangles and stagger on a platter; a few fresh peach slices and mint leaves say, hello gorgeous. Minimal effort, big charm.
Dust with a veil of powdered sugar right before serving. It melts into the crumble and makes the color pop.
Serving Sizes and Scaling Without Stress
A 9×13-inch pan comfortably makes 12 generous bars or 16 smaller nibbles. For a crowd, double the recipe and bake in two pans—no timing changes.
Half-batch? Use an 8×8-inch pan, and check for doneness a few minutes earlier. Same steps, less waiting.
Why the Method Works (Quiet Science, Promise)
Fat in the shortbread coats flour, limiting gluten and keeping the crust tender. Par-baking locks that structure before the fruit arrives.
Cornstarch binds peach juices as they heat, turning liquid to silk. The chilled crumble bakes into crisp, buttery pebbles—texture you can hear.
How to Make It Picnic-Proof
Slice smaller, sturdy bars and layer with parchment in a lidded container. Keep cool with a freezer pack if the sun is feeling bold.
Wrap individual bars in wax paper for grab-and-go moments. They’ll look thoughtful, and hands stay clean—bonus.
A Seasonal Spin Without Losing the Soul
Early summer: mix peaches with a handful of strawberries; add a drop of almond extract. Late summer: peaches plus plums for tangy drama.
Early fall: keep peaches, bump cinnamon, and add a whisper of nutmeg. Same base, new sweater.
Tiny Troubleshooting (So Nothing Derails Dessert)
Crust crumbles when slicing? Chill longer, and wipe the knife between cuts. Warmed edges get messy, fast.
Top looks pale? Bake 3–5 minutes more; watch for that gentle gold. Bubbling at the edges says the center set.
Leftovers: Snack, Breakfast, Repeat
Cold bar with coffee in the morning? Absolutely. It’s basically fruit, right—plus happiness, and a crumbly halo.
Cube leftovers and spoon over yogurt with a sprinkle of granola. Dessert turned parfait; nobody complains.
Entertaining with Ease (Because You’ve Got Other Things to Do)
Make the bars the day before, plate them the day of, and add cream or ice cream at the table. Effortless, but it looks planned.
Set out a tiny jar of cinnamon sugar for sprinkling. A small flourish goes a long way, and guests notice.
Ingredient Ethics, Gently
Choose peaches that smell like peaches—fragrance matters more than perfection. A few freckles? That’s just character.
If stone fruit is off-season, go with high-quality frozen slices. Better to honor the method than force sad fruit.
A Note of Gratitude (and a Nod to Elly)
Recipes like this live in the sweet spot: simple steps, familiar ingredients, and a result that feels like a hug. Thanks, Elly, for the nudge toward summer on a plate.
Now, bake the pan, pour the tea, and let the kitchen smell like sunshine. The rest of the day can wait.
These Heavenly Summer Peach Bars are the ultimate taste of summer in a dessert! Featuring a rich, buttery shortbread crust, a luscious layer of sweet, juicy peaches, and a golden, crumbly streusel topping, they're the perfect balance of textures and flavors. Easy to make and impossible to resist, these bars are ideal for picnics, potlucks, or a simple treat with your afternoon coffee. They capture the essence of fresh summer peaches in every single bite.
Ingredients
For the Crust
1cup unsalted butter (softened)
1/2cup granulated sugar
2cups all-purpose flour
1/4teaspoon salt
For the Filling
3cups fresh peaches (sliced, about 4-5 medium peaches)
1tablespoon cornstarch
1/4cup brown sugar
1teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2teaspoon cinnamon (optional)
For the Crumble Topping
1/2cup all-purpose flour
1/4cup granulated sugar
1/4cup unsalted butter (cold, cubed)
Instructions
1
Preheat and prepPreheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Grease a 9x13-inch baking pan and set aside.
2
Make the crustIn a large bowl, mix the softened butter, granulated sugar, 2 cups of flour, and salt until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Press the mixture firmly and evenly into the bottom of the prepared baking pan.
3
Bake the crustBake the crust for 10 minutes, or until it just begins to set and looks slightly dry on top.
4
Prepare the fillingWhile the crust is baking, in a separate bowl, gently toss the sliced peaches with cornstarch, brown sugar, vanilla extract, and cinnamon (if using). Mix until the peaches are evenly coated.
No need to peel the peaches; the skins soften during baking.
5
Add the fillingRemove the pan from the oven and spread the peach mixture evenly over the warm crust.
6
Make the crumble toppingIn a small bowl, combine the 1/2 cup flour and 1/4 cup sugar. Add the cold, cubed butter and use a pastry cutter or fork to cut it into the dry ingredients until the mixture forms pea-sized crumbs.
7
Add the topping and bakeSprinkle the crumble topping evenly over the peaches. Return the pan to the oven and bake for 30-35 minutes, or until the topping is golden brown and the peach filling is thick and bubbling.
8
Cool and serveAllow the bars to cool completely in the pan on a wire rack (at least 1 hour). This is crucial for the filling to set and for clean slicing. Once cool, cut into squares or bars. Serve plain or with a dollop of whipped cream or a scoop of vanilla ice cream.
For neater slices, chill the bars in the refrigerator for 30 minutes before cutting.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 12
Serving Size 1 bar
Amount Per Serving
Calories380kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat18g28%
Saturated Fat10g50%
Trans Fat0.5g
Cholesterol40mg14%
Sodium150mg7%
Potassium190mg6%
Total Carbohydrate52g18%
Dietary Fiber2g8%
Sugars28g
Protein4g8%
Calcium 30 mg
Iron 1.8 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
Fresh peaches are best: For the most vibrant flavor and texture, use ripe, in-season peaches. If you must use canned, drain them very well to prevent a soggy filling.
Don't skip the cooling time: Letting the bars cool completely is essential for them to hold their shape when cut.
Add a zing: A squeeze of fresh lemon juice over the peaches enhances their natural sweetness and adds a bright note.
Boost the crunch: Add 1/4 cup of chopped pecans or almonds to the crumble topping for extra texture.
Storage: Store cooled bars in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 4 days.
Freezing: Freeze the bars (individually wrapped) in an airtight container for up to 2 months. Thaw in the refrigerator before serving.
Other fruits: This recipe is versatile! Try it with nectarines, plums, or mixed berries.