Learn how to make a buttery, cookie-like butter streusel topping that elevates pies, crumbles, coffee cakes and muffins — or bake it on its own for a crunchy topping to sprinkle over yogurt and ice cream.

Why this butter streusel works so well
- Rich, buttery clumps with the right amount of sweetness — a crisp, cookie-like texture that contrasts beautifully with soft fruit fillings.
- Ready in about five minutes using simple ingredients you likely already have on hand.
- Versatile: use it as a crumble topping for pies, crumbles and cakes, or bake separately and scatter over ice cream, yogurt or oatmeal for an instant crunchy garnish.

Streusel vs. crumble: what’s the difference?
They’re very similar — both are made from butter, flour and sugar — but textures and proportions vary. Traditional German streusel yields larger, buttery clumps and is less sweet, while American-style crumbles often use more sugar and produce a finer, sandier texture.
Sometimes “crisp” is used interchangeably with crumble; a crisp typically includes oats and sometimes nuts, while a classic streusel usually does not.
Ingredients you’ll need
Simple pantry ingredients: butter, flour, sugar, a little salt and vanilla for flavor.

- Flour: unbleached all-purpose flour
- Butter: unsalted, at room temperature
- Sugar: cane or granulated sugar; you can swap half for brown sugar if you prefer a deeper flavor
- Vanilla extract: adds warm, rounded flavor
- Salt: a pinch to balance sweetness (omit if using salted butter)
See the recipe card below for exact measurements and full directions.
How to make the streusel topping
Quick and straightforward — you can make this in a mixer or by hand.
In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine the flour, sugar and salt. Add room-temperature butter and vanilla extract, and beat until the mixture forms large, cookie-like clumps. If any pieces are too small, press them together with your fingers to form bigger crumbs.

No mixer? Mix the flour, sugar, salt and vanilla in a bowl, drop in pieces of softened butter and pinch the butter into the dry ingredients until large clumps form.
Helpful tips
Aim for large clumps
This streusel should be chunky and cookie-like. If it looks too fine, press small crumbs together into larger pieces with your fingers.
Keep mixing until it comes together: It may look sandy at first; continue until large crumbs form.

Use a kitchen scale for consistency
Weighing flour, sugar and butter gives more reliable results than volume measurements and helps you reproduce the same texture every time.
Ways to use the streusel topping
This buttery crumble is extremely versatile: sprinkle it over baked goods before baking, or bake it separately and use as a crunchy garnish.
Add on top of baked goods
Use in place of a top crust for pies, or sprinkle over coffee cake, muffins and fruit crumbles before baking. Bake according to the main recipe’s instructions, with the streusel on top.
I love using this streusel on simple fruit crumbles and tarts — the crunchy contrast with soft fruit is irresistible.

Bake it separately
To make a crunchy topping for ice cream, yogurt or oatmeal, preheat the oven to 350°F (180°C). Spread streusel on a lined baking sheet and bake 12–15 minutes until lightly golden. Let cool — it will crisp up as it cools.

Storage
- Unbaked streusel: Refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 1 week. To freeze, spread on a lined sheet tray and freeze until set, then transfer to a freezer-safe bag for up to 3 months.
- Baked streusel: Store in an airtight container at room temperature or refrigerated for up to 2 weeks, or freeze for up to 3 months.
- Make ahead: Prepare unbaked streusel in advance and store as above; sprinkle on your dessert when ready to bake.
Common questions
Add unbaked streusel before baking if it’s topping a pie, cake or crumble so it bakes along with the dessert. If you want a separate crunchy garnish, bake the streusel on its own and add it afterward.
Yes — bake at 350°F (180°C) for about 12–15 minutes until lightly golden, then cool to crisp it up.
“Streusel” is a German word from “streuen,” meaning to scatter or sprinkle — an apt name for this topping.
Cold butter can work but takes more effort to break down into clumps. Melted butter changes the texture and won’t produce the same chunky crumbs. Room-temperature butter gives the best, large streusel clumps.

Did you make this butter streusel? I’d love to hear how you used it — please leave a comment below!
Butter Streusel Topping
- Author: Vanessa Gilic
- Prep Time: 5 min
- Total Time: 5 min (plus bake time depending on use)
- Yield: about 3.5 cups
- Category: Dessert
- Method: Mix
- Cuisine: German
- Diet: Vegetarian
Description
Make a delicious, buttery streusel that works as a crumble topping for desserts or as a baked, crunchy garnish on its own.
Ingredients
- 250 grams (2 cups) unbleached all-purpose flour
- 125 grams (1/2 cup + 2 tbsp) cane sugar
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 170 grams (3/4 cup or 1½ sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Mix streusel: In a stand mixer with the paddle attachment, combine flour, sugar and salt. Add softened butter and vanilla and beat until large clumps form. Press smaller crumbs together by hand to create bigger pieces. (To make by hand: whisk dry ingredients, drop in butter pieces and pinch until clumps form.)
- Use or bake: Scatter the streusel over desserts before baking, or bake separately.
- To top baked goods: Sprinkle over crumbles, pies or muffins before baking and bake according to the main recipe.
- To bake on its own: Preheat oven to 350°F (180°C). Spread streusel on a lined baking sheet and bake 12–15 minutes until lightly golden. Cool to crisp.
Notes
- By hand: Combine dry ingredients, add butter in pieces and pinch into large crumbles.
- Weigh ingredients: Using a kitchen scale improves consistency and reduces mess.
- Large crumbs: Aim for chunky, buttery clumps rather than a fine texture. Don’t stop mixing too early — it looks sandy at first but will come together.
- Storage: Unbaked streusel keeps in the fridge up to 1 week or frozen up to 3 months (freeze on a tray first to prevent clumping). Baked streusel stores at room temperature or refrigerated up to 2 weeks, or frozen up to 3 months.