Categories
Dessert

Vintage crunch recipe gets two ‘plums’ up

This vintage recipe for plum crunch combines the rich flavor of fresh plums with the warm spice of cinnamon and the nuttiness of an oatmeal-based topping.

When I look at my bookshelf of cookbooks, I often think of a lady I never got the opportunity to meet in person but whom I feel connected to through a very sweet gift: Merna Snay.

Merna, a former resident of the Mount Hope and Haven area, was a prolific cook—and by all reports, a really good one. She got the opportunity to compete in the Pillsbury bake-off on several occasions. When she downsized, many years ago, she gifted me with some amazing vintage cookbooks, and when I decide I need a challenge, I will flip through them to see if I can decipher the directions. There was a generation of authors who often wrote recipes with the assumption that anyone reading them could fill in the blanks for the parts they weren’t including.

Recently, I purchased a big bag of plums from our local grocery store, and with a gathering at our office on the horizon, I decided it was time for one of Merna’s books to come off the shelf.

The recipe I landed on is from the booklet “Rare Recipes and Budget Savers, Volume 2,” published by the Wichita Eagle in 1963.

It was originally submitted for the Home Town News column on June 26, 1962, by Mrs. T.P. Mueller. She included the following note with it: “For that little lady who is in the doghouse for the loss of her plum crunch recipe, here is one, very good, and can be used either with plums or dried prunes.”

I never lost a plum crunch recipe, but I was glad for Mrs. Mueller’s guidance, nonetheless. I did add extra cinnamon in my version.

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Plum Crunch

This vintage recipe for plum crunch combines the rich flavor of fresh plums with the warm spice of cinnamon and the nuttiness of an oatmeal-based topping.
Course Dessert
Keyword brown sugar, butter, cinnamon, cobbler, crumble, fresh plums, plum, quick oats, rolled oats

Ingredients

Filling Ingredients

  • 3 1/2 cups fresh plums pitted and chopped
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1 tablespoon butter melted
  • 1 tablespoon flour

Crunch Ingredients

  • 1 1/4 cups quick or rolled oats
  • 1 cup brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup flour
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/2 cup butter

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Grease an eight-by-eight-inch baking dish with butter, and set it aside.
  • Add the plums sugar, cinnamon, butter and flour in a bowl and stir to combine well.
  • In another bowl, add the quick oats, brown sugar, flour and cinnamon, and mix to combine. Cut in the butter with a fork or pastry cutter until it is mixed throughout the crunch mixture.
  • Press half the crunch mixture into the bottom of the prepared pan, and then spread the filling mixture over top. Sprinkle the rest of the crunch mixture evenly over the top.
  • Bake for 30 minutes or until the filling is bubbling around the edges and the top is browned nicely.
  • Serve warm or room temperature. Store leftovers in an airtight container.

I doubled this recipe and baked it in a nine-by-13-inch pan. It received excellent reviews from our guests. It was sweet and cinnamon-y and home-y.

We had a bit of the crunch left over, so we ended up swirling it into a quart of ice cream, using my stand mixer, so we can enjoy it later on.

And as I crumbled the oats and spread the sugary plums, I had to think of a beautiful connection made between two women from Haven, born decades apart but sharing a love of anything homemade.

Some gifts are priceless.

This piece first appeared in print April 9, 2026.

Spice Up Your Life is a weekly newspaper column written by Lindsey Young in south central Kansas. If you are interested in sponsoring this column, please contact us through the “Contact Lindsey” link at the top of the page.

Categories
Dessert

Try a cake that will have you ‘plum’ ready for summer

A plum cake is not only visually appealing but a delicious addition to a summer dessert table.

Summer fruits and veggies are just starting to make their appearance in the grocery stores, and I’m getting so excited for when gardens are in full swing and all of those delicious offerings are coming from local growers.

For Easter with my family, I volunteered (as I normally do) to bring dessert, and as I walked the produce department at my local grocery store, some beautiful, purple plums caught my eye, and I knew what I was going to make.

The cake I made was not only visually appealing, but it was delicious, too, and it wasn’t all that hard to put together. I can’t wait to see how this cake will turn out with plums later this summer when they’ll be even more flavorful.

I found this recipe on the blog “Once Upon a Chef” by Jennifer Segal. You can find it at https://www.onceuponachef.com/recipes/late-summer-plum-cake.html. I changed up the spices and their amounts in my version to suit what was in my spice cabinet and for a bigger pop of flavor.

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Plum Cake

A plum cake is not only visually appealing but a delicious addition to a summer dessert table.
Course Dessert
Keyword cake, plum

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup butter softened
  • 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar, divided
  • 1 egg
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla
  • 1 1/2 cups flour
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 2 teaspoons cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
  • 1/4 teaspoon all spice
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup milk I used skim
  • 1 pound plums pitted and quartered

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Grease a nine-inch baking pan and set aside. (I served mine straight out of a nine-inch pie pan. The author suggests using a springform pan.)
  • Beat the butter and one cup of sugar for about three minutes.
  • Beat in the egg and vanilla.
  • Add the dry ingredients, alternating with the milk, and mix until everything is just combined.
  • Pour the batter into your pan and spread it evenly. Placing them skin-side up, place the plums in concentric circles around the pan, leaving a little bit of batter between each.
  • Sprinkle the remaining tablespoon of sugar all over the top of the cake, and bake for about 60 minutes or until the cake is golden brown a toothpick inserted in the center of the cake part comes out batter free.
  • Let the cake cool before slicing and store it in an airtight container.

One of the happy side effects of making this cake was having several plums left over, which our schnauzer, K.C., was extremely happy to help me eat. (Side note: always remove the pits before giving plums to pups.) As a fruit and veggie fan herself, she’s looking forward to more fresh produce coming into the house, too, especially carrots.

Unfortunately for K.C., only the humans got to enjoy the finished cake, though. It got good reviews from my tiny cousins all the way up to the older members of the family. 

It will be a great summer recipe to have on hand—as soon as Mother Nature cooperates.

This piece first appeared in print on April 25, 2019.

Spice Up Your Life is a weekly newspaper column written by Lindsey Young in south central Kansas. If you are interested in sponsoring this column, please contact us through the “Contact Lindsey” link at the top of the page.

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