There is nothing quite like waking up to the aroma of a freshly baked Blueberry Coffee Cake filling the kitchen. This recipe delivers a bakery-worthy masterpiece designed to tantalize your senses and perfectly pair with your morning cup of coffee. Every single bite offers a masterclass in textural contrast and balanced sweetness.
At the foundation, you will find a beautifully porous, pale yellow sponge cake matrix that is incredibly tender and moist. Resting directly above that is a generous layer of plump, dark violet blistered blueberries. During the bake, these berries develop a slightly jammy, glossy texture that delicately bleeds into the delicate crumb beneath them.
Capping off this stunning dessert is a thick layer of chunky, uneven, pale golden-brown baked streusel. It has that irresistible dry, buttery appearance you look for in a classic coffee cake, finished with occasional tiny flecks of crystallized sugar for an unexpected, delightful crunch.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
- The Perfect Sponge Matrix: Utilizing buttermilk and a precise combination of leavening agents creates a pale yellow, porous foundation that absorbs the fruit juices without becoming soggy.
- Jammy, Blistered Berries: Tossing fresh blueberries in a touch of flour and sugar ensures they roast and blister in the oven, creating a glossy layer that gracefully bleeds into the cake.
- Chunky Buttery Streusel: Cold butter and coarse sugar guarantee a beautifully uneven, golden-brown crumb topping that offers an irresistible, dry buttery crunch.
- Crystallized Sugar Flecks: A final dusting of sparkling coarse sugar before baking creates tiny, glittering flecks that elevate the visual appeal and texture.
Ingredients & Substitutions
Every ingredient here serves a specific culinary and structural purpose to achieve our visual and flavor goals. Be sure to measure carefully.

The Pale Yellow Sponge Cake
2 cups (240g) All-Purpose Flour: Provides the structural framework for the porous cake matrix. It is sturdy enough to hold the heavy fruit and streusel layers without collapsing.
1 tsp (4g) Baking Powder & ½ tsp (3g) Baking Soda: This dual leavening combination reacts with the buttermilk. It creates the beautiful, airy pockets in our pale yellow sponge.
½ tsp (3g) Kosher Salt: An essential invisible ingredient that balances the sweetness. It enhances the natural vanilla and buttery flavors of the crumb.
½ cup (113g) Unsalted Butter (Softened): Adds vital richness and fat. Creaming this with sugar traps air, contributing to the porous texture.
1 cup (200g) Granulated Sugar: Sweetens the base while aiding in the creaming process. It helps achieve that perfect, tender pale yellow crumb.
2 Large Eggs (Room Temperature): The yolks provide the distinct pale yellow hue to the cake foundation. Eggs act as the binding agent holding the matrix together.
1 tsp (5ml) Vanilla Extract: Introduces a floral, warm background note. It rounds out the dairy and fruit flavors.
1 cup (240ml) Full-Fat Buttermilk: The acidity tenderizes the gluten strands. It guarantees a supremely moist, porous crumb structure.
The Blistered Blueberry Layer
2 cups (300g) Fresh Blueberries: Opt for plump, dark violet berries. As they roast, they will burst, creating a jammy, glossy texture.
1 tbsp (8g) All-Purpose Flour: Tossing the berries in flour creates a microscopic barrier. This prevents them from sinking entirely to the bottom of the pan.
1 tbsp (12g) Granulated Sugar: Encourages the berries to macerate slightly. This aids in creating that desired glossy, blistered finish.
The Chunky Streusel
1 cup (120g) All-Purpose Flour: Acts as the dry base for the crumbs. It absorbs the butter to create a dry, crumbly appearance.
½ cup (100g) Light Brown Sugar & ¼ cup (50g) Granulated Sugar: Brown sugar adds moisture and molasses flavor. Granulated sugar provides a necessary crispness to the crumbs.
6 tbsp (85g) Unsalted Butter (Cold & Cubed): Cold butter is non-negotiable for chunky, uneven crumbles. As it melts in the oven, it creates a pale golden-brown, buttery appearance.
2 tbsp (25g) Coarse Sparkling Sugar: Sprinkled on top right before baking. This produces those highly sought-after, tiny flecks of crystallized sugar.
Equipment Needed
- 9×9-inch (23x23cm) Baking Pan: Lightly colored metal is preferred to prevent the edges from over-browning.
- Stand Mixer or Hand Mixer: Essential for adequately creaming the butter and sugar to build an airy cake matrix.
- Pastry Cutter: The best tool for cutting cold butter into the streusel without melting it with your warm hands.
- Parchment Paper: Ensures a clean release from the pan, keeping your beautiful layers intact.
Step-by-Step Instructions
Follow these specific culinary techniques to achieve the exact textural layers described.
1. Prepare the Chunky Streusel Topping
In a medium bowl, whisk together 1 cup (120g) all-purpose flour, ½ cup (100g) light brown sugar, and ¼ cup (50g) granulated sugar. Drop in the 6 tbsp (85g) of cold, cubed unsalted butter.
Using a pastry cutter or your fingertips, quickly cut the butter into the dry ingredients. Stop when the mixture resembles coarse, dry pebbles with some larger, uneven chunks remaining.
Place the bowl in the refrigerator. Keeping the butter cold ensures the streusel maintains its chunky, dry buttery appearance during the bake.
2. Toss the Blueberry Layer
In a small bowl, combine the 2 cups (300g) of plump, dark violet blueberries with 1 tbsp (8g) of flour and 1 tbsp (12g) of granulated sugar.
Gently toss until every berry is lightly coated. Set this aside while you prepare the cake batter.

3. Mix the Pale Yellow Sponge Batter
Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C). Line a 9×9-inch (23x23cm) baking pan with parchment paper, leaving an overhang for easy removal.
In a large bowl, beat the ½ cup (113g) softened butter and 1 cup (200g) granulated sugar on medium-high speed for 3 minutes. The mixture should be light, fluffy, and visibly pale.
Add the 2 room-temperature eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition, followed by the 1 tsp (5ml) vanilla extract. Scrape down the sides of the bowl to ensure an even, pale yellow base.
In a separate bowl, whisk together the 2 cups (240g) flour, 1 tsp (4g) baking powder, ½ tsp (3g) baking soda, and ½ tsp (3g) kosher salt.
Alternate adding the dry ingredients and the 1 cup (240ml) buttermilk to the butter mixture, starting and ending with the dry ingredients. Mix on low speed until just combined to ensure a tender, porous matrix.
4. Layering and Baking
Spread the thick, pale yellow batter evenly into the prepared baking pan. Smooth the top with an offset spatula.
Evenly distribute the flour-coated blueberries over the batter. Press them down very slightly so they will ultimately bleed into the crumb.
Retrieve your chilled streusel and scatter it in a thick, uneven layer over the berries. Finally, evenly sprinkle the 2 tbsp (25g) of coarse sparkling sugar over the very top to create those signature crystallized sugar flecks.
Bake at 375°F (190°C) for 45-55 minutes. You will know it is done when the streusel is pale golden-brown, the visible blueberries are dark, blistered, and glossy, and a toothpick inserted into the center comes out with just a few moist crumbs.
Expert Tips for Success
- Keep the Streusel Cold: If your kitchen is warm, freeze the streusel for 10 minutes before baking. Warm butter will melt into a flat puddle instead of forming chunky, uneven crumbles.
- Do Not Overmix the Matrix: Once the buttermilk hits the flour, mix only until the flour streaks disappear. Overmixing develops dense gluten, destroying the porous, airy texture of the pale yellow sponge.
- Look for the Glossy Bleed: Around the 40-minute mark, check the cake. You want to see the dark violet juices from the blistered blueberries slightly bubbling up around the edges of the streusel.
- Let It Cool Completely: Cutting into the cake while piping hot will cause the crumb to collapse. Allow it to rest on a wire rack for at least 45 minutes for the cleanest slice.
Storage & Reheating
Store any leftover blueberry coffee cake in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days. Keeping it in the refrigerator extends the life to 5 days, though it may slightly soften the dry buttery streusel.
To freeze, wrap individual slices tightly in plastic wrap and place them in a freezer-safe bag for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature and reheat in a 300°F (150°C) oven for 5 minutes to crisp up the golden-brown crumbs.
What to Serve With This
Looking to build out your weekly menu around this delicious treat? Here are some of our favorite pairings and family meals to enjoy alongside your dessert!
- Cozy Soups & Stews: Start your meal with a comforting bowl of ginger garlic chicken noodle soup, crockpot beef stew, puerto rican beef stew, apple cider beef stew, or pork pozole recipe. For lighter options, try our ratatouille soup, anti-inflammatory lentil soup, fat burning cabbage soup, or creamy potato carrot soup.
- Chicken Favorites: Serve up savory mains like teriyaki chicken stir fry, baked hot honey chicken, bang bang chicken bowl, or baked cream cheese chicken taquitos. For easy weeknights, enjoy bbq chicken wraps, cowboy butter chicken bites, teriyaki chicken bowl, slow cooker mushroom chicken, or garlic parmesan chicken and potatoes. Don’t miss the texas roadhouse smothered chicken, chicken sausage sheet pan, garlic parmesan chicken meatloaf, keto chicken alfredo broccoli bake, chicken pillows, sweet hawaiian crockpot chicken, dragon chicken recipe, and chicken thigh osso bucco.
- Beef & Pork Dinners: Meat lovers will devour these philly cheesesteak sliders, oven roasted country style pork ribs, mongolian meatballs, and one pot beefaroni. You can also whip up a ground beef and broccoli bowl or elegant pork tenderloin dijon mustard sauce.
- Seafood Specialties: Lighten things up with mediterranean salmon, cucumber shrimp salad, garlic butter shrimp, or a rich seafood cassolette. Other hits include maple dijon salmon, crab cake egg rolls, shrimp and avocado bowls, and comforting lobster pot pie.
- Pasta & Noodles: Slurp up some yaki udon recipe, john legend mac and cheese, sun dried tomato spinach spaghetti, white cheddar mac and cheese, or creamy roasted tomato pasta.
- Hearty Bowls & Salads: Enjoy fresh options like greek cottage cheese salad, thai cucumber salad, cottage cheese chickpea salad, homemade ham salad, spicy baked tofu burrito bowl, and halloumi sweet potato bowl.
- Appetizers, Sides & Sauces: Kick off parties with boat dip recipe, baked spinach artichoke dip, fried cheese curds recipe, or roasted fingerling potatoes. Serve alongside garlic parmesan herb bread, pesto parmesan sourdough, creamy peppercorn sauce, homemade teriyaki sauce, and homemade blue cheese dressing.
- More Sweet Treats & Breakfasts: Pair your mornings with homemade breakfast hot pockets or a potato breakfast casserole. If you have a sweet tooth, explore jello meringue cookies, salted caramel pretzel bark, pudding buttercream frosting, pistachio raspberry cake, peach cobbler dump cake, triple chocolate cheesecake, apple slab pie, caramel brownie cheesecake, brown sugar caramel pound cake, pink sugar cookie bars, homemade apple pie recipe, earl grey panna cotta, pineapple bake, strawberry cheesecake dump cake, homemade bounty bars, lemon sugar cookies, or coconut vanilla protein bars.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, you can use frozen blueberries. Do not thaw them before baking, or they will bleed too heavily into the pale yellow sponge matrix and turn the batter green. Toss the frozen berries directly in flour and increase your baking time by 5-10 minutes.
The secret to the tiny flecks of crystallized sugar is finishing the cake with coarse sparkling sugar (or turbinado sugar) right before it goes into the oven. Regular granulated sugar will melt, but coarse sugar retains its dry, glittering crunch.
To prevent your blueberries from sinking, toss them in a tablespoon of all-purpose flour before layering them over your batter. This creates a friction barrier that suspends them beautifully, allowing them to blister and bleed slightly into the sponge.
Store leftovers in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days to maintain the crunchy texture of the buttery streusel. For longer storage, freeze individual slices wrapped tightly in plastic wrap for up to 3 months.
Streusel melts into a puddle if the butter is too warm. Always use cold, cubed butter and cut it into the dry ingredients using a pastry cutter. Chill the streusel bowl in the refrigerator until the exact moment you are ready to sprinkle it on the cake.
Closing & Subscribe
This phenomenal Blueberry Coffee Cake brings cafe-level baking straight into your home kitchen. The contrast between the jammy blistered blueberries and that crisp, buttery streusel is absolutely unforgettable.
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Recipe Card

Ultimate Blueberry Coffee Cake Recipe
Ingredients
Equipment
Instructions
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, brown sugar, and granulated sugar for the streusel. Cut in the cold, cubed butter using a pastry cutter until the mixture resembles coarse, dry pebbles. Place the bowl in the refrigerator to keep the butter cold.
- In a small bowl, combine the fresh blueberries with 1 tbsp of flour and 1 tbsp of granulated sugar. Gently toss until evenly coated. Set aside.
- Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C). Line a 9x9-inch baking pan with parchment paper. In a large bowl, beat the softened butter and granulated sugar on medium-high speed for 3 minutes until pale and fluffy. Add the eggs one at a time, followed by the vanilla extract.
- Whisk together the remaining 2 cups of flour, baking powder, baking soda, and kosher salt. Alternate adding these dry ingredients and the buttermilk to the butter mixture, starting and ending with the dry ingredients. Mix on low speed until just combined.
- Spread the pale yellow batter evenly into the prepared pan. Distribute the flour-coated blueberries evenly over the batter. Scatter the chilled, chunky streusel over the berries, then sprinkle the coarse sparkling sugar evenly over the top.
- Bake at 375°F (190°C) for 45-55 minutes until the streusel is golden-brown and the blueberries are glossy and blistered. Let cool in the pan on a wire rack for at least 45 minutes before slicing.
Notes
Do not overmix the cake batter to ensure a porous, light matrix.