Bloomin’ grilled apples turn into something bigger than the sum of their parts: tender slices that hold their shape, caramelized edges, and a warm cinnamon-butter glaze that melts down into every cut. They come off the grill looking dramatic, but the real win is the texture — soft enough to eat with a spoon, with just enough structure left so the apple still tastes like apple.
The trick is slicing deep enough to fan the fruit open without cutting through the base. That gives the butter mixture room to seep between the slices while the foil around the bottom helps the apple steam and soften before the top starts to scorch. Granny Smith stays pleasantly tart and holds its shape, while Honeycrisp gives you a sweeter, juicier result. Both work; the one you pick changes the balance of the dessert more than the method does.
Below you’ll find the small details that keep the apples from collapsing on the grill, plus a couple of smart swaps if you want to lean tart, sweeter, or dairy-free.
The apples fanned open beautifully on the grill and the cinnamon butter soaked right into the slices. Ours were tender in about 13 minutes and the vanilla ice cream melted into all the caramelized edges.
Save these bloomin’ grilled apples for the night you want a grill dessert with caramelized edges and melted vanilla ice cream.
The Cut That Keeps the Apples Standing Tall on the Grill
Most grilled apples fail because they’re cut too deeply or too evenly. You want thin slices, but you also need the bottom of the apple to stay intact so the fruit opens like a flower instead of falling apart. The foil wrap at the base does two jobs at once: it keeps the apple upright and traps a little heat so the interior softens before the outside turns too dark.
Grilling over medium heat matters here. High heat burns the sugar before the apple has time to tenderize, and low heat leaves you with soft fruit that never caramelizes. You’re looking for the slices to relax and separate, the butter mixture to bubble in the gaps, and the edges to take on a deep amber color.
What the Cinnamon Butter Is Doing Besides Tasting Good

- Apples — Granny Smith gives you a tart, sturdy apple that won’t collapse. Honeycrisp softens a little faster and brings a sweeter finish. Either one works, but softer varieties like Red Delicious turn mushy before the top gets the right color.
- Butter — Melted butter carries the cinnamon and sugar into the slits and helps the surface brown. You can use plant-based butter for a dairy-free version, but choose one that’s meant for baking or it may separate and slide off instead of clinging to the fruit.
- Brown sugar — This melts into the butter and gives the apples that sticky, caramelized finish. White sugar works in a pinch, but it tastes flatter and won’t give you the same depth.
- Cinnamon — This is the backbone of the flavor. Fresh cinnamon makes a bigger difference than people expect here, because the apples are simple and there’s nowhere for stale spice to hide.
- Vanilla ice cream — The cold scoop is part of the dessert, not just a garnish. It melts into the warm apples and turns the buttery syrup into a sauce.
Getting the Apples Tender Without Losing the Caramelized Top
Cutting the Bloom
Set each apple on its stem end and slice straight down from top to bottom, stopping before you reach the base. The slices should be thin enough to fan open but thick enough to hold together when warm. If the apple starts to tip or break apart in your hand, the cuts went too deep.
Brushing on the Cinnamon Butter
Mix the melted butter, brown sugar, and cinnamon until the sugar looks mostly dissolved, then brush it over the top and into the cuts. Don’t just paint the surface; work some of the mixture between the slices so the heat can carry the sugar into the fruit. If the mixture seems grainy, that’s fine — the grill will finish the job.
Grilling to Tender and Caramelized
Wrap the bottom of each apple in foil and set them over medium heat. Close the lid and let them cook until the fruit gives a little when pressed and the tops are glossy and browned, usually 12 to 15 minutes. If the tops darken too fast, move them to a cooler spot on the grill; the apples still need time inside the foil to soften.
Serving While They’re Still Warm
Let the apples sit for a minute or two after coming off the grill so the juices settle instead of flooding the plate. Serve them warm with vanilla ice cream while the caramelized butter is still fluid. If you wait too long, the juices thicken and the contrast between hot apple and cold ice cream disappears.
How to Adapt Bloomin’ Grilled Apples for Different Preferences
Make it dairy-free
Swap the butter for a good plant-based butter that melts smoothly. You’ll still get the glossy coating and caramelized edges, but choose one with a neutral flavor so it doesn’t fight the cinnamon.
Use pears instead of apples
Firm pears can work if they’re just barely ripe and still sturdy. They’ll soften faster than apples, so shorten the grill time and watch for the point where the flesh gives but hasn’t collapsed.
Lean into a tarter dessert
Stick with Granny Smith and add a pinch of salt to the butter mixture. That small change keeps the sweetness in check and makes the cinnamon taste sharper.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store leftover apples in an airtight container for up to 3 days. The slices will soften more as they sit, so expect a looser texture the next day.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing these. The apple texture turns watery and mealy after thawing, and the caramelized top loses its appeal.
- Reheating: Warm them in a 300°F oven until heated through, or use short bursts in the microwave if you’re in a hurry. Reheat just until warm; cooking them hard again will push the apples past tender and into mush.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Bloomin' Grilled Apples
Ingredients
Method
- Cut thin slices into the apples from top to bottom, stopping before you cut all the way through, so the slices stay attached at the base. The apple should look like it can open (bloom) without separating into pieces.
- Mix the melted butter, brown sugar, and cinnamon until evenly combined. You should see a thick cinnamon-sugar mixture ready to brush over the apple slices.
- Fan the apple slices open slightly and brush the cinnamon butter mixture into the gaps. Coat the surface so cinnamon sugar is visible between the slices.
- Wrap the bottom of each apple in foil, leaving the top exposed so the slices can caramelize on the grill. Keep the fanned top uncovered for browning.
- Grill over medium heat for 12-15 minutes until the apples are tender and caramelized. Look for softened, glossy slices with caramelized edges.
- Serve the grilled apples warm with vanilla ice cream. Spoon the ice cream over the fanned apples so the melty topping blends with the caramel.


