This slow cooker 3-ingredient foil wrapped apricot tartlets recipe is straight from my grandma’s spring dessert playbook—the kind of thing she’d pull together when company was coming over in an hour and the pantry was bare. You get warm, jammy apricots on a buttery, flaky base with just a whisper of sweetness from honey, all cooked in little foil parcels right in the slow cooker. It’s a total dessert hack: no fancy dough, no oven, and almost no dishes. You assemble the packets in a few minutes, let the slow cooker do its thing, and then set out the warm foil bundles so everyone can unwrap their own “mini tart.” They look and taste way more special than the effort it takes to make them.
Serve these foil wrapped apricot tartlets warm, straight from the slow cooker, with an extra drizzle of honey over the top right before they hit the table. They’re perfect with a scoop of vanilla ice cream, a spoonful of whipped cream, or a dollop of Greek yogurt if you want to keep things a bit lighter. I like to set the slow cooker on the counter and let everyone grab a parcel, unwrap it, and eat right out of the foil for easy cleanup. A cup of hot coffee or tea balances the sweetness, and if you’re serving brunch, they pair really well with scrambled eggs and a simple green salad so dessert feels like part of the meal, not an extra project.
Slow Cooker 3-Ingredient Foil Wrapped Apricot Tartlets
Servings: 6
Ingredients
1 (8-ounce) tube refrigerated crescent roll dough or puff pastry sheet, thawed
1 (15- to 16-ounce) can apricot halves in juice or light syrup, well drained
1/4 cup honey, plus extra for drizzling on top
Directions
Prepare the slow cooker: Tear off 6 small squares of aluminum foil (about 8x8 inches each). Crumple another sheet of foil into a loose ring or a few balls and place them in the bottom of your slow cooker to create a little rack so air can circulate and the tartlets don’t sit directly in any moisture. Alternatively, lay a single sheet of foil loosely on the bottom and crimp the edges up slightly to catch any drips.
Prep the dough: Unroll the refrigerated crescent roll dough (or puff pastry) on a clean surface. If using crescent rolls, pinch the perforations together to form one solid sheet, then cut the dough into 6 roughly equal squares or rectangles. If using puff pastry, cut the sheet into 6 equal pieces.
Build the tartlet bases: Place one dough square in the center of each foil square. Gently press the dough out just a bit with your fingers so it’s slightly larger, creating a tiny lip around the edges to help hold the apricots and honey.
Add the apricots: Pat the drained apricot halves dry with a paper towel so they don’t make the dough soggy. Place 2 to 3 apricot halves (cut side down) in the center of each dough square, leaving a small border of dough showing around the edges.
Sweeten with honey: Drizzle about 2 teaspoons of honey over the apricots on each tartlet. Don’t worry about being exact—just aim for a light drizzle so the honey can melt into the fruit and dough as it cooks.
Wrap the foil parcels: Bring the sides of each foil square up and around the tartlet, folding the top closed but not pressing down onto the fruit. You want a loosely sealed little packet with some space inside for steam to circulate, but tight enough so the honey doesn’t leak out.
Arrange in the slow cooker: Place the foil-wrapped tartlets seam-side up in the slow cooker, arranging them snugly in a single layer. It’s fine if they’re touching or slightly leaning against each other; just keep them mostly level so the honey stays put.
Cook: Cover the slow cooker with the lid and cook on HIGH for 1.5 to 2 hours, or on LOW for 3 to 3.5 hours. The dough should be cooked through and soft, the bottoms lightly golden, and the apricots warm and jammy. (If you’re unsure, carefully open one packet and peek at the dough.)
Finish and drizzle: Turn off the slow cooker and let the tartlets sit, covered, for about 5 minutes to set. Carefully remove the foil parcels using tongs—they’ll be hot. Open each packet just enough to expose the tartlet and give each one a small extra drizzle of honey right on top while they’re still warm.
Serve: Serve the tartlets warm, either in their open foil packets for easy cleanup or transferred to small plates. Spoon any honey-fruit juices from the foil over the top. Enjoy immediately, and expect people to ask how something this good only took three ingredients.
Variations & Tips
Use this as a base formula and adjust to what you have on hand. Fruit swap: Canned peach halves, pear halves, or even apple slices work well in place of apricots—just keep the total amount of fruit about the same and drain it well. Dough options: Crescent roll dough gives a softer, more bread-like base, while puff pastry is flakier and more “bakery-style.” Both work; use whatever is on sale or already in your fridge. Sweetness level: If your canned fruit is in heavy syrup, you may want to cut back on the honey in the packets and just finish with a light drizzle at the end. If it’s packed in juice, stick with the full amount of honey for that glossy finish. Texture tweaks: For a slightly crisper bottom, you can place the finished tartlets (out of the foil) under the broiler for 1 to 2 minutes to brown the tops—only if you have time and don’t mind dirtying a pan. Make-ahead tip: You can assemble the foil packets up to 6 hours ahead, store them in the fridge on a tray, then transfer them straight into the slow cooker when you get home; just add about 15 minutes to the cook time if starting from cold. Serving stretch: If you need to feed more people, cut the dough into 8 smaller squares and use 1 to 2 apricot halves per tartlet; they’ll be slightly more bite-sized but still cook in about the same time. Flavor boosts that don’t add ingredients: A tiny pinch of salt on the apricots before drizzling with honey makes the flavors pop, and letting the tartlets sit in the warm slow cooker on the “keep warm” setting for up to 30 minutes keeps dessert flexible for busy evenings.