A quick and simple Strawberry Compote with a hint of orange is the perfect topping for pancakes, waffles, and even ice cream. All you need are a few ingredients and 10 minutes to make this delicious strawberry sauce.

Strawberry season is here, and fresh juicy strawberries rarely ever make it to the next day in my house. I use them to make strawberry hand pies, strawberry galettes, and easy strawberry cakes, and I absolutely adore using them to make a next-level delicious strawberry compote to serve on top of pancakes instead of maple syrup too.
Frozen strawberries can also be used like my mixed berry compote I made with frozen berries, so once you learn how to make strawberry compote, you can enjoy it all year round. I love the idea of spooning it over these amazing banana bread french toast for Valentine’s Day breakfast in bed or for Mother’s Day brunch.
There are so many different options when it comes to a fresh fruit compote! Here are some different ways you can use this strawberry compote:
- Use it as a filling for this chocolate hand pies.
- Serve it instead of fresh berries in strawberry shortcake.
- Use it as a topping for scones, biscuits, Dutch baby pancake, ice cream pie and more.
- Mix it with chia pudding, yogurt, oatmeal or cottage cheese for a quick breakfast or snack.
Table of Contents
Helpful tools
The only special piece of equipment you’ll need is a zester to make the orange zest.
Ingredients and substitutions
As always, you’ll find the complete list of ingredients and quantities in the recipe card at the end of this post. Below are some notes and substitution tips:

- Strawberries – fresh strawberries are (of course) the main ingredient in strawberry compote. Choose berries with deep red color and strong aroma for the best flavor. However, if you are making this compote outside of strawberry season, frozen berries will work.
- Orange – you’ll use both the orange zest and the orange juice of half an orange. This keeps the flavor bright, but the orange flavor won’t be too overpowering. The acidity in orange juice also helps preserve the bright color of the cooked strawberries and it also adds a boost of natural pectin in the mixture.You can substitute lemon zest and lemon juice.
- Sugar – I use just two tablespoons of sugar to sweeten, but you can add more sugar to taste especially if you use lemon juice instead of orange juice.
- Salt – just a pinch is needed to enhance the flavor of the compote.
How to make strawberry compote
The following instructions, step-by-step photos, and tips are here to help you visualize how to make the recipe. You can always skip straight to the printable recipe card at the end of this post.
Wash, hull, and quarter the strawberries. Add them to a medium-sized saucepan along with the orange zest, orange juice, sugar, and salt.

Set the heat to medium and cook for 5-10 minutes, stirring frequently. Remove from the heat to cool, then transfer to jars and refrigerate.

More baker’s tips
- If you use frozen berries to make this recipe for strawberry compote, be ready to adjust the cooking time. They release more water than fresh and will take longer to reduce and thicken. Keep an eye on the saucepan to prevent anything from burning.
- If the berries start to break down while cooking and there’s still a lot of juice, you can remove some or all of the fruit. Continue cooking to reduce the juice, then return the fruit to the pan to keep them intact.
- The compote will continue to thicken as it cools.
Storage
My strawberry compote recipe keeps well for up to 2 weeks in a clean glass jar in the refrigerator.
You can also freeze it to keep it for even longer. Divide the batch into smaller portions before freezing so you only need to defrost as much as you plan to use. The best way is to use an ice cube tray. Freeze until solid, then pop them out and store the cubes in a freezer bag.
This makes using strawberry compote for pancakes or as a quick ice cream topping super easy!
FAQs
Strawberries contain a small amount of natural pectin, which helps things gel together. So do orange and lemon. In this recipe, the mixture gets thickened naturally from the available pectin in the strawberries and orange juice, and from reducing the cooking liquid just enough.
With that being said, this compote is not thick like jam. It is spoonable, pourable, and saucy, perfect for spooning on top of all sorts of treats.
No, my strawberry compote recipe is not made for canning. The sugar content is too low.

Hungry for more?
10-Minute Strawberry Compote

Equipment
- Zester
Ingredients
- 1 pound strawberries, 454 g
- ½ an orange, use both zest and juice
- 2 tablespoon granulated sugar, 25 g
- A pinch of salt
Instructions
- Wash, hull and quarter the strawberries.
- Add the strawberries to a medium saucepan along with the zest and juice of half an orange, sugar and a pinch of salt.
- Cook over medium heat for 5-10 minutes stirring frequently until some of the berries disintegrate and some remain whole but soft, and the sauce thickens slightly.
- Remove from heat and allow to cool, the sauce will thicken more as it cools down.
- Transfer to jars and refrigerate for up to two weeks.
Video
Notes
- Half an orange will yield about 3 to 4 tablespoons of juice.
- If you use frozen berries to make this recipe for strawberry compote, be ready to adjust the cooking time. They release more water than fresh and will take longer to reduce and thicken. Keep an eye on the saucepan to prevent anything from burning.
- If the berries start to break down while cooking and there’s still a lot of juice, you can remove some or all of the fruit. Continue cooking to reduce the juice, then return the fruit to the pan to keep them intact.
- The compote will continue to thicken as it cools.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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I just made this and I can’t wait to try it! I substituted honey and maple syrup for the sugar. Thanks for the recipe 🤗🤗
Thanks Barbara! I hope you enjoy it!
Hi if i want to make a big batch to store for a long period of time … and i mean batch about 9 lbs pf strawberries… should i follow the same recipe
Proportionally or is there a diferent recipe for a big batch
Hi Ligia, I do not have a big batch recipe, scaling up should be totally fine. But please note that this recipe is very low in sugar so it is not suitable for canning, and it only keeps in the fridge for about two weeks. Your only other option is to freeze it.
Delicious recipe and very quick and easy to make!
Delicious and easy! I used the lemon juice and zest. Glad you had the note about adding more sugar to taste when using lemon juice.
Glad the note helps Debbie! Thanks for taking the time to leave a review 🙂
Can you freeze strawberry compote?
I’ve never tried it since it keeps in the fridge for 1 – 2 weeks. But if you want to keep it longer, I suggest freezing in small batches so you can defrost only as much as you need to each time.
Made this recipe with my nephew to top on pancakes and it turned out amazing! The simple instructions were a plus to cooking with kids as well.
Thanks Tati for the feedback! I’m glad you had fun making this with your nephew 🙂
I just made this with our glut of strawberries. It’s absolutely delicious and so simple. I put a little lemon in at the end out of habit. I can confirm that it’s spectacular with granola and yogurt for breakfast. Thanks for the recipe! X
Thanks for your feedback Joanna!
Making yogurt now, came here to find a recipe to add the strawberries to it in the morning with some granola!
This compote would be perfect in yogurt with granola, Katy!
Spinning this on some Angel food cake ?
Mmm sounds excellent, don’t forget the whipped cream!
Need to try this. I love cooking with fresh strawberries
This would be so good on literally everything! Now I need to go get some strawberries so I can make this!
I just bought a bunch of strawberries! I have to try this 🙂