Maryland Crab Dip Recipe

Servings: 6 Total Time: 50 mins Difficulty: Beginner
Warm Cheesy Chesapeake Appetizer
Maryland Crab Dip Recipe pinit

A maryland crab dip recipe is the kind of appetizer that shows up at every Chesapeake gathering for good reason: it packs sweet lump crab meat into a warm, cheesy base with just enough Old Bay to remind you where it came from. This version keeps the crab front and center instead of burying it under filler, so every scoop tastes like the coast. You get a make-ahead dip that bakes in about 25 minutes and works for game day, holidays, or a quiet night with crackers.

The texture matters as much as the flavor. We use a mix of cream cheese and mayonnaise for a base that stays scoopable rather than stiff, plus a little sour cream to cut the richness. Baking brings a lightly browned top while the inside stays creamy and hot. If you want more seafood ideas, our crab meat recipes cover lighter ways to use the same ingredient. Making this maryland crab dip at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.

Why You’ll Love These Maryland Crab Dip

  • Real lump crab stays visible in every bite, not shredded into nothing
  • Old Bay and Worcestershire give a salty, savory depth without extra work
  • Bakes in one dish and holds heat well for party serving
  • Make it ahead and refrigerate before the oven saves time

Ingredients You’ll Need

  • 8 oz cream cheese, softened — forms the creamy base and binds everything
  • 1/3 cup mayonnaise — adds moisture and a mild tang
  • 1/4 cup sour cream — lightens the texture and balances richness
  • 1 lb lump crab meat, picked over for shells — the main ingredient
  • 1 cup shredded sharp cheddar cheese, divided — gives bite and a browned top
  • 2 tbsp Old Bay seasoning — the signature Maryland spice blend
  • 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce — umami and slight acidity
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice — brightens the crab
  • 2 green onions, thinly sliced — mild onion note
  • 1/4 tsp garlic powder — background savory layer

Ingredient Substitutions

Cream cheese: Replace with an equal weight of mascarpone for a softer, slightly sweeter base. Mascarpone whips smoother than cream cheese but lacks the same tang, so add an extra 1 tsp lemon juice to keep the dip from tasting flat. The baked top will brown a little less, so broil for 1 minute at the end if you want color. The maryland crab dip works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.

Lump crab meat: Use an equal weight of claw meat if lump is unavailable or pricey. Claw meat has a stronger shellfish flavor and finer texture, which changes the dip from chunky to more integrated. You lose the visual pieces of white crab, but the seasoning carries the same profile. Storing leftover maryland crab dip correctly keeps it tasting good for days.

Sharp cheddar cheese: Swap for an equal amount of Monterey Jack if you want a milder, stretchier melt. Jack browns slower and tastes less salty, so increase Old Bay by 1/2 tbsp to keep the Maryland character. The top will look paler but stay creamy. For the best results with this maryland crab dip, read through all the steps before starting.

Mayonnaise: Replace with an equal amount of full-fat Greek yogurt for a tangier, lower-oil base. Yogurt thins as it heats, so reduce sour cream by half to avoid a loose dip. Expect a sharper edge and a slightly less glossy surface after baking. If you enjoyed this, our spinach artichoke dip is worth trying next.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Heat your oven to 180°C / 350°F and lightly grease a 1.5-quart baking dish so the dip releases cleanly.
  2. Beat the softened cream cheese, mayonnaise, and sour cream in a medium bowl with a hand mixer on medium-low heat off the stove until smooth, about 2 minutes, with no lumps remaining.
  3. Stir in 3/4 cup cheddar, Old Bay, Worcestershire, lemon juice, garlic powder, and green onions with a spatula until evenly distributed.
  4. Fold in the lump crab meat gently with do not overmix so the pieces stay whole and unevenly spread through the base.
  5. Scrape the mixture into the dish and smooth the top, then sprinkle the remaining 1/4 cup cheddar across the surface.
  6. Bake on the center rack for 25–30 minutes until the edges bubble and the top is golden and crispy at the corners.
  7. Rest the dip for 5 minutes before serving so the base firms slightly and scooping does not break it apart.

Pro Tips

Soften cream cheese fully at room temperature for 30 minutes so it blends without clumps that survive baking. Cold blocks leave streaks no amount of mixing fixes.

Pick through crab meat on a white plate to spot hidden shell fragments that ruin the texture. Even premium tubs occasionally hide a piece.

For a deeper browned top, switch the oven to broil for the final 2 minutes but watch closely so the cheese does not burn. Learn more about safe browning technique from Serious Eats on dairy melts.

Make the dip up to a day ahead, cover, and refrigerate unbaked; add 5 minutes to bake time if it goes in cold. This matches our baked spinach dip prep style.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Overmixing the crab breaks the lumps into stringy bits, leaving a uniform paste instead of a chunky dip. Fold with a few slow turns only.

Using low-fat cream cheese makes the base separate and turn oily under heat because stabilizers break down. Stick with full fat for a stable set.

Skipping the rest period after baking means the dip spreads when scooped and feels soupy. Those 5 minutes let proteins tighten.

Serving Suggestions

Offer sturdy crackers, toasted baguette slices, or celery sticks so the dip does not slide off weak bases. Warm bread holds the weight best.

Pair with a cold gin cocktail to cut the cheese richness, or keep it alcohol-free with lemon sparkling water. The citrus mirrors the lemon juice inside.

For a spread, set the baking dish on a board with nachos and veggie sides so guests build their own plate. It keeps the table casual and low effort.

Storage and Reheating

Cool the dip to room temperature within 2 hours then refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 3 days. Crab and dairy together limit the safe window.

Reheat covered at 180°C / 350°F for 15 minutes until the center reaches 74°C / 165°F for food safety. Uncover for the last 3 minutes to crisp the top.

Freezing is not advised because cream cheese separates when thawed and turns grainy. Make a fresh batch instead of saving frozen leftovers.

Recipe Variations

Spicy Version

Add 1 tsp crushed red pepper and 1 tbsp hot sauce to the base with the Old Bay. The heat sits behind the crab rather than covering it, and the top still browns the same way in 25–30 minutes.

Bacon Topped

Scatter 4 strips of cooked, crumbled bacon over the cheese before baking for a smoky crunch. The bacon adds salt, so drop Old Bay to 1.5 tbsp to avoid overshooting.

Low-Carb Option

Serve with cucumber rounds and bell pepper strips instead of crackers and skip the baguette. The dip itself is already low in starch from the spinach dip style base.

Extra Crab

Raise the crab to 1.25 lb and cut cheddar to 3/4 cup total for a seafood-forward ratio. The dip firms more because crab replaces some dairy, so bake 5 minutes less to stay creamy.

Maryland Crab Dip Recipe pinit
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Maryland Crab Dip Recipe

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 15 mins Cook Time 30 mins Rest Time 5 mins Total Time 50 mins
Cooking Temp: 180  C Servings: 6 Estimated Cost: $ 18 Calories: 320 kcal

Description

This Maryland crab dip packs sweet lump crab meat into a warm, creamy cheese base with Old Bay and Worcestershire for true Chesapeake flavor. It bakes in about 25 minutes and works for game day, holidays, or a quiet night with crackers.

Ingredients

Cooking Mode Disabled

Instructions

  1. Heat oven and grease dish

    Heat your oven to 180°C / 350°F and lightly grease a 1.5-quart baking dish so the dip releases cleanly. Use a paper towel or brush to coat the interior evenly, preventing stuck edges after baking.

  2. Blend cream cheese base

    Beat the softened cream cheese, mayonnaise, and sour cream in a medium bowl with a hand mixer on medium-low speed (heat off the stove) until smooth, about 2 minutes, with no lumps remaining. Scrape down the sides once so the base is fully homogeneous and scoopable.

  3. Stir in seasonings and cheese

    Stir in 3/4 cup cheddar, Old Bay, Worcestershire, lemon juice, garlic powder, and green onions with a spatula until evenly distributed. The mixture should look uniformly speckled with spices and onions before adding crab.

  4. Fold in crab meat

    Fold in the lump crab meat gently with a spatula and do not overmix so the pieces stay whole and unevenly spread through the base. Stop after a few slow turns when you still see distinct white crab chunks rather than a uniform paste.

  5. Fill dish and top cheese

    Scrape the mixture into the prepared dish and smooth the top, then sprinkle the remaining 1/4 cup cheddar across the surface. The cheese layer should cover most of the top so it browns into a golden crust.

  6. Bake until bubbly golden

    Bake on the center rack for 25–30 minutes until the edges bubble and the top is golden and crispy at the corners. The internal temperature should reach 74°C / 165°F for food safety with crab and dairy; pull it when corners lift slightly and surface looks toasted.

  7. Rest before serving

    Rest the dip for 5 minutes before serving so the base firms slightly and scooping does not break it apart. The center will stay hot but set enough to hold a scoop without sliding.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 6


Amount Per Serving
Calories 320kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 24g37%
Saturated Fat 12g60%
Cholesterol 95mg32%
Sodium 720mg30%
Total Carbohydrate 5g2%
Sugars 2g
Protein 20g40%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Note

  • Storage: Cool to room temperature within 2 hours then refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 3 days; crab and dairy limit the safe window.
  • Reheating: Reheat covered at 180°C / 350°F for 15 minutes until center reaches 74°C / 165°F, uncover last 3 minutes to crisp top.
  • Make ahead: Prep unbaked up to a day ahead like our spinach artichoke dip for easy party prep.
  • Pro tip: Soften cream cheese at room temperature 30 minutes so it blends without clumps that survive baking.
Keywords: maryland crab dip, lump crab, old bay, cream cheese, baked dip, cheddar, appetizer, chesapeake
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Frequently Asked Questions

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Can I make this dip ahead of time?

Yes, you can assemble the unbaked dip up to a day ahead, cover, and refrigerate; add 5 minutes to bake time if it goes in cold. For more make-ahead ideas see our baked spinach dip prep style.

Can I freeze this crab dip?

Freezing is not advised because cream cheese separates when thawed and turns grainy. Make a fresh batch instead of saving frozen leftovers for best texture.

What can I substitute for lump crab meat?

Use an equal weight of claw meat if lump is unavailable or pricey; it has a stronger flavor and finer texture but the same seasoning profile. You lose the visible white pieces but the dip stays tasty.

How do I know when the dip is done?

The dip is done when edges bubble and the top is golden and crispy at the corners, about 25–30 minutes. For safety, the center should reach 74°C / 165°F since it contains crab and dairy.

Anna Food and Lifestyle Blogger

Hi, I’m Anna — a wellness enthusiast, recipe creator, and founder of Cook Recipe. I love making healthy, easy, and feel-good meals that inspire others to live happier, more balanced lives. When I’m not in the kitchen, you’ll find me exploring new places or flowing through a yoga session! 🌿

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