6 Mistakes to Avoid When Making Fruit Cobbler (2024)

Meghan Splawn

Meghan Splawn

Meghan was the Food Editor for Kitchn's Skills content. She's a master of everyday baking, family cooking, and harnessing good light. Meghan approaches food with an eye towards budgeting — both time and money — and having fun. Meghan has a baking and pastry degree, and spent the first 10 years of her career as part of Alton Brown's culinary team. She co-hosts a weekly podcast about food and family called Didn't I Just Feed You.

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updated May 1, 2019

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6 Mistakes to Avoid When Making Fruit Cobbler (1)

Cobbler is one of those scrappy recipes beloved for its ability to transform fresh fruit and pantry staples into a well-loved dessert, while simultaneously being un-screw-up-able. Although, like many casual desserts, cobbler can be mastered or ruined by just a few key choices. Today, we’re going to tackle the six most common things you shouldn’t do so your cobbler turns out beautifully every time.

1. Topping cobbler with pie crust.

I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but fruit topped with pastry crust is actually a pandowdy. Cobblers should be topped with a slightly sweet biscuit-like topping, although some regional variations include more cake-like toppings. Pie crust is fine when you’re making pie, but it’s decidedly not for cobbler making.

Try this: Our favorite cobbler topping is a sweetened cream biscuit that mixes up incredibly quickly and requires just a few ingredients. You can scoop it right onto the fruit filling.

2. Using any type of fruit.

To be clear, you can use any fruit for making cobbler, but using canned fruit or, worse, canned pie filling can result in a sickly sweet cobbler with a gummy filling.

Try this: Fresh fruit is grand, but frozen fruit works too. Just be sure to thaw the fruit completely first. Another tip: Cut all fruit into bite-sized pieces for easier scooping and eating.

3. Not coating the fruit in some starch.

We love cobblers for being juicy, but really ripe fruit can make more puddles than a spring rain. The result is a soupy cobbler with a soggy top.

Try this: Add one to two tablespoons of cornstarch to the filling. Partnered with a little sugar and lemon juice, this will make a lush sauce for the fruit. When baking, be sure the filling is bubbling-hot to ensure the cornstarch is cooked enough to thicken.

4. Overcrowding the topping.

Completely covering the fruit filling with the cobbler topping will steam both the fruit and the bottom of the topping, making for a wet finished cobbler in the most unappealing way.

Try this: Scoop the cobbler topping onto the fruit, leaving space between each portion of topping. This will allow steam to escape the filling and create more of those crags of caramelized fruit that we all love.

5. Not cooking it long enough.

Baking cobbler has a distinct challenge: You can’t see the bottom of the biscuits and the filling won’t completely thicken until it cools, so how do you know when it’s done?

Try this: Because the cobbler topping is a variation on a quick bread, we can take its temperature to ensure doneness. A probe thermometer inserted in the center of the cobbler should reach 200°F in the thickest part of the topping. The filling should be bubbly around the sides, and the tops of the biscuits should be more deep amber than golden.

6. Not serving with whipped cream or ice cream.

This is more a personal commandment, but cobbler is made more perfect when it’s served warm with the cool and creamy contrast of whipped cream or ice cream.

6 Mistakes to Avoid When Making Fruit Cobbler (2024)

FAQs

6 Mistakes to Avoid When Making Fruit Cobbler? ›

If you use enough batter to completely cover the fruit, you'll end up with a cobbler that's far too bready, more like an upside-down cake.

Why did my cobbler turn out like cake? ›

If you use enough batter to completely cover the fruit, you'll end up with a cobbler that's far too bready, more like an upside-down cake.

How do you tell if a cobbler is done? ›

Use your probe thermometer! According to Kitchn, when the center of your cobbler reaches 200 degrees F, it's done. Since you have a tool that ensures your cobbler is cooked through, there's one more tip that will make your cobbler experience even better. Let your cobbler rest for a bit before serving.

Can you overcook cobbler? ›

(bakers tip: it's pretty hard to overcook a cobbler, so don't be afraid to leave it in there for longer than 30 minutes - if the top is browning too quickly and the juices still aren't running clear, tent the crisp with foil and continue baking.)

Why do you put cornstarch in a cobbler? ›

Making the Fruit Filling

You can bake a cobbler with just fruit as the filling, but a little sugar and cornstarch tossed with the fruit before baking will work together to create a lush sauce from the fruit's juices. This is the thing that turns a good cobbler into a knock-out dessert.

Why did cobbler get banned? ›

For reasons unknown, Cobbler has historically been banned by the Mao Clan, as it is forbidden by The Hero's Code, with Shin Mao stating how it is against his familial hero's code.

Is cobbler batter supposed to be runny? ›

Add milk slowly to the dry cobbler mix, you don't want your batter too runny. If the mixture is too thick you can add more milk, but you want the batter the consistency of a thick cake or brownie batter. Since this recipe is going to sit on a pantry shelf, we're using all-purpose flour.

Is cobbler supposed to be mushy? ›

If your Peach Cobbler is mushy, it means either 1) your peaches were too ripe and broke down too much when baking (this can also produce a mushy topping), or 2) the Peach Cobbler was overbaked. Take care to use firm but ripe peaches and bake the cobbler until the topping reaches 200 degrees F.

How do you keep cobbler crust from getting soggy? ›

Blind Bake

The most common way to ward off a soggy pie crust is by a process called blind baking. Blind baking means you pre-bake the crust (sometimes covered with parchment or foil and weighed down with pie weights to prevent the crust from bubbling up) so that it sets and crisps up before you add any wet filling.

Do you refrigerate cobbler after baking? ›

Does peach cobbler need to be refrigerated? Yes, leftover peach cobbler should be stored covered in the refrigerator. It will help keep the cobbler topping from getting too mushy. It will keep in the refrigerator for 2 or 3 days.

Should cobbler be doughy? ›

Just remember that a true cobbler is made with a dough or batter topping that is thick enough to be spooned and dropped atop the sweet filling. Other variations that require sprinkling, crumbling, or rolling the topping over the filling are not cobblers.

Why is my peach cobbler not cooking in the middle? ›

Mistake: Baking at too high of a temperature

Cobblers need enough time in the oven for the topping to cook through and brown, but at too high a temperature, anything above 375 ℉, the fruit filling might not be cooked by the time the top is burnt.

Is cobbler easier than pie? ›

The biggest difference is that a cobbler is so easy to make (easier than pie!). While a pie is made with a bottom crust and often a top crust, the dough and the fruit filling cook together in a cobbler.

What ingredient makes a crisp different from a cobbler? ›

While both are fruit desserts that can be made in the oven in a baking dish, or on a stovetop skillet, cobblers and crisps have nuanced differences, including: Exterior: Cobblers are denser due to the biscuit dough topping and base, while crisps use oats and a streusel topping, making them lighter.

Why is my cobbler gummy? ›

To be clear, you can use any fruit for making cobbler, but using canned fruit or, worse, canned pie filling can result in a sickly sweet cobbler with a gummy filling.

Why is my cobbler soupy? ›

Typically that wonderfully fresh fruit sheds all its juices in the oven, leaving the filling soupy, the fruit mushy, and the topping anything but crisp. Plopping any old raw topping onto room-temperature fruit may be easy, but it will likely lead to a soggy mess.

Is cobbler supposed to be cakey? ›

Some recipes are more like a cake, with a cake-like batter prepared on the bottom of the pan and then peaches are incorporated. Some Peach Cobblers are topped with a pastry crust topping, and some are topped with a more cake-like topping. To me, however, Peach Cobbler isn't a cake or a pie!

Why is my cobbler mushy? ›

Not coating the fruit in some starch.

The result is a soupy cobbler with a soggy top. Try this: Add one to two tablespoons of cornstarch to the filling. Partnered with a little sugar and lemon juice, this will make a lush sauce for the fruit.

Will cobbler thicken as it cools? ›

We know, it's hard to resist slicing into your peach creation the minute it comes out of the oven. Again, patience. You need to let the cobbler cool and let the syrup thicken. It'll be worth the wait.

Should you refrigerate cobbler after baking? ›

Does peach cobbler need to be refrigerated? Yes, leftover peach cobbler should be stored covered in the refrigerator. It will help keep the cobbler topping from getting too mushy. It will keep in the refrigerator for 2 or 3 days.

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