How To Make Peach Cobbler ~ How To Cook Like Your Grandmother
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Thursday, July 3, 2008

How To Make Peach Cobbler



Got cherries? Make cobbler. Got strawberries? Make cobbler. Got apples? Blueberries? Peaches? Cobbler, cobbler, cobbler.

I guess what I'm saying here is ... man I like cobbler. It's even fun to say. Cobbler cobbler cobbler cobbler. Whoa, I'm sounding like a turkey in my head. Okay, here's the recipe. This works for whatever fruit you want.

Read the rest ...

Ingredients



six peaches (see note below)
3/4 cup sugar
1/4 cup butter

Batter

3/4 cup flour
3/4 cup sugar
3/4 cup milk
2 teaspoons baking powder
pinch of salt

Directions

Whatever fruit you decide to use, you should have enough to fill a 9x9 baking dish before you start peeling and slicing.

Some fruits will need to be peeled, some won't. Peaches do. My wife was making the cobbler, and she wanted to peel them with a knife. I wanted to try something I'd read about: If you put peaches or other fruit in boiling water for about a minute then plunge it into cold water, the skin will just slide off. We decided she would start peeling by hand while I put the water on to boil and see who finished first.



She had five of them done before the water started to boil. So she was right, just grabbing a knife and doing it is faster. I kept the last one to try the boiling water trick.



And did it work?



Wow, that's easy.

Slice the peaches all the way around, twist the two halves to separate them from the pit, and pop the pit out.



Slice everything into bite-sized pieces. (Be careful, peeled peaches are very slippery.)



Add 3/4 cup of sugar and mix.

Batter

The batter couldn't be simpler. Combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, salt and milk and stir it all together.




Assembly

Melt the butter in the baking dish. Put the butter in the dish and put it in the oven while you pre-heat it to 350°. By the time you're done prepping the fruit and batter the butter should be melted.



Add the fruit and distribute it evenly.



Pour the batter over the fruit but don't stir it.



Bake at 350° for 40-50 minutes, until the batter is golden brown and developing cracks in the surface.



Serve with fresh whipped cream, or ice cream.



If you serve it while it's still warm, the whipped cream will melt into the fruit. Mmm, peaches and cream.



And that's it.




If you like snack food be sure to sign up to get future posts by email. I'll be spending this holiday weekend making and eating junk food. From scratch. Does that make it good food? I'm not sure I care.

UPDATE: Sweet Bird at From Whence The Sweet Bird Sang did this with cherry and it looks great. Go take a look.

^

26 comments:

Kristin said...

Hmmm, I like the cake-y topping on that. We almost always end up having a kind of crisp, with a topping made mostly of oats and some weird non-wheat flour so the MiL can eat it. But I think I would like yours too. Maybe I'll try it when the SCARY AMOUNT of blackberries start getting ripe. I'm afraid. Just when I finish with the never-ending mulberries, I'll have to deal with the perpetual blackberries. Sigh.

Drew Kime said...

Do some blackberry cheese. Just so you can hang another purple sack over your sink.

Stephanie said...

Oooh, that looks tasty! We generally do a crisp too, or something with a biscuit-like topping. But I think our next cobbler will definitely be this one!

Drew Kime said...

I like that it's so simple, and I can pretty much guarantee I'll have everything in my cupboard already.

I think I'll add a little raw sugar on top next time. Just enough to add a little sparkle and crunch.

lapa said...

Very nice tips.

Sweet Bird said...

You're right, it's totally delicious. I tried it out and posted my pictures tonight. I will admit that I didn't bother sweetening the fruit, though because I used cherries instead of stonefruit. I'm not really a sweets kind of person anyways, so I might not even sweeten with different fruit.

Thanks for the great recipe, I'm sure it'll become a standby.

Drew Kime said...

Awesome! That's what cherries are supposed to look like when you bake them.

Sarah S said...

I just made this tonight, and it came out excellent, only thing I changed was I added a few dashes of cinnamon to the batter. Definitely will be making this all summer. Thanks!

Drew Kime said...

Woo woo! Two for two. Loving it.

Benji said...

I love, love, love making this. Made it for the MiL when she came to visit and when she got home, she called for the recipe. I didn't tell her that I add cinnamon and vanilla to mine. Was that a little mean?

Drew Kime said...

Ooh, not cool. I'm not a fan of "secret recipes". Does yours taste better because hers tastes worse?

Give here the real recipe. When she makes it and pelple love it she'll tell them, "I got the recipe from my daughter-in-law. Isn't it wonderful? She's such a good cook." Keep it to yourself, and the only person she'll talk to about it is you, when you serve it to her again.

Let's all share, people.

Jenna said...

Looks delicious! I'll have to give this a try! Thanks!

Benji said...

...but I don't like her...she's evil. Does that count?

Drew Kime said...

Jenna, let me know how it comes out.

Benji, oh, well in that case ...

Grooveycrafts said...

yum :), it looks so good. The boiling the water one might have taken time to boil but it looks neater and the peach was probably softer to cut.

You can do the same with almonds to get the skin off

Drew Kime said...

Groovy, I don't think those peaches needed much help in the "easy to cut" department. Thanks for the tip on the almonds. I've seen a bunch of dessert recipes that call for sliced/slivered/crushed almonds. I'll try peeling them myself. And if it's not as easy as the peaches, I'll blame you.

Anonymous said...

I was looking for some recipes on line and found your recipes. They all look delicious and I love the step by step pictures.
I think I'm going to try to make the peach cobbler, will probably use apples instead. I'll let you know how it turns out.

Deborah Dowd said...

Cobbler is so good- just perfect, especially in the cool weather. A little cream or ice cream and you are in heaven!

Drew Kime said...

Deborah, it's funny you should say that. I've always seen cobbler as a summer dish. Maybe it's because there just isn't much fresh fruit in the winter. Or maybe it's the ice cream.

Hmm, but I like ice cream with my apple pie in the fall and winter. Now that's interesting. I wonder what's behind associating a food with one time of year more-so than others?

Anonymous said...

What kind of flour do you use. All purpose or self rising?

Drew Kime said...

Anon, it's plain white flour.

Jennifer Nicole said...

I'm a beginning cook/baker, and I tried this and it came out awesome. I was wondering, if I were to make it cinammon apple, could someone give me an estimate as to how much cinammon to add to the apples? Thanks!

Drew Kime said...

Jennifer, I have a mixture of two part granulated sugar to one part cinnamon that I keep in a shaker. I'd just put the apples in the baking dish, give the top a good coating, then add the batter. Good luck, and let me know how it comes out.

deaconsbench said...

Many thanks for giving me another "doable" recipe!

Drew Kime said...

I've always been a fan of doability.

Wait, I didn't mean it to sound that way. But I like it. :-)

Anonymous said...

Michelle from mass : it was easy but its not good yet cuz its cooking and smelling great !! thanks alot !!