Apple Cobbler Recipe - Food.com (2024)

11

Submitted by Aroostook

"Love those great apple recipes!"

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Apple Cobbler Recipe - Food.com (2) Apple Cobbler Recipe - Food.com (3)

photo by Elly in Canada Apple Cobbler Recipe - Food.com (4)

Apple Cobbler Recipe - Food.com (5) Apple Cobbler Recipe - Food.com (6)

Ready In:
30mins

Ingredients:
12
Serves:

6

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ingredients

  • 8 medium apples, peeled and sliced
  • 14 cup sugar
  • 14 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1 lemon, squeeze the juice out and grate the rind
  • 14 cup butter
  • Cobbler Mix

  • 1 cup flour
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 1 12 teaspoons baking powder
  • 14 teaspoon salt
  • 14 cup butter
  • 14 cup milk
  • 1 egg, slightly beaten

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directions

  • Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.
  • Mix apples, sugar, spice and lemon together.
  • Heat through (either in the microwave or in a sauce pan) until bubbly.
  • Stir often.
  • Cobblers mixture:

  • Sift all dry ingredients.
  • Cut in butter until mixture resembles course crumbs.
  • Mix milk and beaten egg.
  • Add all at once to dry ingredients.
  • Stir just to moisten.
  • Drop spoonsful of cobbler topping over hot sweetened fruit mixture.
  • Bake for 20 minutes or until crust is browned.
  • Serve warm with vanilla ice cream or heavy cream.

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Reviews

  1. I loved this recipe, Barbara! The combination of the apples and lemon was wonderful! I added just 1/4 more sugar to the apple mixture and that was the only change I made. Delicious and perfect for a beatiful Autumn day! Thank you so much for sharing this recipe!

    Bev I Am

  2. These are fantastic. I like to make small single servings, so I used my muffin pans ( I doubled the recipe). I lined my pans with foil cupcake wrappers. I omitted the lemons due to allergies. I also doubled the sugar and cinnamon to make more sauce. This made 24 wonderful single serve dessert cups! These can be frozen individually and popped in the oven to reheat, taste the same as the day they were made Thanks for a wonderful recipe!!!

    cherrycola

  3. I was apple picking with my friend Fran when she suggested we end the day making cobbler. I love Fran, but her cobbler recipe is another story. I offered to bake at my house knowing I could pop into Zaar and find a better recipe. Barbara, as fate would have it, your recipe popped up first and I quickly printed it. The cobbler not only looked amazing, but tasted twice as good! Thanks for posting!

    Richard-NYC

  4. A very delicious recipe for fall day! I decreased the sugar in the apple mix to 2 Tbsp. cause the apples I used were sweet. I did not have a lemon on hand so I used 2 Tbsp lemon juice. I also increased the cinnamon to 1 teasp. and added half a teasp. to the cobbler mix as well. The cobbler turned out perfect, thanks for sharing this recipe!

    Bunniegirl

  5. Excellent recipe, I am enjoying the last of the fresh apples this fall. I made one variation and that was to add a bit of freshly ground ginger in with the apples. Just a personal preference for a hint of ginger.

    tlapp

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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

Aroostook

United States

  • 61 Followers
  • 633 Recipes
  • 17 Tweaks

Zaar...Wow, what a place! I'm one of the old timers of Zaar. I can't count the number of wonderful dishes I cooked in the past few years since joining. Along the way I have had the pleasure of meeting several Zaar chefs. Talk about your fruits and nuts! lol. I have enjoyed meeting them all.Family: What's to say...I have had the same sweet husband forever (Good thing....I'd hate to have to break a new one in...=) and live close to a couple of grown children. (Maybe you've met Smoke Alarm Jr. ..her brown rolls are sooo good!) Therefore, my family gets together often to enjoy each other's company and cooking. My greatest joy is six "little to tallerthanme" kids running around calling me Grammy. They wear me out! lolFor the past thirty years I have been a Special Education teacher for grades 9-12 and love it. Took some time off last year to recovery from surgery, chemotherapy and radiation for breast cancer. (Loved the radiation....I keep imagining that we are absolutely napalming the nasty cancer cells tohellandback to keep the little suckers from returning. =) My prognosis is good and now "I'm back in the saddle again". lol. Being a north country "gurl", I am happiest outside...walking, fishing, sitting in front of an outdoor fire or being on water (although in February it's a bit stiff....=0) When indoors I like to read, garden, knit, quilt and paint. During cold Maine weather I like to warm my feet on a very large ( 100 pounds of long legs and huge feet), sweet and furry golden retriever named Kerry (aka KTBRD: Kerry the big red dawg..lol) . In the summer, the dawg and I round up the grandkids, hit the local dairy bar for a Mounds Sundae that is to die for!!!=0) . Then spend a lot of long and lazy summer days at camp . All in all...Boy, Life is good! =)

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Apple Cobbler Recipe  - Food.com (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between apple cobbler and apple crisp? ›

Cobbler: A fruit dessert made with a top crust of pie dough or biscuit dough but no bottom crust. Crisp/crumble: In Alberta, the terms are mostly interchangeable. Both refer to fruit desserts similar to cobbler but made with a brown sugar streusel topping sometimes containing old-fashioned rolled oats.

Is cobbler supposed to be moist? ›

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.

Can you prep a cobbler the day before? ›

Peach cobbler isn't the kind of dessert that you can just reheat the next day without it getting soggy. Cobblers contain a lot of moisture, so if you want to make one ahead, prep and store the filling and topping separately in the refrigerator and then bake off the cobbler when ready to serve.

Is Apple Cobbler the same as apple pie? ›

Cobbler is sometimes described as a kind of fruit pie, but strictly speaking, the two are different. Pies are made from pastry, rather than biscuit batter, and they are fully encased, with a crust at the top and the bottom, while cobblers typically only have a topping.

What makes a cobbler a cobbler? ›

Cobbler is usually topped with batter or biscuits in lieu of crust. Cobbler's name comes from its sometimes cobbled texture, which is a result of spooning or dropping the topping over the fruit rather than distributing it equally. This way, the filling can peek through.

Why is it called Brown Betty? ›

This has led some historians to believe that Betty was the name of the cook and creator of the recipe and that brown was in reference to her skin color.

Why is my cobbler full of liquid after baking? ›

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.

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 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.

Why is my cobbler gummy? ›

You shouldn't have a problem with Peach Cobbler being gummy if you use fresh fruit unless you overcook it. Canned peaches, however, can result in a gummy filling because the peaches are already softer to begin with and bathed in heavy syrup. Make sure to thoroughly drain the peaches before using.

What is cobbler topping made of? ›

The method for the topping goes like this: Combine equal parts flour and sugar, and add enough melted butter to make a dough. This makes a very sweet cobbler with a topping somewhere between a sugar cookie and pie crust.

Do you refrigerate cobbler after baking? ›

Once completely cooled, cover the dish with the fruit and store in the fridge; store the topping in a covered container at room temperature. Before serving, spread the topping over the jammy fruit filling and reheat for about 15 minutes in a 350°F oven.

How do you know when 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.

What are the best apples to bake with? ›

Which apples bake best? For the best pies, crisps, and other baked treats, apples need to be firm enough to hold their own during the cooking process. We call these apples “baking apples” and to namedrop, they include Braeburn, Cortland, Honey Gold, Jonathan, Fuji, Gala, Granny Smith, Haralson, and Newtown Pippin.

Are honeycrisp apples good for baking? ›

Honeycrisp. One of the sweetest apples around, this Midwestern favorite is good for anything—including baking. It boasts a distinctive juicy crispness and is firm enough that it won't cook down much. It complements just about any other apple variety to make a stellar pie.

What is another name for apple cobbler? ›

Apple cobbler (also known asapple slump, apple grunt, and apple pandowdy) is an old recipe in which the baked apples are topped with a cobbler crust formed of batter, pie crust or baking powder biscuit dough.

Is apple brown betty the same as apple crisp? ›

Both are very similar apple desserts, but the difference mainly comes down to the crumble topping: Instead of the flour and oat mixture used in an apple crisp, an apple brown betty uses breadcrumbs for its crumbly, delicious topping.

Why is it called apple crisp? ›

Crisps tend to incorporate baked apples with a batter of sugar, flour, oats, and nuts. It tends to be crispier than a cobbler, hence the name.

Does it matter what apples you use in apple crisp? ›

You can use one variety or a mix. Our test kitchen prefers baking apples, like Rome or Cortland for apple crisp. We've also tried and liked this recipe when made with other common varieties like Empire, Gala, or Braeburn.

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