Like my grandma, I also love cobbler in the summer because it satisfies the urge for a dessert with a bubbling fruit filling and buttery, biscuit-like topping. Although I sadly don’t have my grandmother’s recipe, I love making this cobbler with summer cherries because it’s hands-down the seasonal fruit I look forward to most. I scoop up as many as I can once they hit the markets.
The Best Cherries for Cobbler
This cobbler uses sweet cherries in the filling, like Bing or Rainier. It can be made with fresh summer cherries when they’re in season, or year-round with frozen fruit. A little lemon juice perks up the filling while a bit of cornstarch thickens the fruit juices and keeps them from becoming too soupy and soaking into the biscuit topping. (Though note that cobblers are meant to be fairly juicy; more so than pies.) If you can find them, you can also use tart cherries, such as Morello or Montmorency, or a mixture of tart and sweet cherries. Dial up the sugar by 1/4 cup or so because these types of cherries are quite sour.
How to Make Cherry Cobbler
While some cobblers have more of a cake-like batter on top, I love my cobbler with a less-sweet biscuit topping. My topping lands somewhere between a roll-out dough and a pancake batter. It’s a scoop-able batter, and I like to use a spring-loaded levered ice cream scoop or large spoon to drop large mounds of batter on top. The topping spreads and puffs over the fruit filling as it bakes, so don’t worry too much about gaps when you’re dolloping. I also like to brighten up the topping with lemon zest and add some crunch with a sprinkling of sugar before the cobbler goes into the oven. The doughy biscuit topping develops a crisp exterior and a fluffy middle that’s a great contrast to the warm juicy fruit. This cobbler is best served with a scoop of ice cream.
More Best Summer Cobblers
Peach Cobbler Apple Cobbler Blackberry Cobbler Strawberry Rhubarb Cobbler Berry Cobbler with Coconut Walnut Streusel
2 1/2 pounds pitted fresh or frozen sweet cherries 1/2 cup (70 g) granulated sugar 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 tablespoon cornstarch (use 1 1/2 tablespoons if using frozen cherries) 1/8 teaspoon kosher salt
For the topping:
2 cups (250 g) all-purpose flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 1/4 cup (35 g) granulated sugar, plus additional for sprinkling over top 1 tablespoon lemon zest 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt 6 tablespoons (85 g) unsalted butter, cut into small pieces 1 cup whole milk 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
If you are using frozen cherries, you can put the dish in the preheating oven to defrost them a bit while you make the cobbler topping. Whisk the milk and vanilla together in a measuring cup, and using a fork, work the liquid into the dry mixture until you get a thick batter–it should resemble something between biscuit dough and pancake batter.