Old Fashioned Blackberry Cobbler Recipe
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This blackberry cobbler recipe makes an old-fashioned Southern Blackberry Cobbler recipe with a lattice top and pastry dumplings. Always a favorite!
I grew up having a definite love / hate relationship with blackberry cobbler.
You see, during the summer my sister and I would spend days with our grandparents while our parents worked. Our days were filled with all of the love and fun little girls could possibly pack into them – with the exception of the days when we knew we were going with Grandmother to pick blackberries.
Southern Blackberry Cobbler Recipe
My Grandparents’ land adjoined ours with our pasture in between us on one side. The other side adjoined my aunt and uncle with acres of trees in between. Along the line of the trees and just inside their canopy were Grandmother’s blackberries.
It seemed as if it took forever to reach them with our baskets swinging and dolls tucked under our arms. Grandmother would lead the way, usually humming or telling us about each plant, bird, or bug as we past it by. Finally, we were there. Outfitted in our long sleeves and thick gloves we would go about picking basket after basket of big, juicy blackberries. We knew there would be a cobbler for dessert after supper and most likely, if we picked enough, we’d get to help her make blackberry jam.
With the sun beating down on us, sweating under those gloves that were beginning to feel like they weighed twice as much as they did, and with scratches along our arms where the long blackberry thorns had worked their way through our shirt sleeves, I was ready to be done with picking blackberries. At this point I would convince myself that blackberry cobbler wasn’t that great after all.
And yet, when I caught sight of her blackberry cobbler on the sideboard during supper, I was quiet certain blackberry picking was worth it after all.
How to Make Southern Blackberry Cobbler
Here are the step-by-step photos showing exactly how she made her Blackberry Cobbler. You’ll notice when I made the step-by-step photos of her recipe (many, many years ago!), I used her cobbler pan. I made sure to snap a few photographs the other day when I made this blackberry cobbler again, this time making it in my medium skillet. This shows you that you can easily make it in either!
Start by making the dough for your cobbler crust.
Once your cobbler crust dough has been made, pop it into the freezer for a bit while you are making the filling portion of your blackberry cobbler.
I use my Mother’s cobbler pan that she gave me and that is just like the one that my Grandmother would use. It’s a simple, round stainless steel pan without handles that went with their Towncraft cookware. You can just use any medium-sized, heavy bottomed pan.
Clean your blackberries and put them in your pan over medium heat.
Pour in your sugar.
Add butter.
And a bit of water. Give it all a good stir and let it just do it’s magic.
Like this.
It should start to get thick and syrupy and absolutely scrumptious before the next step. The berries will be soft when you press them against the side with a spoon.
While your blackberry cobbler filling is cooking away, go ahead and roll out the dough for your crust.
I like to just roll mine out on the parchment paper that I wrapped it in for the freezer – there’s less mess that way.
Take one half of your dough and cut into 1/2″ wide strips. Then, cut again into about 1/2″ long pieces.
Now this is the twist in the recipe for Grandmother’s blackberry cobbler that I told you about.
Now just drop those little pieces of dough you cut up one at a time into the boiling blackberry dish.
This makes a delicious dumpling right in your blackberry cobbler that is out of this world.
Continue to cook, and stir gently until all your dough pieces have cooked in your blackberries.
Remove your blackberry cobbler pan from the heat and begin to place the second half of your dough in long strips along the top in a lattice pattern.
Place pats of butter on the strips of dough and lightly sprinkle with sugar.
Bake for about 20 minutes until the dough has lightly browned.
Remove from the oven and allow to cool for at least 10 minutes before serving. I highly recommend grabbing your ice cream at this point and get ready with big ole scoops! ๐
Here’s my Grandmother’s Blackberry Cobbler recipe. I hope you love it as much as my family always does.
Southern Blackberry Cobbler
Ingredients
For the crust:
- 2 cups (240 g) all-purpose flour
- 12 tablespoons (170 g) butter
- 1/2 cup (114 g) ice water
For the cobbler:
- 3 cups (432 g) blackberries, cleaned (about 24-ounces)
- 1 1/2 cups (297 g) sugar
- 6 tablespoons (85 g) butter
- 1 1/2 cups (340 g) water
Instructions
For the cobbler crust:
- Chill mixing bowl and pastry cutter in freezer for about 15 minutes prior to making crust.
- Cut the butter called for in the crust into the flour with a pastry cutter. Slowly incorporate ice water just until the dough begins to form.
- Pour dough onto parchment paper, divide and quickly work into two flat discs. Wrap tightly and place in the freezer to chill prior to using.
For the Cobbler:
- Combine berries, sugar, butter, and water in a heavy-bottomed pan.
- Bring to boil over medium heat and cook for 20 minutes. Berries will be soft when pressed against the side of the pan with a spoon. The blackberry mixture will also begin to thicken and become syrupy.
- Preheat oven to 425ยบ F.
- Remove pastry for cobbler crust from the freezer and roll. Cut 1/2" strips in both portions of the dough.
- In one half of the dough, cut strips again to form individual pieces for dumplings.
- Drop the dough pieces into boiling blackberries and occasionally stir gently to make sure all dumplings are cooked, about 7 minutes.
- Remove cobbler pan from heat and place the second half of the dough in a lattice pattern on top of the blackberries. Place pieces of butter on top of the lattice crust and sprinkle with sugar.
- Place into oven and bake for about 20 minutes or until crust is lightly browned.
- Remove from oven and allow to cool for at least 10 minutes before serving.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
Enjoy!
Robyn xo
From the Add a Pinch recipe archives. Originally published 2011.
This sounds really great! I wanted to try it. One question:
Do you use the same heavy bottom pan for the oven?
Thank you!
Hello, I love this recipe. I too grew up on these cobblers. My aunts could whip one up in the blink of an eye. I have one question. I couldn’t get my syrup to thicken. I’m guessing I need to cut back on the water?
Thanks
I pinned the cobbler on Pinterest
Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! I lost my (favorite) aunt many years ago, and sadly with her went many of her recipes. I have tried every cobbler recipe out there trying to duplicate hers. This is the closest I’ve ever come. When I was very young she helped raise me, as my mom worked a lot. I have loved to cook since I was small, and as much as she would shoo me away from the hot stove, I’d be dragging a chair to watch and help. The only difference I can tell, is that when the cobbler cooled a bit, she would pour some cream into the cracks and crevices of the lattice top, then put it into the fridge to cool. It made an impact on my memory, because the deep purple color would swirl with the cream, and make wonderful patterns. Sort of like spin art at the county fair :o)
Anyway, thank you again for sharing this recipe. Shawna Lee
Ps: I have the same memories of my mom making us go pick blackberries for hours upon hours upon hours! I was a kid, it probably was only a couple, but it felt like forever! Now, I wish I had my momma here. Such is life right?
Thank you, Thank you,and Thank you I have been searching for a great blackberry cobbler-mine is in the oven now this was easy.
I hope you loved it, Ava!
I just KNEW someone would know how and what a cobbler should be, look like and is!
Forgive my extreme happiness please.
You must understand how aggravated I get when someone says I made a cobbler only to see it is that mix of flour, sugar and milk. That is not a cobbler at all! To me it is a lazy dump of something. Is there a name for that besides ‘a cup, a cup, a cup’?
So yummy! That’s just how my grandmother made her cobblers — dumplings in them and lattice top on them. In fact, I just pulled a muscadine cobbler out of my oven made just that way! I have never known anyone else to make them that way. Thanks for sharing yours!
As with most of my family recipes, nothing is written down. Evidently we suffer from measure-deficit. For generations, we’ve operated with a pinch of this, a scooch of that, a dash, a pinch, a tad. So, last week when a friend ask for my grandmother’s stovetop blackberry cobbler recipe, I panicked. I was traveling and couldn’t belly up to the stove to make one and write down my measurements. So I Googled and found Granny’s method here. Thank you so much! My husband came home with two quarts of berries last night!
Favorite cobbler fruit ever. So many memories! Love this, Robyn.
Love the idea of dumplings and cobbler top in this, and recipes with stories are always the best.