Cobbler, Crisp or Crumble?
We love fruit dessert, especially when it is covered with a warm crunchy topping. You can change up the fruit, the topping, the pan, and even the baking method. But the way we eat it doesn’t change for us – we like it warm with ice cream!
Fruit cobbler is topped with dough that bakes up like a biscuit. The dough can be rolled out and cut like a biscuit or loose and dropped onto the fruit. The idea for this recipe post came from my desire to clean some things out of our freezer. I found frozen biscuit dough that I thawed and cut into smaller circles. The fruit is topped in a way that when baked the biscuits form a cobbled look. I brush the dough with cream and sprinkle with sugar before baking.

Peach Blueberry Cobbler
Fruit crisp is topped with a streusel made with flour, oats, fat and sugar. The sreusel can also have nuts and spices.

Strawberry Rhubarb Crisp
The topping for fruit crumble is more crumbly and loose than streusel, and does not contain oats. I often make my crumb topping from leftover cookie or cake crumbs. In addition to the biscuit dough, I found some crumbs in the freezer that I had ground from over-baked almond spice biscotti.
Apple Blueberry Crumble
I usually start with 6-8 cups of fruit. In the summer I add fresh blueberries to my apples and peaches, then stir in sugar, citrus zest and juice, and flour. The flour helps thicken the fruit so it doesn’t get too runny. Allow the fruit to set for a few minutes with the sugar so the juices start to release. You can see how it forms a syrup and clings to the fruit.
When using rhubarb I coat it with the sugar and flour so it looks “white washed”. Rhubarb needs additional fruit to compliment it. I usually go with a sauce made from strawberries or raspberries. You can also stir in frozen berries. I don’t like to add fresh strawberries or raspberries because they break down and end up stringy.

Apples & berries ready for topping

Rhubarb “white washed” with sugar & flour
Be sure to add enough fruit to the pan. I mound it so that when it cooks down my pan is still full. These fruit desserts work in any type of baking pan. I choose my pan based on my baking method. For the oven I use a cake pan, pie pan or cast iron skillet. I put a sheet pan under my baking dish to catch the drips. The fruit dessert needs to bake until the center is bubbly and the top is golden brown. That usually means the fruit around the edge is bubbling over the sides.

Biscotti crumble baked in the oven

Circles & scraps of biscuit dough
I also like to grill fruit dessert and for that I use a cast iron skillet or aluminum pan. They cook up much faster on the grill and I don’t have to worry about drips. I will place my dessert onto the grill at the start of our meal and it is ready in time for dessert. Once the filling is hot, move the pan off the direct heat and allow the top to brown. I have taken fruit crisp to cookouts as my dish to share. Have it all ready to go in a disposable pan, place it on the grill when you arrive, and you’re done!

Cobbler on the grill in a mini skillet

Crisp on the grill in aluminum cake pan
To my ground biscotti crumbs I added a bit more flour and sugar, then stirred in melted butter and just enough heavy cream to bind them together. The crumbs already had almonds and spices so it didn’t need anything else. I stirred it all together with a fork. I was pleased that my earlier biscotti mistake turned into an easy, delicious dessert!
The streusel is made in the mixer using cold butter. You have to mix it long enough for the clumps to form. You want to see the fruit bake up into the topping so resist the urge to add too much. These toppings are really versatile. Any extra can be frozen and used later to easily top off muffins, pie or your next fruit dessert.

Crumb topping

Streusel topping
Apple Blueberry Crumble
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Crumb topping:
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Strawberry Rhubarb Crisp
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Streusel topping:
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Note: If berries are sweetened then cut sugar down to 1/2 cup. I usually add sauce made from berries that I have cooked down with sugar and then strained. Press down when straining to get some of the fruit pulp into the sauce. You can start with fresh or frozen berries. |
Peach Blueberry Cobbler
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Biscuit Dough
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