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The Berry Cobbler That Farmers Market Shoppers Make on Repeat

Written by: Butter & Sage Market

Butter & Sage Marketplace is where food meets community! We’re here to connect your taste buds with the heart of your neighborhood, one homemade loaf, cultured butter, and jar of jam at a time. Your neighborhood’s next culinary treasure is just a click away.

Published: May 19, 2026

You know that moment at the farmers market when you spot the berries? The towering flat of blueberries. The blackberries so ripe they've stained the paper pint container. You buy more than you planned — obviously — and then you get home and think: now what?

Make this cobbler. It takes about ten minutes of hands-on effort, a handful of pantry staples, and forty minutes in the oven — and what comes out is the kind of dessert that makes people ask for the recipe before they've finished their first bite.

Why This Berry Cobbler Works With Whatever You've Got

The beautiful thing about this recipe is that it has no opinion about what fruit you use. Fresh blueberries from the market booth? Perfect. A bag of frozen mixed berries you've been saving since last summer? Also perfect. Peaches, cherries, blackberries, strawberries — any fruit that's looking beautiful right now works here. The batter rises up around the fruit as it bakes, golden on top, soft and cakey underneath where the fruit juices have soaked in, bubbling at the edges. It's not fussy. It's just good.

The technique is almost suspiciously simple: melt butter in the pan, spoon batter over it, then fruit over the batter. No stirring between layers. The batter rises up and around the fruit as it bakes, creating that signature cobbler texture without any drama.

The Best Fruit to Use (And Where to Find It)

If you're shopping your local farmers market right now, you're in the best position for this cobbler. Blueberries and blackberries hold their shape beautifully and pool into glossy pockets in the batter. Peaches get jammy and fragrant. Cherries turn ruby-dark. Even strawberries — which tend toward soft in baked goods — work here, because soft and jammy is exactly what this cobbler wants.

If you're using frozen fruit, the one rule: let it thaw completely before adding the sugar. The maceration step needs real fruit juices, not ice melt. Give it 20–30 minutes at room temperature and you'll be fine.

Make It Yours

Once you've made this cobbler once, you'll see how easy it is to riff on. Add a teaspoon of vanilla extract to the batter. Stir lemon or orange zest into the fruit. Swap in cardamom for a warmly spiced version that pairs beautifully with peaches. Replace half the flour with almond flour for a slightly nutty base. Serve warm with vanilla ice cream, whipped cream, or crème fraîche. It's a cobbler — it's designed to be played with.

[Recipe card will be embedded here via Divi builder]

If you made this with fruit from a farmers market vendor, we want to hear about it. Tag us at @butterandsagemarket and tell us what fruit you used. And if you're looking for local berry growers or produce vendors near you, browse the Butter & Sage Market vendor directory. Your next favorite summer ingredient might already be a few miles away.

Easy Fresh Berry Cobbler

Six pantry staples and any fruit you love — fresh or frozen — come together in one pan for the dessert that never fails. Golden on top, soft and jammy underneath, bubbly at the edges. Forty minutes and done.

Easy Fresh Berry Cobbler
Prep 10 min
Cook 40 min
Rest 5 min
Total 55 min
Yield 8 servings
Level Easy
8

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Sprinkle the fruit with u00bd cup of the sugar and let sit for 10u201315 minutes until juices begin to form. If using frozen fruit, let it thaw completely first.
  2. Preheat oven to 350u00b0F.
  3. In a small bowl, whisk together the milk, remaining u00bd cup sugar, flour, baking powder, and salt until a smooth batter forms.
  4. Add the butter to a 9x13 baking dish and place in the oven until melted, about 3u20134 minutes. Watch it carefully.
  5. Remove the dish from the oven. Spoon the batter evenly over the melted butter. Do not stir.
  6. Spoon the fruit and all of its accumulated juices evenly over the batter. Do not stir. The batter will rise up around the fruit as it bakes.
  7. Bake for 40 minutes, or until the top is golden brown and the edges are bubbling. Let cool 5 minutes before serving.

Notes

Use whatever fruit looks best at your local farmers market — blueberries, blackberries, peaches, cherries, strawberries, or a mix. Serve warm with vanilla ice cream, whipped cream, or crème fraîche. Leftovers reheat well in a 325°F oven for 10 minutes.
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