Even while the hammers rain blows down, and the kitchen is in shambles, I have a list of things to do. A cobbler was on my must bake list before the stone fruit season bid us adieu. It’s been bookmarked ever since I saw it on Leites Culinaria when I stopped by attempting to try and bake a recipe off the site for a photography competition. This cobbler was high on my list, until Monsieur Lebovitz’s Absolute Best Brownies knocked me off my perch!
I’m glad I made the cobbler. It was delicious and ever so fruity. Mr PAB said, ‘What is this ‘thing’ Deeba? It’s delicious!‘ The daughter said, “I love this mushy, ugly thing. Can I have some more?”, and the son loved it too, especially the biscuit crust {anything with butter is!}. I served it chilled because it’s still summer here and we’d rather have cold dessert than warm. Also, chilling it meant that all the fruit juices thickened up nicely and the flavours matured. Of course, it wasn’t very picture-worthy, but heck… My first cobbler was downright delicious, and is off to the Food Photo Competition @ Leite’s Culinaria!
Cornmeal Drop-Biscuit Peach Cobbler
Recipe from Matt and Ted Lees book, The Lee Brothers Simple Fresh Southern
Adapted minimally from recipe @ Leites CulinariaFor the peach filling1 kg ripe peaches, stoned , chopped {or sliced}3-4 plums, stoned, chopped1/2 cup brown sugar {or more, depending on your peaches and your sweet tooth}Juice of 1 lime1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon1/2 teaspoon saltFor the biscuit dough3/4 cup sifted all-purpose flour1/4 cup fine cornmeal1/4 cup brown sugar1/4 cup pistachio nuts, shelled1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder1/4 teaspoon iodized salt or fine sea salt3 tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cut into pieces, plus more for the baking dishMethod:Preheat oven to 220C. Butter a 9″ pie dishPlace all filling ingredients in a large bowl, and toss to mix well. Allow to stand for ten minutes while you make the drop-biscuit doughDrop-biscuit doughPlace the flour, cornmeal, brown sugar, baking powder, pistachio nuts and salt in the bowl of a food processor and pulse for a few seconds till the nuts are chopped fine, and the mixture blended. Add the butter and give 2-3 short pulses till the butter cuts through, and the mixture becomes like coarse meal with pea size bits of butter. Add the buttermilk and stir with a rubber spatula just until a tacky, wet dough comes together, which should take no more than a few seconds.Gently plop spoonfuls of the biscuit dough on top of the peach filling or, if the dough is too sticky to plop, simply spread it unevenly. The dough should be patchy and should not cover the entire surface of the filling.Bake until the cobbler’s syrup is bubbly and the biscuit top is alluringly browned, 20 to 25 minutes.Scoop the warm cobbler into small dessert bowls, ramekins, even cocktail glasses. Serve warm.♥ Thank you for stopping by ♥
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