This cherry cobbler features sweet, jammy cherries topped with a light, muffin-like lemon biscuit topping. You can make it with fresh or frozen cherries, and it’s wonderful served warm with vanilla ice cream.

Why you’ll love this cherry cobbler
- Quicker and easier than a pie but delivers the same comforting fruit-and-topping experience.
- Works with fresh or frozen cherries, so you can make it year-round.
- The topping is tender and buttery with a bright lemon note — think biscuit meets lemon muffin.
If you enjoy cherries, try pairing this with vanilla ice cream or use reserved cherry juice to make an ice cream base for an extra-special finish.

What is a cobbler?
Traditionally, a cobbler is a fruit-filled pan topped with biscuits. Variations include cake-like toppings or even a bottom crust, but this recipe uses a biscuit-style topping that’s been softened to a cookie-dough-like texture. The result is buttery and tender without being too thick, so each bite has a nice balance of topping and filling.
A touch of lemon zest in the topping lifts the cherries and brightens the whole dessert.

Ingredients & Substitutions
- Cherries: Fresh sweet cherries are ideal, but frozen cherries work too — thaw and drain them before using. Pitted and sliced cherries make the filling easier to manage.
- If using frozen cherries, thaw, discard or reserve the juice, and slice before combining.
- A cherry pitter speeds things up and is highly recommended.
- Sugar: Granulated sugar is used in both the filling and the topping to create a jammy filling and tender topping. Substitutions may affect texture.
- Flour: All-purpose flour is used here. A digital scale gives the most consistent results.
- Baking powder: Leavens the topping. A small amount of baking soda could work but will change browning.
- Butter: Cold, cubed butter is rubbed into the dry ingredients. Salted or unsalted both work — add a pinch of salt if using unsalted.
- Greek yogurt: Used to lighten the topping in place of cream; sour cream or full-fat dairy alternatives will also work. Dairy-free yogurts can be used for a dairy-free version.
- Egg: Adds structure and a cake-like note to the topping.
- Lemon: Zest is rubbed with sugar for the topping and the juice is used in the filling; both brighten the cobbler.
- Vanilla & Almond Extracts: Vanilla in the topping and a touch of almond in the filling pair beautifully with cherries.
- Cinnamon: Optional, but it complements fruit nicely.
- Cornstarch: Thickens the cherry filling; weigh for best results if possible.
- Heavy cream: Brushed on the topping before baking to help it brown; melted butter can be used instead.

Step-By-Step Instructions
Cherry Filling
- Pit and halve the cherries (this can be done a day ahead) and place them in a deep-dish pie or casserole dish.
- Slice about half of the cherries into quarters so the filling has a mix of textures.
- Toss cherries with sugar, lemon juice, cornstarch, almond extract, and cinnamon until evenly combined.
- Puree about one-third of the mixture in a food processor, return it to the dish, and stir to combine — this helps create a jammy base.
- Bake the filling for 10–15 minutes while you prepare the topping.



Biscuit Topping
- Zest the lemon into a bowl with the granulated sugar and rub them together with your fingers until fragrant and combined.
- Add flour and baking powder and stir to combine.
- Cut in the cold, cubed butter using your fingers or a pastry cutter until the mixture looks crumbly with pea-sized pieces of butter remaining.
- Stir in the Greek yogurt, egg, and vanilla until the dough comes together; it should resemble cookie dough.




Assemble
- Remove the partially baked cherries from the oven.
- Use a cookie scooper to drop small scoops of the biscuit dough evenly over the cherries.
- Brush the tops with heavy cream or melted butter and sprinkle with granulated or raw sugar.
- Bake 45–60 minutes at 350°F (conventional). The topping should be golden and the filling should bubble slowly and thicken around the edges. Oven times vary; check for thick bubbling and golden color.
- If the topping is browning too fast while the filling isn’t bubbling, tent loosely with foil until the filling is ready.
- Let the cobbler rest briefly after baking so the filling can set before serving.


Pro Tips for the best cobbler
- Follow the ingredient suggestions and substitutions section for best texture and flavor.
- Don’t reduce the sugar significantly — it helps create a jammy filling and tender topping.
- If using frozen cherries, thaw and drain them, or add a bit more cornstarch to compensate for extra moisture.
- Allow the cobbler to cool shorty after baking so the filling sets and becomes nicely jammy.

Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Thaw and slice frozen cherries and discard or reserve the liquid. Slicing produces a more jammy texture than using whole frozen cherries.
You can try a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend; results may vary, but many such blends work well in biscuit- or cake-like toppings.
Yes — use dairy-free butter and a dairy-free yogurt or sour cream substitute for the topping, and a plant-based cream or melted dairy-free butter for brushing the tops.
How to store cherry cobbler
Cover and leave at room temperature for the first night, then refrigerate. Reheat portions gently in the microwave or in a warm oven. Freezing is not tested for this specific texture and may change the topping and filling consistency.

Thanks for reading — if you make this cherry cobbler, please leave a rating or review. Happy baking!
Love, B

Flavor
Cherry Cobbler
Pin Recipe
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Equipment
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1 deep dish pie pan or casserole dish
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1 food processor
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1 cherry pitter
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1 knife
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1 Rubber Spatula
Ingredients
Cherry Filling
- 2 lbs. fresh sweet cherries, pitted (can also do frozen but let them thaw)
- 67 g granulated sugar
- 1 large lemon juice
- 30 g cornstarch
- 1/2 tsp almond extract
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon
Biscuit Batter
- 67 grams granulated sugar
- 1 lemon zested, juice for filling
- 120 grams all-purpose flour, spooned and leveled
- 5 grams baking powder
- 85 grams salted butter, cold and cubed
- 120 grams Greek Yogurt, cold
- 1 large egg, cold
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
Topping
- 60 mL heavy cream, or melted butter works
- 2-3 Tbsp raw or granulated sugar, for sprinkling on top
- vanilla ice cream for topping
Method
Cherry Filling
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Preheat the oven to 350F (177C) conventional and lightly butter a large deep-dish pie or casserole dish (9″ deep dish recommended).
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Pit all the cherries and place them in the prepared pan.
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Slice the cherries so you have a mix of halves and quarters for varied texture.
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Add sugar, lemon juice (reserve the zest for the topping), cornstarch, almond extract, and cinnamon; toss until combined.
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Puree about one-third of the cherries in a food processor, then return and stir to make the filling jammy.
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Bake the filling for 10–15 minutes while preparing the topping.
Biscuit Topping
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Zest the lemon into sugar and rub together until fragrant.
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Whisk in flour and baking powder.
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Cut in cold butter until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs.
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Fold in Greek yogurt, egg, and vanilla until a cookie-dough-like batter forms.
Assemble
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Remove the cherries from the oven and drop small scoops of biscuit batter over the top.
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Brush with heavy cream or melted butter and sprinkle with sugar.
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Bake 45–60 minutes until the topping is golden and the filling bubbles thickly; tent with foil if the top browns too quickly.
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Allow to cool slightly so the filling sets before serving.