Grandma’s Blackberry Cobbler
on Feb 20, 2013, Updated Jun 28, 2024
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read our disclosure policy.
This Blackberry cobbler made with blackberries, black raspberries, or red raspberries and a flaky pie crust is a favorite family dessert passed down by my grandmother.
Where This Recipe Comes From:
I originally wrote this post to celebrate my grandpa’s life, and that celebration will forever come in the form of food — specifically his and my favorite blackberry cobbler recipe that my grandma perfected. I decided to share a piece of my heart with you by sharing part of the last letter I ever wrote to my grandpa, who we lost in 2013.
Grandma said that she sat on the bed and held his hand on a Sunday, the day before he died, and read it aloud to him. She told me he was sleeping, but she was sure he was still listening. The letter helps to explain this dish and its deep sentimental meaning for me.
Grandma makes this blackberry cobbler for every family function, dinner, and holiday. The actual cobbler part is a lot more like pie crust than it is a traditional cake or biscuit-like cobbler. This is how Grandma makes it, and it’s so good.
So, here’s my and grandpa’s favorite dessert. I made it the week he passed and got all teared up when I bit into the flaky crust and warm berries. He would have approved of how the recipe turned out.
A Letter to my Grandpa:
Dear Grandpa-
I just wanted to write and tell you some of my favorite things about you and my most precious memories of childhood.
Let me start by saying that I am heart-broken that I can’t be with you right now. I’d love to be in the living room and smell the wood smoke from a warm fire, to eat some of Grandma’s noodles and sheet cake, to hear your peacocks cawing in the trees, and to ask you about the day you met Grandma. I’d like to hold your strong weathered hand and tell you just how grateful I am for you. The miles between you and I won’t allow for that though so a letter is in order. I hope that it counts for something.
Childhood was magic for me. I loved being part of a big family and I have you and grandma to thank for that. I loved playing on Sundays with the cousins, salted watermelon by the log cabin (“Don’t eat the seeds… It’ll make a watermelon grow in your stomach!”), collecting peacock feathers, canning with Mom in the barn, and picking whole truck beds full of corn to shuck in the pasture. I loved sledding down your hill, playing in the creek all summer long, picking your apples and making cider, and hearing you tell about your days as a SeaBee in Egypt building runways.
All that magic is still in my heart. I want a similar rural life for my kids and my family. I want the heritage and tradition of hard work and a life well lived surrounded by family. I can’t wait to have turkeys and peacocks of my own, and I think of you every time I go out to feed my hens. I love that farm and everything you’ve built it to be.
One of my favorite memories is burnt cookies. Whenever we’d make chocolate chip cookies at our house and left a pan in the oven too long, the cookies got dark. We didn’t like dark cookies, and so mom would just say, “Put them in a bag, and we’ll take them to Grandpa. He likes a dark cookie.” Whether that was true or not, I still think of you every time I bake a batch of cookies too long, which happens more than I like to admit.
I loved picking raspberries with you and Dad. The weather was always muggy with heavy dew on the shaded plants that got my socks wet as we walked. I think the best part of berry picking was having grandma’s cobbler all winter long! I also loved setting lines for catfish and then going back in the morning to see what had happened over night. My favorite part was watching you and Dad catch bait fish under a bridge with a net.
I’ll never forget the day that we buried my beloved Daisy Dog on the farm. You dug the hole for her, and that act alone let me know that you love me.
I could go on and on and on. I’m a lucky girl to have the childhood that I did, and you played such a major role in that.
Thank you so much. I love you.
Melissa
*The cobblers are sitting on the cutting board he made me for my wedding*
Grandpa in the Navy. He lied about his age to get in… such a kid!
Grandma and Grandpa on their wedding day.
Grandma and Grandpa at my wedding.
Ingredients:
For the Crust:
- Flour
- Salt
- Shortening– Original or Butter Flavor
- Cold Water
For the Fruit Filling:
- Black Raspberries, Blackberries, or Red Raspberries– Fresh or Frozen
- Granulated Sugar
- Flour
See recipe card below for full information on ingredients and quantities
Frequently Asked Questions:
Black raspberries grow wild in southern Indiana, so that is what I often use for my cobblers, but I’ve never been able to find them frozen or fresh at the stores. Red raspberries and blackberries will both work great too.
The difference is in the crust. Pies are usually encased in crust, either just on the bottom, or both on top and on bottom. Cobblers are simply topped with some sort of baked pastry or dough.
Cobbler can stay at room temperature for up to 12 hours, but store in the fridge for longer-term storage. It will keep in the fridge for up to 5 days. Just let it warm up to room temperature for about 20 minutes.
Most cobblers, pies, and crisps, freeze well. Simply cover the cobbler, and freeze for up to 3 months. When you’re ready to serve, let it thaw in the fridge or on the counter, and you may want to bake it for about 15 minutes to warm it up.
More Pies, Cobblers, and Crisps:
Pies, Crisps & Tarts
Healthy Pumpkin Pie Recipe
Pies, Crisps & Tarts
Homemade Coconut Cream Pie
Pies, Crisps & Tarts
Homemade Chocolate Cream Pie
Pies, Crisps & Tarts
Hoosier Sugar Cream Pie
Did you make this recipe? Leave a ⭐️ review and share it on Instagram, Facebook, or Pinterest!
Grandma’s Blackberry Cobbler
Ingredients
For the crust:
- 2 cups flour
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 3/4 cup shortening, original or buttered-flavored
- Around 1/2 cup ice-cold water
For the fruit filling:
- 2 cups fresh or frozen black raspberries, blackberries, or red raspberries
- 1/4 cup granulated sugar, plus more for sprinkling
- 2 tablespoons flour
Instructions
- In a medium bowl, mix the flour and salt together. Add the shortening, and cut together with a fork, until well combined and the mixture starts to clump together into pea-sized pieces .
- Add the cold water one tablespoon at a time, until the dough comes together, mixing after each tablespoon of water. Don’t over-mix or add too much water, and be sure to use very cold water (it makes the crust flaky). The dough will be fairly dry but will come together into a ball when you pat it together with your hands.
- When the dough forms a ball, turn it out onto a floured surface, and roll until 1/4-inch thick. Cut into the size of the bottom of 4 oven safe bowls. Place crust in the bottom of your dishes.
- Combine the berries, sugar, and flour in a small bowl.
- Place 1/4 of the berry mixture in each bowl on top of the crust. With remaining crust (you should have only used about 1/2 of it), cut it into strips (or hearts) and place strips over the berries. Dip your finger in water, wet the crust, and then sprinkle with additional sugar.
- Place bowls on a cookie sheet, and bake in a 375 degree F. oven for 30 to 40 minutes, until the top is golden and the berries are bubbly.
- Serve hot with ice cream or freshly whipped cream.
Notes
- If you don’t have little cute bowls, you can make this in an 8×8-inch baking dish.
- Black raspberries grow wild in Southern Indiana, but I’ve never been able to find them frozen or fresh at the store elsewhere. Red raspberries or blackberries work well, too.
- Raspberry pie filling can be used in place of the frozen berries, sugar, and flour.
- This is a whole lot like a pie crust, buy my grandma always called it cobbler. Just so you know it’s not a very traditional cobbler.
I love that you shared this story. It brought tears to my eyes! My mom always made black raspberry pies. I purchased some black raspberries from a farm in Michigan and they were shipped to me in a styrofoam cooler with ice packs. They were a bit pricey, but sometimes only black raspberries will do when wanting to recreate this dish. I am going to use your grandma’s recipe tonight!
Thank you!
I love that you had some shipped Trish! How neat is that!
I just had to share your story with my cousin and aunt. We were lucky to have my grandparents in our life and have so many great memories. I just wish I had thought to write to them and let them know how much they were loved. Your story really touched my heart, and thank you for sharing it!
Dianna, thank you for the kind comment! I’m so grateful that I have written a few memories down for me own kids to enjoy one day too.
Love the pic of your grandparents wedding. Day! Your gma is soo beautiful! I’ve never seen a pic of her that young! And your memories and letter are just beautiful!
Loved the salute. And that picture is too wonderful of him with the goat. And good to know that every kid was tortured with the thought of a watermelon growing in their stomach.
Aww. This made me tear up! I had a rotten, terrible, no-good relationship with my grandparents (who are both gone now), so this is so refreshing to hear about a good grandpa being a good man. And the cobbler looks amazing!
Well written, friend! Thanks for sharing a part of your heart.
-Staci
Oh dear, this was beautiful. Thank you for sharing it Melissa. I’ll definitely be trying the cobbler.
What a touching post. Your letter was perfect and your grandmothers cobbler looks amazing. My Grandpa was in the navy as well…. he lied about his age because his mother wouldn’t sign the papers for him to join. He is also from Indiana!!! He passed away in 2007 2 weeks after my first son was born so I was unable to go to the funeral or to go see him while he was sick. Breaks my heart every time I think about it.