Fruit CobblerPerhaps the most popular desert in a dutch oven is a cobbler, they are easy to put together and very easy to bake. There are many ways to make the crust on it, myself most times I just use a basic biscuit recipe and add extra sugar and put in a little extra milk. There are also two ways to make them in the oven. For a person new to this type of cooking, making the cobbler in a separate pan that fits into the dutch oven and sits on a trivet of some sort for baking. We’ll start that way.
Most often I make cobblers in the shallow ovens they work the best. A good rule of thumb is about 1/4-1/3 the capacity of the oven in fruit. So a 10-inch shallow will work best with 1 to 1/2 quarts of fruit. Use this as a guide, one thing about doing period cooking is not to get to hung up on exact measuring, this was a product of the 1890's and the famous Fanny Farmer. For the most part we've got to hung up on exact and it scares folks away from dutch ovens.
This one I made out of fresh cherries, there were enough on the tree at our farm to make a small cobbler. I made this one in a separate bowl because I didn't have an oven small enough.
I picked and pitted the cherries and one can see there was enough juice that no added water was needed. With drier fruits a little water is needed, amount is not critical.

I added a bit of flour, somewhere around 2 teaspoons per cup of liquid is about right, less will make a more runny fruit, more will make it stiffer. About half that amount of cornstarch will also work fine. With canned fruit you will not need to add sugar.
I then added enough brown sugar to make it sweet and stirred it well and put it in the soup bowl.
Canned fruit will also work, most are period correct, but peaches were the most common.


Just put the desired coals out on the ground the size or slightly larger than the oven, 1- 1 1/2 inch for with the trivet, maybe half with out.

Set the oven on top and cover with coals, bake for 25 minutes or longer, till the crust is nice and browned. Any longer than maybe 35-40 minutes will let you know you need more heat next time.

If it doesn’t brown even, turn the lid 180 degrees. One needs to just try, make mistakes and learn
And the finished product:

The next cobbler was made with fresh apples; of course one needs to peel them first:

The apple slices were then laid out in a well-greased dutch oven, this is a 12 shallow since there were not a lot of folks to feed that day;:

The spices were then added; I like mine spicy so I use a lot of cinnamon, nutmeg and just a little bit of clove:

Sugar and flour were added on that and then it was stirred:

The crust mixture is then just formed about ½ thick by hand and spread over the top:


I then bake it in a medium hot oven till done, (about 30 minutes) with all this sugar in the mix be very careful about putting to much coals on the bottom.

My crusts as I said tend to be thicker, it fills folks up well and they love it. Sometimes when extra's show up and I lack fruit or oven space, I just make more crust.
Another method I use sometimes to save time is to make extra yeast bread dough, either white or whole wheat. I then use the leftover bread dough for the top. I let it rise a bit and then bake as above, but when it is getting done I just sprinkle some brown sugar on top and finish baking.