Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (2024)

Hello, foodies…

Since I see you Saturday and Sunday, my weekend usually falls on Monday and Tuesday. So today, I slept till 9. It was WONDERFUL. Then, I came into QVC for a quick health screening and have been doing more cookbook writing for the past few hours. I’m headed the gym in few minutes, but I wanted to get my blog in before I left!

Guess what’s on the menu this Wednesday night, foodies? We’re making my Peach Praline Dumplings with Sweet Cream. Imagine an apple dumpling, except the apple is replaced with a fresh, ripe, juicy peach and stuffed with pecans, brown sugar, and a hint of vanilla. The sweet cream is just the perfect finishing touch. If you’re not hungry enough thinking about it, wait till you see the step-by-step photos! First, though, the recipe.

Peach Praline Dumplings with Sweet Cream

This recipe is prepared with the Prepology® 4-Piece Nonstick Knife Set with 4 Cutting Mats (K35540).

Go to David's Recipe Item Page for the full list of items that David has used in his recipes.

Ingredients:

Stuffing:
• 1/4 cup sugar
• 1/4 cup light brown sugar, firmly packed
• 1 cup toasted pecans, finely chopped
• 1 tsp vanilla extract
• 1 oz butter, melted

Dumplings:
• 2 eggs
• 2 Tbsp water
• 2 frozen puff pastry sheets
• 8 ripe peaches
• 3 Tbsp sugar

Sweet Cream:
• 1 pint heavy cream
• 1 cup sugar

Directions:

1. To prepare the stuffing, place the sugar, brown sugar, and chopped pecans into a medium-size bowl. Toss the ingredients to distribute evenly. Add in the vanilla and melted butter and mix until well-combined. Set aside.

2. Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper and place a wire cooling rack on top. Lightly coat the paper and rack with cooking spray. Set aside.

3. Cut the peaches in half, remove the pit, and carefully remove some of the center flesh to create a small pocket. Spoon the praline stuffing into the cavity of each peach half and then pair the halves back together to form a whole peach. Set aside.

4. Whisk the eggs and 2 Tbsp of water in a small bowl. Set aside.

5. On a lightly floured surface, roll each puff pastry sheet out until it measures a 12" x 12" square. Cut each puff pastry sheet into four 6" x 6" squares, yielding a total of eight squares with both sheets combined.

6. Place a stuffed peach in the center of each square. Moisten the corners with a small amount of egg wash. Bring two opposite corners of dough up over the peach and press the corners together. Repeat with the two remaining sides. Do not discard the egg wash. Place the peach dumplings onto the prepared cookie sheet and freeze for 15–20 minutes.

7. Move an oven rack towards the lower-middle part of the oven and preheat the oven to 400°F. Remove the dumplings from the freezer. Deeply poke the bottom of each dumpling twice in a cross shape. (Be sure to insert the fork all the way through the dough and through part of the peach.) Brush each dumpling with the remaining egg wash and sprinkle with sugar. Bake for 30–40 minutes, or until golden brown and fork tender.

8. While the dumplings are baking, mix up the sweet cream. Fit your stand mixer with the whisk attachment. Pour the cream into the bowl and whip until soft peaks form. Then, add the sugar and then whip until stiff.

9. Allow the dumplings to cool slightly before serving with the sweet cream.


Now, here's how this looks in photos, foodies...

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (1)

Combine the sugar, brown sugar, and chopped pecans and toss well.

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (2)


Add in the vanilla and melted butter and mix until well-combined. Set aside.

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (3)

Foodies, we test and re-test our recipes to ensure they’re spot-on before giving them to you. After we photographed this recipe, it became clear that not only did we need a cookie sheet lined with parchment paper (and sprayed with cooking spray), but we also needed a wire cooling rack on top, as the juice from our peaches made the dough soggy. So don’t forget the rack!

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (4)

Cut the peaches in half, remove the pit, and carefully remove some of the center flesh to create a small pocket for the filling.

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (5)

Spoon the praline stuffing into the cavity of each peach half and then pair the halves back together to form a whole peach. Set aside.

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (6)

Whisk the eggs and 2 Tbsp of water in a small bowl. Set aside. (This is your egg wash, which will make those dumplings a beautiful golden brown.)

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (7)

On a lightly floured surface, roll each puff pastry sheet out until it measures a 12" x 12" square.

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (8)

Cut each puff pastry sheet into four 6" x 6" squares, yielding a total of eight squares with both sheets combined.

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (9)

Place a stuffed peach in the center of each square. Moisten the corners with a small amount of egg wash. (Keep any remaining wash—you’ll need it later.)

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (10)

Bring two opposite corners of dough up over the peach and press the corners together. Repeat with the two remaining sides. Make the rest of the dumplings.

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (11)

Place the peach dumplings onto the prepared cookie sheet (remember—they should be on top of the cooling rack). And, freeze for 15–20 minutes.

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (12)

Move an oven rack towards the lower-middle part of the oven and preheat the oven to 400°F. Remove the dumplings from the freezer.

(This part isn’t photographed, but you’ll need to deeply poke the bottom of each dumpling twice in a cross shape. Be sure to insert the fork all the way through the dough and through part of the peach.)


Then, brush each dumpling with the remaining egg wash and sprinkle with sugar.

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (13)

Bake for 30–40 minutes, or until golden brown and fork tender. While the dumplings are baking, mix up the sweet cream. Fit your stand mixer with the whisk attachment. Pour the cream into the bowl and whip until soft peaks form. Then, add the sugar and then whip until stiff.

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (14)

Voila! Before you ask, yes. This is as delicious as it looks. Feel free to skip the sweet cream if you have vanilla ice cream or whipped cream on hand.

Before you rush out for fresh peaches, here's today's blog question: Since we're talking about peaches, tell me about your best peach recipes. Do you make a great peach cobbler? Peach pie? How about peach jam? I'll see you Wednesday at 8pm ET. Now, off to the store with you!

Keep it flavorful!
--David

Tell Me About Your Best Peach Recipes. Do You Make Cobbler? Pie? Jam? (2024)

FAQs

What is cobbler topping made of? ›

In a cobbler, the topping is a dough with a rising agent like baking powder that bakes up into a slightly sweet, biscuit-like topping. In crisp, the topping is made with flour, sugar, butter, oats and sometimes nuts without a leavening agent. The topping is sprinkled over the fruit before baking.

What are the best peaches for jam? ›

Clingstone. The pretty yellow peach flesh "clings" to the stone, and therefore the name. These are the earliest peaches to come in. Distinguished by their juiciness and sweet peach flavor, they lend themselves very well to jams, preserves and canning.

What is the difference between a peach pie and a peach cobbler? ›

The biggest difference between a cobbler and a pie is the placement of the dough. Pies have, at a minimum, a bottom crust with the fruit placed on top, while a cobbler has the fruit on the bottom and a dolloped dough on top instead.

What is cobbler jam? ›

Fruit Cobbler Jam is a low-sugar cooked jam made with Pomona's Universal Pectin. Pomona's Pectin contains no sugar or preservatives and jells reliably with low amounts of any sweetener. This recipe was adapted from a high-sugar Peach Cobbler Jam recipe that Lanette Lepper found on the Farm Bell Recipes website.

What makes a good cobbler? ›

You can bake a cobbler with just fruit as the filling, but a little sugar and cornstarch tossed with the fruit before baking will work together to create a lush sauce from the fruit's juices. This is the thing that turns a good cobbler into a knock-out dessert.

What is the most delicious peach? ›

The darling little donut peach, also known as the Saturn peach, is often considered the sweetest peach variety. This heirloom variety looks like a typical peach — that's been smushed! They're soft and tender with less acidity than their yellow-skinned counterparts.

What is the most flavorful peach? ›

Donut peaches are small, squished-looking fruits that some people consider the sweetest of all. They come in white-fleshed varieties that are soft, juicy and super sweet. Other contenders for the sweetest peach are Redhaven, Red Globe, Polly and Elberta varieties.

Can you leave the skin on peaches when making jam? ›

Chop 1 pound unpeeled yellow peaches into 1/2-inch pieces

And while leaving the skins on the fruit for your jams and preserves is a personal choice, they recommend it for the color it lends the finished jam—and for the fact that the skin imparts more peach flavor.

Is it better to use canned or frozen peaches for cobbler? ›

If using frozen peaches, thaw, chop, and blot them dry before using. Readers have raved about this dessert using frozen, thawed peaches. Canned peaches are not ideal because they're already too soft and mushy.

Why is my peach cobbler runny? ›

Not coating the fruit in some starch.

We love cobblers for being juicy, but really ripe fruit can make more puddles than a spring rain. The result is a soupy cobbler with a soggy top. Try this: Add one to two tablespoons of cornstarch to the filling.

Is cobbler dough the same as pie crust? ›

Cobbler is sometimes described as a kind of fruit pie, but strictly speaking, the two are different. Pies are made from pastry, rather than biscuit batter, and they are fully encased, with a crust at the top and the bottom, while cobblers typically only have a topping.

Why is my peach cobbler hard? ›

Make sure you use juicy, ripe peaches. If your peaches are hard, the filling won't be as juicy and sweet. Also, make sure you don't over-bake the cobbler or the topping will be dry and hard. Bake until the cobbler topping is golden brown.

How do you ripen peaches in 5 minutes? ›

Method 1: Paper Bag With an Apple or Banana

There's a reason this method is popular: It's because it works! Storing the peaches with other ethylene-emitting fruit, like an apple or a banana, helps to speed up the ripening process.

Do peaches ripen once picked? ›

Most commercially grown stonefruit are picked before they reach full ripeness because they continue to ripen off the tree. If you find yourself with unripe peaches all you need to do is pop them into a brown paper bag out of direct sunlight at room temperature. Within a day or two they will have ripened.

What is the topping on cobbler called? ›

Cobbler is usually topped with batter or biscuits in lieu of crust. Cobbler's name comes from its sometimes cobbled texture, which is a result of spooning or dropping the topping over the fruit rather than distributing it equally.

Is cobbler crust the same as pie crust? ›

Cobbler is sometimes described as a kind of fruit pie, but strictly speaking, the two are different. Pies are made from pastry, rather than biscuit batter, and they are fully encased, with a crust at the top and the bottom, while cobblers typically only have a topping.

Is cobbler just crumble? ›

Cobbler: A fruit dessert made with a top crust of pie dough or biscuit dough but no bottom crust. Crisp/crumble: In Alberta, the terms are mostly interchangeable. Both refer to fruit desserts similar to cobbler but made with a brown sugar streusel topping sometimes containing old-fashioned rolled oats.

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