ORIGINAL PECAN COBBLER RECIPE

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Rich and luscious, Pecan Cobbler is super simple to make. It is amazingly delicious, too! Pecan Pie Cobbler tastes like the best pecan pie you’ve ever had but BETTER!! 

Yep, this is the original recipe that started the Pecan Cobbler rage. I understand, it’s a phenomenal recipe! This recipe has gooey sweet pecan pie filling with a buttery pastry biscuit top crust. 

caramel, crust, nuts

Pecan Cobbler

This Pecan Cobbler is a must-have on your dessert list! It’s packed with crunchy pecans and oozing with gooey caramel. The rich caramel sauce is created from butter and brown sugar baking to saucy perfection. Pecan Cobbler Recipe is a sweet buttery dessert that’s loaded with toasted pecans. It’s a simple, easy dessert made in just one pan.

This dessert by far is one of the best desserts I’ve ever made. If it’s not the best, it’s in the top five for sure!

Pecan Pie Cobbler has a fluffy with a crisp top, crunchy from the pecans, and is self-saucing. Self-saucing simply means the ingredients create a sauce as it cooks. This is a result of layering the ingredients as I indicate in the recipe box below.

pecan pie cobbler. Pecan Cobbler.

More about this Pecan Pie Cobbler recipe

Unlike most cobblers, this Pecan Cobbler is absent of any fruit. It’s rich and totally irresistible. Enjoy it plain or with a big scoop of vanilla ice cream.

  1. I do not recommend using margarine in place of the butter, the caramel turn out the same using margarine. Stick with the real thing in this recipe.
  2. I make this pecan cobbler with self-rising flour, I haven’t test it with all-purpose flour.
  3. Yes, this recipe has a lot of sugar. The sugar and butter make the caramel sauce and it’s amazing!

Self-rising flour is all-purpose flour with baking powder and salt added. To make your own, combine 1 cup of all-purpose flour with 1 and 1/2 teaspoons of baking powder and 1/2 teaspoon of salt.

Pecan Cobbler. Pecan Pie Cobbler.

Tips and Recommendations

  • I use whole milk.
  • I cannot stress enough the importance of using real butter. Do not use margarine.
  • As well, I do not recommend reducing either the brown sugar or the hot water in this recipe.
  • Additionally, I don’t recommend reducing the amount of butter. These three components are what make the sauce and it’s detrimental this ingredients as well as the amounts are correct.
How long does Pecan Cobbler last?

Three days in the fridge. Store your cobbler in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 72 hours.

How do I reheat Pecan Pie Cobber?

To reheat, you can reheat it either in the oven or the microwave. To reheat it in the oven, turn your oven to 350 degrees F and heat until the cobbler is heated through. Furthermore, for the microwave, cover it with a damp paper towel and reheat it in 30-second increments until heated through.

Favorite recipes that you’ll enjoy too!

Reasons I blog

  1. I’ve ‘met’ people from all walks of life and many different countries.
  2. I enjoy connecting with people.
  3. I enjoy sharing my passion.
  4. It allows me to network and builds friendships.
  5. I have learned to write better and research better.
  6. Additionally, blogging allows me to trade tips and techniques as well as gain knowledge.
  7. You will never be bored with blogging. There always something to do on the blog.
  8. Blogging has challenged me mentally and creatively.
  9. I can express my opinion.
  10. I wake up at night thinking about a post I want to create.
    Blogging at times has put me out of my comfort zone.
  11. Blogging challenges me to be better.

You’ll enjoy these cobblers too!

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  3. Mile High Pound Cake
  4. Million Dollar Pound Cake
  5. Strawberry Cake
  6. Crock Pot Crack Chicken
  7. Ground Beef Mongolian Noodles
  8. Old Fashioned Blue Ribbon Pound Cake
  9. Captain Rodney’s Dip
  10. Dark Chocolate Brown Sugar Cookies

**Please note, I updated this recipe on 9/29/14. I tested the recipe using self-rising flour versus a cake mix and found the flour to be much better. The recipe reflects these changes. 

This Pecan Pie Cobbler is one of my favorite desserts – to make and to eat! You are just not going to believe how easy it is!

Did you like this recipe? Please consider leaving a 5 rating and comment. As well, your 5-star rating helps others find our recipe when they do a Google search. Thanks for visiting Call Me PMc.

Rich and luscious, not only is Pecan Cobbler crazy simple to make, it’s crazy delicious too!

PECAN COBBLER

This decadent Southern dessert recipe is super easy to make. The cobbler and sauce are created in one pan. The luscious, velvety texture makes the perfect bite…after bite…after bite!
Author: Paula
4.83 from 388 votes
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Prep Time: 5 minutes
Cook Time: 30 minutes
Total Time: 35 minutes
Servings: 10 servings

Ingredients

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  • Add butter to a 9×13-inch cake pan or casserole dish and melt in the oven.
  • Once the butter is melted, sprinkle the pecans over the butter.
  • In a bowl, mix flour, sugar, milk and vanilla. Stir to combine, but don’t over-mix.
  • Pour batter over butter and pecans, do not mix.
  • Sprinkle brown sugar evenly over batter, do not stir.
  • Carefully pour the hot water over the mixture; do not stir.
  • Bake 30 to 35 minutes or until golden brown.

Notes

Recipe from Paula @CallMePMc.com All images and content are copyright protected. Please do not use my images without prior permission that includes copying the ingredient list or entire recipe and posting in the comments on Pinterest for Facebook. If you want to share this recipe, please simply link back to this post for the recipe.

Nutrition

Calories: 449kcal | Carbohydrates: 78g | Protein: 4g | Fat: 15g | Saturated Fat: 5g | Cholesterol: 20mg | Sodium: 79mg | Potassium: 125mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 63g | Vitamin A: 242IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 59mg | Iron: 1mg

Nutritional information given is an automatic calculation and can vary based on the exact products you use and changes you make to the recipe. If these numbers are important to you, I recommend calculating them yourself.

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411 Comments

  1. Okay…I love pecans and all but stumbled upon this recipe looking for Peach Cobbler. Do you think I could sub in peaches? Either way…I’ve gotta try with pecans. Looks amazing!

      1. I make a dump cake where I used peaches, then add crushed pecans to the dry cake mix before baking

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    1. You can try this ratio
      1 1/2 tsp baking powder
      1 tsp salt
      for each cup of all purpose flour
      this is the usual substitution, but I have not made it this way before. Let me know how it turns out

  3. Good Morning! I made this yesterday to take to our evening Bible study at church last night and it was very well received. The only thing different I did was to use Splenda in place of sugar and Splenda brown sugar blend in place of light brown sugar. I did great and saved no telling how many calories. I have seen other Pecan Pie Cobbler recipes and would not make them because they listed the nutritional values on them and one serving had 650 calories and I could not in good conscience make that to serve anyone as no one I know can afford to eat that many calories in a small piece of dessert. I decided to give yours a try since it did NOT list the nutritional value and because it did NOT list Karo syrup as an ingredient, and I knew I could my Splenda products in place of the sugars on the ingredient lists. Thanks for sharing this delightful dessert.

    1. ABSOLUTELY AMAZING. SOMEBODY ACTUALLY MADE THIS!!!!! THEY DID NOT JUST LOOK AT IT AND SAY AH WHAT A PRETTY PICTURE. IS THIS A SEE WHO CAN CREATE THE PRETTIEST PICTURE OR IS THIS A RECIPE BLOG? AMAZING, AMAZING, AMAZING. LET’S HAVE SOME MORE REAL PEOPLE!!!!!

      1. 5 stars
        I agree totally Donna ! I don’t want to be a party pooper but so many blogs there are loads of comments that say ” this looks delicious” Holy moly !! I want to read comments from people you actually MADE the recipe and what they thought. I wish people would refrain from commenting until they actually make it. Reading 150 comments on how good it looks is daunting and boring. But it DOES look delicious, lol. Going to make it this weekend but had to chime in when I saw your post.

    2. A NOTE FOR THOUGHT:
      For those of you who use any artificial sweetener in your cooking……everyone can not tolerate using anything but a natural sweetener or the real McCoy, sugar. Many people are sensitive to or are allergic to any man made artificial sweetener . My personal problem is that in approximately 15-20 minutes of consumption of the said product, I become violently ill from both ends. Not a fun thing to happen. I know that many people use artificial sweeteners in their food for various reasons… but it has been proven that they are toxic to the human body and can create and have been linked to many different health problems. If you insist on using artificial sweeteners in your cooking, then be sure to tell everyone that this is an artificially sweetened product so they can make the decision to eat or not to eat.

      1. Agreed. I have fibromyalgia and Aspertain poisoning has been linked to this disease. I drank diet sodas for years thinking it was healthy. If you are worried about the sugar content you can cut back on the sugar in the recipe. In most recipes it is fine.

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  5. I went back and read your blog about the Pecan Dump Cake to make sure I hadn’t left anything out. You did say that the flour, etc, made for a better cake and the recipe reflected that. Let me apologize for this faux pax. I thought I had read the whole thing. I’m going to try both ways to see which I like better.
    Red face… 🙂

    1. I re-worked the recipe and tested it to the original. The one reflected in the post is much much better than the original. Sorry for the misunderstanding.

  6. I received an e-mail from FaveSouthern Recipes that had your recipe for Pecan Cobbler Dump Cake in it. They mentioned 5 ingredients. Yours has 8 ingredients. Theirs had store-bought cake mix. Yours said self-rising flour, granulated sugar, brown sugar, milk and vanilla. Did they leave something out , etc? Yours and theirs are quite different. Store-bought cake mix is different than your “mix” ingredients. Theirs sounded very simple and more like a “dump” cake. Yours…not so much. Sounds like a great cake, but I want to know who actually has the correct recipe. Did they take “liberties” with theirs?
    Thanks!!!
    Stan

    1. The brown sugar is sprinkled over the batter then the hot water poured over it. So it
      butter
      pecans
      batter – flour, sugar, milk, vanilla
      brown sugar
      hot water

      1. I like karo light corn syrup. Can I add a cup to pour over brown sugar? Thanks Angie

      2. Im a little confused so the melted butter , pecans and brown sugar go on the bottom of the pan then the batter then water ?

      3. no, butter and pecans together, then the batter, then sprinkle brown sugar, then pour the water

      4. Whatv kind of Butter are up supposed to use? Can I use I can’t believe it’s not butter?

      5. I don’t recommend I Can’t Believe It’s not Butter. I would use real butter, either salted or unsalted. You could also use a margarine, but even it won’t be as good as real butter.

4.83 from 388 votes (299 ratings without comment)

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