Easy Stovetop Cherry Grunt (Stovetop Cobbler) Recipe

 

Oven Tied Up? This Easy Cherry Cobbler Is Made 100% on the Stovetop


Crisps, slumps, pandowdies, grunts, cobblers, fools. In the fruit dessert category you'll find all sorts of names depending on the specific cooking method. Some of these names are pretty obscure, and clearly not appealing. When I realized that my recipe goal of creating a stovetop version of the familiar baked cherry cobbler would actually classify it as a grunt, I sighed.

"A fruit grunt is juicy and delicious, with the moistest biscuit dumplings you'll ever find."

Who would even know what a grunt is? Anyhow, I went ahead with the plan to turn my baked fruit and biscuit dessert into an easy one-pot-stovetop dessert. Now that I've made one, I don't know why it took me so long. A fruit grunt is juicy and delicious, with the moistest biscuit dumplings you'll ever find. Not only is a grunt time saving (simmered fruit is faster than baked), but it frees up the oven, a most valuable piece of real estate come holiday time.

The process is easy and can be used to turn virtually any cobbler into a grunt. Just soften and cook the fruit in a pot on the stove and cook the biscuits by steaming them on top of the fruit. That's it. The cooking method technically renames the biscuits into dumplings, but the fluffy texture remains the same.

I start by making a basic biscuit dough. A bit of butter cut into some flour, some milk to combine, a bit of baking powder, salt, sugar, and vanilla, and that's it. Just don't overmix it.

For the cherries, I start with frozen fruit. Unless you have access to fantastic in-season sour cherries, frozen fruit is better and luckily, it's in season year-round. A typical grunt does not have thickener. This makes sense because the fruit is not stirred as the topping cooks, and a thicker mixture would burn on the bottom of the pot. Still, I like the texture you get with just a touch of cornstarch, which adds a little body to the cherry liquid without the risk of it burning.

Once the cherry mixture is done, I drop pieces of the biscuit dough right on top (just like you would for chicken and dumplings). Slap on a lid quick, because you want an all around hot and steamy environment in order for the dumplings to rise properly and cook through evenly. Resist the temptation to peek too often or you'll let the heat out. A clear glass lid comes in handy here. Cook just until the dumplings are set, about 25 minutes.

And that's it, we're ready to serve. Scoop the dumplings into bowls and spoon the cherries over the top. The slight amount of thickener results in bright, clear cherry flavor and the juicy liquid is sopped up by the buttery soft-crumbed dumplings.

As for what to tell your guests when you serve it? Do yourself a favor and just call it a stovetop cobbler. A grunt by any other name would taste as sweet.

Don't be fooled by the name! A cherry grunt is really a stovetop cobbler, made with juicy fruit and the moistest biscuit topping you'll ever taste, all without ever having to fire up the oven. A grunt by any other name would taste as sweet.

Why this recipe works:

  • A small amount of thickener enables you to thicken and cook the fruit and dumplings without stirring.
  • Cooking the dumplings with a lid effectively steams the dumplings and keeps them moist.
  • Ingredients

    For the Dumplings:

    • 1 cup (5 ouncesall-purpose flour

    • 2 tablespoons sugar

    • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

    • 1/4 teaspoon salt

    • 3 tablespoons (1 1/2 ounces) cold unsalted butter, cut into cubes

    • 1/3 cup plus 1 teaspoon milk

    • 1/4 teaspoon vanilla

    For the Cherries:

    • 1/2 cup (3 1/2 ouncesgranulated sugar

    • 1 teaspoon cornstarch

    • 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon

    • Pinch salt

    • 6 cups (about 32 ouncesfrozen sour cherries

    • Whipped cream or ice cream to serve

    • Directions

    1. For the Dumplings: Combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt in a bowl. Rub the butter cubes into the flour mixture with fingertips until no visible pieces of butter remain but flour mixture is still fluffy and dry. Stir in milk and vanilla until mixture is just moistened. Do not overmix. Set aside.
    2. For the Cherries: Combine sugar, cornstarch, cinnamon, and salt in bowl. Place cherries and sugar mixture in 10-inch saucepan and heat over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until sugar is dissolved. Increase heat to medium high and heat until cherries have just come to a boil. Adjust sweetness level to taste then reduce to a low boil.
    3. Spoon heaping tablespoon sized pieces of dumpling dough onto cherries, spacing evenly (you should get about 6 dumplings). Immediately cover, reduce heat to low, and cook, adjusting heat to keep mixture at a steady simmer. Avoid peeking until dumplings are mostly set, about 25 minutes.
    4. To serve, spoon warm dumplings and fruit into bowls and eat plain or top with whipped cream or ice cream.

      Special equipment

      10-inch saucepan with lid

      This Recipe Appears In

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