Old-Fashioned Strawberry Cobbler Recipe with Fresh Strawberries
This old-fashioned strawberry cobbler recipe is the kind of easy summer dessert that feels worth baking the second strawberries are good. The berries turn jammy and juicy, the top bakes up buttery and cakey, and the whole thing is especially good warm with vanilla ice cream.
It’s simple, low-fuss, and not too sweet. Scroll down for the ingredients and step-by-step.

Why you’ll love this recipe
This cobbler keeps things very straightforward, but it still gives you all the things people actually want from a strawberry dessert.
- Jammy, juicy strawberries
- A soft, buttery, golden top
- Pantry-friendly ingredients
- An easy dessert that looks pretty without extra work
- A warm strawberry dessert that feels right for spring and summer
One thing to know going in, this is a batter-style cobbler. It is not a biscuit-topped cobbler. Since it’s baked in a 9×13-inch dish, it comes out a bit thinner, with lots of glossy fruit and a soft cakey layer on top. If that sounds good to you, you’re in exactly the right place.

Practical tips before you start
A few small details make this recipe easier to follow and help it turn out the way you want.
- Use 1 cup sugar total, divided.
For this version, the sugar gets split between the fruit and the batter. Use 1/3 cup (67 g) with the strawberries and 2/3 cup (133 g) in the batter. - Let the strawberries sit after you sugar them.
Give them 10 to 15 minutes. That short rest helps them get glossy and juicy, which gives you a better strawberry layer once baked. - Whisk the dry ingredients well.
This helps distribute the baking powder evenly, so the topping bakes up more evenly. - The batter should look smooth and pourable.
In the process photos, it is thinner than muffin batter and not stiff. That is what you want here. - Do not stir after layering.
Once the strawberries go into the buttered dish and the batter is poured over the top, leave it alone and let the oven do the work. - Let it rest before serving.
Like a lot of fruit desserts, it sets up a bit as it cools. Ten to fifteen minutes makes it easier to scoop.

Ingredients
For the cobbler:
- 1/2 cup salted butter (113 g)
- 3 cups fresh strawberries, tops removed, halved or quartered (about 450 g)
- 1 cup granulated sugar, divided (200 g total)
- 1 cup all-purpose flour (120 g)
- 2 teaspoons baking powder (8 g)
- 1/4 teaspoon salt (about 1.5 g)
- 1 cup milk (240 ml)
- 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract (2.5 ml)
For serving:
- Vanilla ice cream or Cool Whip, optional

Ingredient notes
A few quick notes before you start mixing:
- Fresh strawberries are the best fit for this recipe and for the photographed result. They give you that bright, jammy fruit layer without watering down the batter.
- Salted butter works well here because it balances the sweetness and gives the cobbler a fuller flavor.
- Granulated sugar is divided between the fruit and the batter. That keeps the strawberries juicy and the topping lightly sweet.
- Milk helps create the loose, pourable batter that gives this cobbler its soft, cakey texture.

How to make old-fashioned strawberry cobbler
1. Preheat the oven and melt the butter
Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C).
Place the butter in a 9×13-inch baking dish (about 23 x 33 cm) and set the dish in the oven while it preheats. Let the butter melt fully, then carefully remove the dish.
You want the butter melted, not deeply browned. If it melts before the oven finishes preheating, take the dish out and set it aside.

2. Toss the strawberries with sugar
Place the strawberries in a mixing bowl and toss them with 1/3 cup granulated sugar (67 g).
Let them sit for 10 to 15 minutes. This gives the berries time to release some juice, which helps create that jammy strawberry layer once baked.
The berries should look lightly coated and glossy, not drowned in sugar.

3. Mix the dry ingredients
In a separate bowl, whisk together:
- the flour
- the remaining 2/3 cup granulated sugar (133 g)
- the baking powder
- the salt
Whisk for a good 20 to 30 seconds so everything is evenly combined.

4. Add the milk and vanilla
Pour in the milk and vanilla extract. Whisk just until the batter is smooth and no dry streaks remain.
The batter should be thin and pourable, not thick.

5. Assemble the cobbler
Spread the sugared strawberries and their juices evenly into the baking dish over the melted butter.
Pour the batter over the top as evenly as you can.
Do not stir. The layering is part of what gives this cobbler its texture.

6. Bake until golden and bubbly
Bake for 30 to 35 minutes, or until the top is golden brown and the fruit is bubbling around the edges.
Start checking around the 30-minute mark. Since this is baked in a larger dish, it may be ready right around that window.

7. Let it cool slightly, then serve
Let the cobbler rest for 10 to 15 minutes before scooping.
Serve it warm on its own, or with vanilla ice cream or Cool Whip. Warm with vanilla ice cream is especially good here, and it leans right into that cozy, old-fashioned feel.

Optional upgrades
These are optional and not part of the photographed version, but they work well if you want to tweak it next time.
- Add 1 to 2 teaspoons lemon juice to the strawberries if your berries taste a little flat and need more brightness.
- Add a little lemon zest to the batter for a fresher citrus note.
- Use a smaller baking dish next time if you want a thicker cobbler. The photographed version uses a 9×13-inch dish, so keep that if you want the same look and thickness.

How to tell when it’s done
A few easy signs help here:
- The top should look golden
- The edges should look bubbly
- The batter should look set, not wet in the center
- The strawberries should look soft and juicy
Because this is a fruit dessert, the center will still feel soft. That is normal. It should not look raw, but it also should not be dry.

Serving ideas
This cobbler is at its best slightly warm. A few simple ways to serve it:
- With vanilla ice cream
- With Cool Whip
- On its own, once it has cooled a bit
- For a casual spring or summer dessert table
It is the kind of dessert that works just as well after a weeknight dinner as it does for a cookout or small get-together.

Storage and reheating
If you have leftovers, cover the dish and refrigerate for up to 3 days.
To reheat:
- Microwave individual portions until warmed through
- Or warm the whole dish in a low oven until heated
The topping will soften more after chilling, but the flavor stays great.
Can you use frozen strawberries?
You can, but it will change the result. Frozen berries release more liquid, so the cobbler can turn out looser and softer. For the best results, stick with fresh strawberries.

This is one of those simple strawberry desserts that doesn’t need much to be good. A scoop of vanilla ice cream and a spoon are enough.
Old-Fashioned Strawberry Cobbler Recipe with Fresh Strawberries
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup salted butter 113 g
- 3 cups fresh strawberries tops removed, halved or quartered (about 450 g)
- 1 cup granulated sugar divided (200 g)
- 1 cup all-purpose flour 120 g
- 2 teaspoons baking powder 8 g
- 1/4 teaspoon salt about 1.5 g
- 1 cup milk 240 ml
- 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract 2.5 ml
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Place the butter in a 9×13-inch baking dish (about 23 x 33 cm) and let it melt in the oven as it preheats.
- In a bowl, toss the strawberries with 1/3 cup sugar (67 g). Let them sit for 10 to 15 minutes.
- In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour, the remaining 2/3 cup sugar (133 g), baking powder, and salt.
- Add the milk and vanilla extract. Whisk just until smooth.
- Remove the baking dish from the oven. Spread the strawberries and their juices over the melted butter.
- Pour the batter evenly over the strawberries. Do not stir.
- Bake for 30 to 35 minutes, until the top is golden brown and the fruit is bubbling around the edges.
- Cool for 10 to 15 minutes, then serve warm.
