Cream Cheese Strawberry Cobbler
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This scrumptious cream cheese strawberry cobbler recipe, with fresh strawberries and tender buttery cobbler batter, is destined to simply melt in your mouth.
There are some things in life that just have to be experienced and one of them is this scrumptious cream cheese strawberry cobbler recipe. Do you remember as kids what it was like to wake up to the aroma of baking in the house? How the smell of freshly baked cookies, pie, or even cobbler made you get out of bed and run to the kitchen to see what was cookin’?
There are so many times when my son was a teenager that he just didn’t want to get out of bed. But one way I could lure him out was bakin’ this favorite dish right here. He LOVES this cobbler served warm with a little vanilla ice cream or whipped cream on top. He may not have been real talkative at the table during those teen years but at least this got him out of his room and put a smile on his face, but only for a second of course!
How do you know it’s a cobbler?
This old-fashioned fruit dessert usually features a fruit filling baked with a crust. The crust can be either a solid sheet or ācobbledā together as in this cream cheese strawberry cobbler recipe. Usually, the crust is placed over the fruit, but it can also go either on top or on the bottom and sometimes both depending on your preference.
This strawberry cobbler is the definition of scrumptious. The combination of fresh and sweet strawberries, rich cream cheese, and tender buttery cobbler batter just melts in your mouth. Now let’s get on to cookin’ so your kitchen can smell like heaven…
Recipe Ingredients
- All-purpose flour
- Swerve
- Milk or Greek yogurt
- Baking powder
- Cinnamon (optional)
- Vanilla extract (optional)
- Strawberries (cut into halves or thirds)
- Butter
- Cream cheese (visit this post for our easy homemade cream cheese recipe)
How To Make Cream Cheese Strawberry Cobbler
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Pour melted butter into the bottom of a 9×13-inch glass baking dish.
Mix milk or yogurt, flour, Swerve, baking powder, vanilla extract, and cinnamon (both optional) together in a large bowl.
The batter will look something like this.
Plop pieces or scoops over the butter in the baking dish. Do not mix the butter and the batter.
Arrange strawberry pieces on top of the batter. You can spread the batter a bit if you like but don’t mix it with the butter. Place the cream cheese squares around the strawberries.
Now here is where you could go crazy with the cream cheese if you like. You can see in the picture my cream cheese squares are still a little solid so if you wanted them to spread out then put softened cream cheese in there at this point.
Bake in preheated oven until the top is nice and golden brown and the edges are bubbling (about 30 to 45 minutes).
You may need to cover with foil if the edges are brown but not bubbling.
By now I am feeling a bit woozy from the beautiful aroma floating around my kitchen. And I can’t wait to add my vanilla ice cream and dig into this mouth-watering cobbler. I hope you can make it as soon as possible!
Storage
- Store leftover cobbler, covered, in the fridge for up to 3 days.
- You can also freeze leftovers for up to 3 months. Thaw in the fridge before reheating in the oven so it’s bubbly once more.
Recipe Notes
- If you want the cream cheese to be melted a bit more into the cobbler versus what I made, then leave the cream cheese out to soften real good before putting it on top of the cobbler for baking. We like a big chunk of cream cheese with our servings but some people like it blended in a bit more. Do what cranks your tractor!
- You can take this cream cheese cobbler recipe and adapt it to your favorite fresh fruit and berries. Try equal amounts of blueberries, blackberries, raspberries, or cranberries. Otherwise, go wild and use a combination to make a mixed berry cobbler.
- If you donāt have cream cheese, you can simply omit it completely or make your own at home using my recipe. I promise it’s so much easier than you think! I also have a non-cream cheese strawberry cobbler recipe on the blog too.
- To add a lemon flavor to this cobbler, mix a tablespoon of bottled or fresh lemon juice into the cobbler batter.
Recipe FAQs
Where did cobblers come from anyway?
It appears that our cherished cobbler was an improvisation of the beloved pie. According to Wikipedia, the cobbler “originated in the British American colonies. English settlers were unable to make traditional suet puddings due to lack of suitable ingredients and cooking equipment, so instead covered a stewed filling with a layer of uncooked plain biscuits, scone batter, or dumplings, fitted together.” They have many names and depending on where you are from you might hear them called tart, pie, torte, pandowdy, grunt, slump, buckles, crisp, croustade, birdās nest pudding, or crowās nest pudding.
You may also like these cobbler recipes:
Chocolate Cobbler Recipe (Possible Options for Food Allergies)
Easy Crescent Cherry Cream Cheese Cobbler
Recipes for Pineapple Cake, Cobbler, and Puddin’
Ingredients
- 1/2 stick butter
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 cup Swerve or sugar or your favorite sweetener
- 1 cup milk or Greek yogurt
- 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp cinnamon optional
- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract optional
- 2 cups strawberries cut into halves or thirds
- 4 oz cream cheese softened and cut into squares
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. Pour the melted butter into the bottom of a 9x13-inch glass baking dish.1/2 stick butter
- Mix the milk or yogurt, flour, Swerve, baking powder, vanilla extract, and cinnamon (both optional) together in a large bowl. Scoop out and place over the butter in the baking dish. Do not mix the butter and the batter.1 cup all-purpose flour, 1 cup Swerve, 1 cup milk, 1/2 tsp baking powder, 1/2 tsp cinnamon, 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- You can smooth the batter down a little if you like without mixing it into the butter and then arrange strawberry pieces on top of the batter. Place the cream cheese squares around the strawberries.2 cups strawberries, 4 oz cream cheese
- Bake in the preheated oven until the top is nice and golden brown and the edges are bubbling (30 to 45 minutes). You may need to cover it with foil if the edges are brown but not bubbling.
Can you use almond flour for this recipe .
I have used Almond flour for this recipe and it taste great but doesn’t rise as nicely as all purpose. It came out a little mushy with the almond flour but tasted divine.
Looks very yummy, easy & sugar conscious. Iām wondering if Splenda would be a good substitute for Swerve?
I have gotten away from using Splenda but if that is what you prefer my guess is it would be fine.
Thank you for commenting!
I don’t have a glass 9×13, I have a 9×9 or maybe it is a 8×8. How would you adjust this for that size?
You could keep the recipe as is and make two of the 8 x 8’s or cut it in half to make one and see if that filled it up.
You give the calorie count but what is the count for carbs?
Hi Faye, the carbs weren’t showing because it couldn’t tell between the milk and the greek yogurt. So now it’s updated. To decrease carbs could use almond milk and I have tried almond flour too but it doesn’t rise much and ends up tasting great but very mushy.
I’m seeing fresh strawberries appearing on grocery shelves again so it is the perfect time for me to discover this delicious recipe! I am looking forward to enjoying many servings of this strawberry cobbler.
This looks absolutely DIVINE! And I love that I can use swerve!! It used to be so hard to find but here lately I’ve seen it in all of my stores.
Awe, Thanks my friend! Appreciate your comment and let me tell you… it tastes divine too :). Can wait for you to try it!
What in the world is “Swerve”?? I’m a Southerner and have never even heard that word.
I agree–I’ve been cooking/baking for 70 years and I’ve never heard this word either.
thanks for your comment. Swerve is a natural sweetener. Zero calories and doesn’t raise blood sugar. I wrote a post about it here https://www.southernplate.com/swerve-and-sugar-substitutes/ and here is their website… https://swervesweet.com/
You can certainly use regular ole sugar instead if you like.
Hi Jeanine thanks for your comment. Swerve is a natural sweetener. Zero calories and doesn’t raise blood sugar. I wrote a post about it here https://www.southernplate.com/swerve-and-sugar-substitutes/ and here is their website… https://swervesweet.com/
You can certainly use regular ole sugar instead if you like.
Its a sweetener