Golden peach cobbler dump cake with a crisp topping and juicy peaches, ready for an easy dessert night.

Quick Answer: Layer peaches in a baking dish, cover evenly with dry cake mix, drizzle melted butter across the top, and bake at 350°F (175°C) until browned and bubbling, then rest 15–20 minutes before serving.

What Is A Peach Cobbler Dump Cake?

A peach cobbler dump cake is a simple baked dessert made by layering fruit and a dry cake mix in a pan, then adding butter so the top bakes into a crisp, cobbler-like crust. It is called a “dump cake” because you assemble it by adding ingredients directly to the baking dish with minimal mixing.

Why Does This Recipe Work For Home Cooks?

It works because the peaches provide moisture and syrup, while the dry mix and butter form a browned topping as they bake. The method is forgiving, uses common pantry ingredients, and does not require a mixer.

What Ingredients Do You Need For Easy Peach Cobbler Dump Cake?

You need peaches, a dry cake mix, butter, and a few optional seasonings that sharpen flavor. If you use canned peaches, you can control sweetness and texture by adjusting how much syrup you add.

Ingredients (U.S. And Metric)

  • Peaches, sliced (fresh or frozen): 6 cups (about 900 g)
    • If using canned peaches: 2 cans (15 oz each / 425 g each), drained well
  • Granulated sugar (only if needed for fresh peaches): 2 to 4 tbsp (25 to 50 g)
  • Cornstarch (for fresh or very juicy peaches): 1 tbsp (8 g)
  • Fine salt: 1/4 tsp
  • Ground cinnamon (optional): 1 tsp
  • Vanilla extract (optional): 1 tsp (5 ml)
  • Dry cake mix (plain yellow-style cake mix works well): 1 box, about 15 to 16.5 oz (425 to 470 g)
  • Unsalted butter, melted (or very thinly sliced): 12 tbsp (170 g)

Ingredient notes:

  • Fresh peaches vary a lot in sweetness and juiciness. Taste one slice before adding sugar.
  • Frozen peaches usually need no sugar, but they release more liquid. Cornstarch helps keep the base from turning soupy.
  • Canned peaches can be packed in juice or syrup. Drain them well for a less sweet, thicker filling. If you prefer a looser filling, add back 1/4 to 1/2 cup (60 to 120 ml) of the liquid.

What Equipment Do You Need?

You need a baking dish, a bowl if you want to toss peaches with seasonings, and a way to melt butter. A 9-by-13-inch (23-by-33-cm) dish is standard, but other sizes work with adjusted bake times.

Practical Pan Guide

Pan SizeApproximate Bake Time At 350°F (175°C)
9 x 13 in (23 x 33 cm)45 to 55 minutes
8 x 8 in (20 x 20 cm)55 to 70 minutes
9 in round (23 cm)50 to 65 minutes

Bake times vary with dish material, fruit temperature, and how much liquid you use.

How Do You Make Peach Cobbler Dump Cake Step By Step?

You make it by layering peaches, covering them with dry cake mix, and adding butter so the top bakes evenly. The key is to spread the cake mix in an even layer and distribute butter across as much surface as possible.

Method

  1. Heat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Lightly butter the baking dish or leave it ungreased if your dish tends to brown quickly.
  2. Build the fruit layer. Add peaches to the dish. For fresh or frozen peaches, toss with sugar (if needed), cornstarch, salt, cinnamon, and vanilla, then spread evenly.
  3. Add the cake mix. Sprinkle the dry cake mix evenly over the peaches. Level it gently with a spoon. Do not stir.
  4. Add the butter. Pour melted butter slowly over the surface, aiming for even coverage. If using sliced butter, distribute thin slices across the top.
  5. Bake until the top is deeply golden and the edges are bubbling, 45 to 55 minutes for a 9-by-13-inch dish.
  6. Rest for 15 to 20 minutes before serving. The filling thickens as it cools.

How Do You Keep The Top From Staying Powdery?

To keep the topping from staying dry, you need enough butter coverage and an even cake-mix layer. If you see dry pockets after 30 minutes, lightly drizzle 1 to 2 tbsp (15 to 30 ml) of melted butter over the pale spots and continue baking.

Other causes of powdery topping:

  • The cake mix was piled unevenly, leaving thicker drifts.
  • Butter was poured quickly in one area instead of across the surface.
  • The oven runs cool. If the top is pale at the end, bake 5 to 10 minutes longer.

Should You Use Fresh, Frozen, Or Canned Peaches?

You can use any of the three, and the best choice depends on availability and how much control you want over sweetness. Fresh peaches give the best aroma, frozen peaches are consistent, and canned peaches are the most predictable for weeknight baking.

Quick guidance:

  • Fresh: Add sugar only if needed; consider cornstarch for very ripe peaches.
  • Frozen: Use from frozen; add cornstarch; expect a longer bubble time.
  • Canned: Drain well to avoid a thin filling; add back a little liquid only if desired.

What Variations Are Sensible Without Changing The Method?

You can adjust seasoning, sweetness, and texture without altering the core dump-cake approach. Keep the fruit layer on the bottom, cake mix in the middle, and butter on top.

Practical variations:

  • Warm spice: Add nutmeg (a pinch) or ground ginger (1/4 tsp) with cinnamon.
  • Citrus lift: Add 1 to 2 tsp finely grated lemon zest to the peaches.
  • Topping texture: Add chopped nuts, 1/2 cup (60 g), over the cake mix before butter.
  • Less sweet: Drain canned peaches thoroughly and skip added sugar.

When Is It Done Baking?

It is done when the top is evenly browned and the filling is bubbling around the edges and in a few spots near the center. If the top browns early but the filling is not bubbling, loosely cover with foil and continue baking until the fruit layer is clearly hot and active.

How Should You Serve It?

Serve it warm or at room temperature once the filling has set slightly. If you cut too soon, the filling will be looser, especially with very ripe or frozen fruit.

How Do You Store And Reheat Peach Cobbler Dump Cake Safely?

Store it refrigerated within 2 hours of baking, and eat it within 3 to 4 days for best quality. Because it contains moist fruit and baked topping, it should not sit at room temperature overnight.

Storage and reheating:

  • Refrigerate: Cover the dish or transfer portions to a sealed container.
  • Reheat: Warm in a 350°F (175°C) oven until heated through, or microwave single portions in short bursts. Ovens restore crispness better than microwaves.
  • Freeze (optional): Freeze tightly wrapped portions up to 2 to 3 months. Thaw in the refrigerator before reheating. Texture softens after freezing, which is normal.

What Are The Most Common Problems, And How Do You Fix Them?

Most issues come from liquid balance, uneven butter, or underbaking. Small adjustments usually solve them.

  • Too soupy: Use drained canned peaches, add cornstarch for fresh or frozen fruit, and let the bake rest before serving.
  • Too dry: Add back a little peach liquid, or use slightly riper fruit next time.
  • Burning edges: Use a light-colored dish if you have one, place the dish on a sheet pan, or cover edges with foil late in baking.
  • Gummy top: Bake longer until the top is fully browned and the filling bubbles clearly.

Endnotes

[1] foodsafety.gov
[2] usda.gov


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