Outdoor Cooking — Open Fire & Campfire

Campfire Peach Cobbler

Cook Time
30–45 mins
Difficulty
Easy
Method
Dutch Oven
Serves
6–8

Campfire peach cobbler is one of the most beloved outdoor desserts for a reason — it’s simple, crowd-pleasing, and tastes like it took far more effort than it actually did. Made entirely in a cast iron Dutch oven over campfire coals, this dessert is a backyard and camping classic. The combination of sweet peaches, golden cake topping, and butter-crisped edges creates a warm, bubbling dessert that pairs perfectly with a scoop of vanilla ice cream under the open sky. Best of all, it only needs four ingredients.

Why This Recipe Works Every Time

  • Four ingredients: Canned peaches, yellow cake mix, butter, and cinnamon. That’s the whole recipe. No bowls, no mixing, no measuring beyond pouring.
  • Dutch oven is perfect for cobblers: The cast iron retains and distributes heat evenly, creating a golden bottom crust while the coal-topped lid browns the cake layer from above.
  • Coals, not flames: Hot coals give you controlled, even heat. Active fire flames create uneven, hard-to-manage temperatures that burn the bottom before the top sets.
  • No stirring required: The layered approach is the whole point. Peaches on the bottom, dry cake mix on top, butter over everything. The layers cook into a self-basting cobbler texture as the butter melts down through the cake mix into the peaches.
  • Scales easily: Double everything and use a 10-quart Dutch oven for a large group. The timing stays roughly the same.

The Cobbler (Serves 6–8)

  • 2 cans (15 oz each) sliced peaches, drained
  • 1 box yellow cake mix (dry — do not prepare, use straight from the box)
  • ½ cup unsalted butter, sliced into thin pats
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

Optional

  • Vanilla ice cream or whipped cream for serving
  • Fresh sliced peaches (in season, substitute or supplement the canned peaches)
  • Pinch of nutmeg in addition to cinnamon

Step-by-Step Instructions

1
Build your campfire well before you plan to cook — 45–60 minutes ahead. You need a solid bed of glowing orange coals with gray ash on the surface. Active flames create unpredictable heat and will burn the bottom of the cobbler.
2
Lightly grease the inside of your Dutch oven with butter or a quick spray of cooking spray. This prevents the peaches and caramelized cobbler edges from sticking.
3
Pour the drained peach slices into the Dutch oven and spread them evenly in a single layer across the bottom.
4
Sprinkle the dry cake mix evenly over the peaches. Do not stir — do not mix the layers. Even, even, even. The layering is what creates cobbler texture as it cooks.
5
Lay the butter pats evenly across the top of the dry cake mix, covering as much surface area as possible. The butter will melt down through the cake mix and into the peaches as it cooks.
6
Sprinkle cinnamon (and nutmeg if using) evenly over the top.
7
Place the lid on the Dutch oven. Set the Dutch oven on the coals using long tongs. Place additional hot coals on top of the lid — this is the key to getting even top-heat that browns the cake layer properly.
8
Cook for 30–45 minutes. Every 10–15 minutes, rotate the Dutch oven ¼ turn in one direction and the lid ¼ turn in the opposite direction. This compensates for uneven coal heat and prevents hot spots.
9
Lift the lid to check progress — the cobbler is done when the top is golden brown, the edges are bubbling, and the cake topping is fully set with no wet or doughy patches. If the top is browning too fast, remove some coals from the lid.
10
Remove from coals. Let cool 5–10 minutes before serving — it will be extremely hot. Scoop and serve with vanilla ice cream if available.

Easy Cobbler Variations

Cherry Cobbler: Swap peaches for canned cherry pie filling. Use chocolate cake mix for a rich twist.

Apple Cobbler: Use canned apple pie filling with yellow or spice cake mix. Add a pinch of nutmeg alongside the cinnamon.

Tropical Mix: Combine pineapple chunks and peaches. Use coconut cake mix for a beachside campfire dessert.

Blueberry Lemon: Use canned blueberries with lemon cake mix. Add a tablespoon of lemon zest over the fruit layer before adding cake mix.

Pro Tips for Dutch Oven Campfire Cobbler

  • Cook over coals, not flames: This is the single most important tip. Direct flames create uneven, too-hot heat. Wait for the fire to burn down to glowing coals before you start.
  • Rotate the Dutch oven and lid separately: Turn the pot and lid in opposite directions every 10–15 minutes. This counteracts hot spots from uneven coal placement.
  • Top coals are essential: Placing coals on top of the lid is what browns the cake topping. Without them, you get a cooked bottom and a raw, pale top.
  • Fresh peaches when in season: Canned peaches work great — but in summer, fresh sliced peaches add a brightness and texture that canned can’t match.
  • Do not stir the layers: The magic of this recipe is in the layers cooking separately. Stirring turns it into mush instead of cobbler.

Essential Gear

Lodge 6-Qt Cast Iron Dutch Oven
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Long-Handle Campfire Tongs
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Heat-Resistant BBQ Gloves
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