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Savory Tomato Cobbler – itโs hard to come up with enough superlatives to describe thisย wonderful, delicious, slightly sweet, savory, rich and absolutely delightful Tomato Cobbler direct from our garden to the table!
For this recipe I used a variety of large heirloom tomatoes, a few grape tomatoes and fresh thyme from our garden.
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Tomato Cobbler
Ingredients
For the tomatoes:
- 3 tablespoons unsalted butter
- 1 large onion chopped
- 2 cloves garlic minced
- 1 teaspoon chopped fresh thyme
- โ teaspoon cayenne pepper
- 3 large tomatoes (about 1 3/4 pounds) cut into 1-inch chunks
- 1 teaspoon packed light brown sugar
- Sea salt
- 2 heaping cups of cherry tomatoes halved then measured
- 3 tablespoons unbleached all-purpose flour
For the biscuit topping:
- 1 ยฝ cups unbleached all-purpose flour
- 1 ยฝ teaspoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon granulated sugar
- Sea salt and freshly ground pepper
- 6 tablespoons cold unsalted butter thinly sliced
- โ cups whole milk plus more for brushing
- 2 teaspoons whole-grain mustard
- 1 teaspoon fresh thyme chopped
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350ยฐF.
- To make the tomato filling melt 2 tablespoons butter over medium-high heat in a large oven-proof skillet. ย (See NOTE below) Add the chopped onion and cook, stirring occasionally, until soft and light brown, about 5 minutes. ย Add the garlic, thyme and cayenne pepper. ย Cook and stir for 1 more minute then add the chopped tomatoes, brown sugar and 1 ยผ teaspoons salt.
- Bring to a simmer and cook just until the tomatoes start to soften, 4-5 minutes. ย Do not overcook. Remove the skillet from the heat and gently stir in the flour and cherry tomatoes. ย Dot with the remaining 1 tablespoon of butter and set aside.
- To make the biscuit topping whisk together the flour, baking powder, granulated sugar, ยพ teaspoon salt and black pepper in a medium bowl. ย Add the sliced butter and using a pastry cutter, blend the butter into the flour until it resembles coarse meal. ย Add โ cup of milk, the thyme and mustard to the flour mixture. ย Gently stir with a fork just until a sticky dough forms. ย To do over mix.
- Using an ice cream scoop, drop balls of dough over the filling. ย Brush the dough balls with milk and bake until the biscuits are golden brown and the filling is bubbly - about 55-60 minutes. ย Allow the cobbler to rest about 15 minutes before serving.
- Serves 6 (or two at my house)
Recipe Notes
- NOTE: As you may know, we really shouldn't cook tomatoes in cast iron as the acidity can strip the seasoning on your pan. Use stainless steel or enameled cast iron or even a regular casserole dish.
- Recipe adapted from a 2014 Food Network Kitchen recipe
Nutrition
Here are a few more of our favorite savory cobblers:
Skillet Taco Cobbler ~ ground beef, black beans, tomatoes and corn come together in a nicely spiced base for tender, cheesy cornmeal biscuits.
Savory Winter Vegetable Cobbler with Cheesy Herbed Biscuits ~ a delicious and hardy vegetable dish loaded with mushrooms, cauliflower, butternut squash, onions, carrots and celery. Topped with a soft cheesy biscuit to soak up all the juice!
No doubt this Buffalo Chicken Cobbler must be fantastic. Check it out over at Lemons for Lulu. I’ve also taken the classic Chicken Pot Pie and turned it into a savory cobbler with Herb Biscuits. So much easier than rolling out the dough. Hope you’ll give a few a go in your kitchen!
Gerlinde @sunnycovechef
This looks lovely. What a great idea to make a savory cobbler.
Tricia Buice
Thanks Gerlinde! Have a great week!
Bianca @ Confessions of a Chocoholic
I’ve never had tomato cobbler, but this does sound delicious!
Tricia Buice
It is Bianca – hope you give it a try. We were thrilled and can’t wait to try it again.
Sippitysup
I’ve made savory cobblers with meat, but this all veg version is much more true to the sweet original. GREG
Tricia Buice
I haven’t tried a meat cobble Greg – but now I want too ๐
handmade by amalia
I knew that it was a keeper just by looking at the photos.
Amalia
xo
Tricia Buice
Thanks Amalia – you should give it a try – amazingly good ๐
Chris Scheuer
Wow! With your superlative description I cannot help but make this fabulous sounding dish sometime very soon! I can’t wait for some local tomatoes and I’ll be all over it. Thanks Tricia, it’s beautiful too!
Tricia Buice
Thanks Chris – it is a perfectly tasty dish and I can’t wait to make it again.
Judy at My Well Seasoned Life
One word for this recipe ‘genius’. Can’t wait to use the many other words that will be inspired once I make this and taste it. Thanks.
Tricia Buice
Thank you so much Judy. It is absolutely amazing – really, really great. I look at our organic garden and all those happy tomato plants and just can’t wait to pick fresh tomatoes and make this again! Thanks for commenting and stopping by. I know you will love it.
scrambledhenfruit
This is a "must make!" I don't have your gorgeous heirlooms in my garden, but I know where to find them! I've cooked tomatoes in my cast iron before, but never knew it wasn't good for it. Somewhere I've heard that it adds iron to the tomatoes. Who knew?
dentistvschef
Wow, fyi i just bookmark this recipe and i'm convincing you that i just bookmark few of the recipes that literraty MUST TRY!!!<br /> lovely and comforting dish, <br />btw, you shouldn't cook any food with acid and sugar on cast iron pan since it's will react, tomato contain ascorbic acid and the natural fructose fruit made it sticky to the cast iron pan…
Jeanne
Does the tomatoes react to the cast iron pan ? I have always been told not to cook tomatoes in a cast iron pans.
Tricia Buice
Hey Jeanne – the tomatoes did not react or change in any way because I used cast iron. After receiving your comment I did a little research and found that you are right about not cooking tomatoes in cast iron. Cooking tomatoes or tomato sauce in cast iron is not a good idea because it can strip the seasoning but won't necessarily damage the pan. The skillet in the photo is very old and
Linda D.
My two cents about using cast iron-cooking any recipe with tomatoes causes some of the iron to leach out of the pan. The best spaghetti sauce comes from a cast iron skillet! As far as having to reseason the pan-if you are using it, you will eventually have to reseason. Enjoy the cast iron and if you don’t have one you definitely need one in your kitchen. Great recipe.
Tricia Buice
I will watch my pan and skip tomato dishes I guess ๐ Thanks for the info!
Jeanne
Thanks Tricia for your reply. I'm making this tonight. !!! Can not wait to dig in. I'm going to add blue cheese to my biscuit mix. ๐
Anna and Liz Recipes
This looks so amazing we will definitely put this one on our list of things to make – thanks for the recipe! Have a great weekend!!
SavoringTime in the Kitchen
This is going on my list of things to try when my large tomatoes start to ripen. I have lots and lots of big green tomatoes and my foot is tapping ๐ It really looks delicious with those drop biscuits on top!
Chris Scheuer
This looks amazing Tricia, I can see my you loved it. I never thought of a tomato cobbler but it's an awesome idea. Those tomatoes are gorgeous!
Angie Schneider
I am SOLD, Tricia. Your homegrown tomatoes are sensational! Mouthwatering clicks!!
Monica
Looks amazing, Tricia! What a fantastic way to enjoy seasonal tomatoes. And I'm so intrigued by the biscuits with thyme and mustard. Sounds and looks so good…the amazing-ness of this totally comes through in your photos!
Abbe@This is How I Cook
I think I'd get along with your husband just fine. His logic is one I can relate too. this looks totally fabulous and i trust your judgement. Back when we had a garden I always used to mail order seeds and such.It was worth it. Thanks, Tricia. I feel like I just won the lottery!
Ambar
Seriously! This dish looks AMAZING! I can only imagine how good this must taste! This is such a creative dish! LOVE it!
Cheri Savory Spoon
Hi Tricia, I am scrapping what I was going to make for dinner tonight and making this, I can't believe it I have everything, LOVE THIS DISH!!!
Cheri Savory Spoon
Hi Tricia, wanted to let you know that I did make this and it turned out perfectly, my husband and I loved it!
Big Dude
Looks delicious Trish – Great use of summers bounty.
Karen Harris
You have me sold by the photos alone. SO GORGEOUS!!! I've got a crisper drawer full of tomatoes. Thanks for this recipe.
Tanna at The Brick Street Bungalow
I can tell by your enthusiasm that this is a MUST try!! Those tomatoes look so beautiful before and after being cooked! Thank you for sharing this one… btw, I'm in full agreement with your hubby about the six serving issue. LOL! blessings ~ tanna