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Community Corner

Peachy Blackberry Cobbler

The next time you want to impress your dinner guests, try this tasty cobbler. Your family and friends will love it and will be amazed at your talents! You don't have to tell them how easy it was to make…let them be dazzled by your baking prowess.

Talk to a southener and they'll tell you that cobbler is a "southern thing". Ask a northener and they will lay claim to it, although they may refer to it as a Brown Betty or a buckle.

Cobblers have appeared in both European and American cookbooks since the 19th century and they were probably around for another century or so before that. They may have gotten their beginnings as meat and vegetable dishes and over the years, evolved into desserts.

Some of the many names given to them are pandowdy, grunt, brown betty, slump buckle, crisp, croustade, bird's nest pudding and crow's nest pudding. The names may differ, but they all share the same things in common; seasonal fruits and berries with a top crust. It's a true testament that a recipe doesn't have to be complicated to be delicious.

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With peaches in season and Floridians' easy access to them this dish is a perfect match for this time of year.

Once you’ve mastered this dish, try using different berries and fruits in the recipe. Baking and cooking should be fun, so get creative and don’t ever be afraid to try new things.

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You may substitute thawed, frozen blackberries if you can’t find fresh. Also, when peaches are out of season, use thawed frozen or canned peaches. Just don’t get the canned peaches in heavy syrup, they’re too sweet.

Makes 12 servings

2 tablespoons cornstarch

1 ½ cups, plus 1 teaspoon sugar

1 ¼ lb. (5 cups) blackberries

2 lb. (6 medium) peaches, peeled, pitted and cut into ½” thick  wedges

3 cups biscuit mix, such as Bisquick

1 cup whole milk

Preheat oven to 425°  and generously butter a 9” x 13” baking or casserole dish.

1.  Whisk together cornstarch and 1 ½ cups sugar in a large bowl. Add blackberries and peaches (without juice, if using canned) and stir to combine. Transfer to baking dish and bake 10 to 15 minutes until just starting to bubble. Remove from oven.

2.  While the fruit is in the oven, combine the biscuit mix and milk in a bowl and mix until just combined.

3.  In baking dish, on top of fruit, drop 12 spoonfuls of biscuit dough (about 1/3 cup each). Sprinkle dough with remaining 1 teaspoon of sugar.

4.  Bake 25 to 35 minutes, until top is a golden brown. Serve warm on its own, or with a scoop of vanilla ice cream.

Find the ingredients at these Largo markets

Thursday Downtown Market at Ulmer Park at 301 West Bay Dr. It will be open from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

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