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Boy Scout Peach Cobbler
Posted on 2/17/24 at 1:59 pm
Posted on 2/17/24 at 1:59 pm

It has been a little too cold here for my old body to do this recipe on a campfire out in the woods, so I decided to cook my outside, on a campfire treat inside, in the oven. When I was a scoutmaster here in Clinton, we would take up to 85 scouts camping sometime every month. They loved it and the adult leaders endured it. I always said there should be an Adult Men version of Boy Scouts, so we could camp without the hassle of young guys running wild all night long while you are trying to sleep. I guess that's deer camp, or catfishing off a sand bar on the Louisiana side of the Mississippi River below Vicksburg
During my Scoutmaster days, we had 18 BSA 8-quart Dutch Ovens

and we tried to always cook Peach cobbler for the kids when we camped. You have never been stressed out until you are down to the last two Dutch ovens of cobbler and see 20 or so scouts still in line to get their serving. Not knowing how many of them are lined up for their first bowl and how many quickly woofed down their cobbler and snuck back into line for second helpings helped none at all.
A campfire Dutch oven has legs and an inverted lid so you can place it over coals to heat the bottom and lay coals on top to heat the top. You can buy one (5 QT-Ozark Trail brand) at Walmart for $30.00, or elsewhere for up to $150.00, depending on size and brand. The campfire Dutch Oven will normally make a cobbler in 30-40 minutes, if the cook knows what they are doing. Mine is in the cabinet out on the screen porch with my fish fryer, so I decided to use my trusty old 6 quart cast iron pot. It works fine and makes a pretty good Boy Scout Cobbler in the oven, Here is the recipe I used.
Need:
1 or 2 large cans of sliced peaches. I like the ones packed in juice, but used heavy syrup for this one, which I made using only one can of peaches. The heavy syrup makes a sweeter cobbler than I like, but we still managed to eat all of it and send a big bowl to our next door neighbor.
1 yellow cake mix - I only used half of it because I was making a half recipe cobbler.
2 sticks of butter - I only used 2/3 of a stick

You can use a bit of cinnamon if you like. I didn't use any
Vanilla Ice Cream - Cheap store brand works just fine, or go with the $10.00 a gallon stuff if you like.

I preheat the oven to 325 and spray the inside of my Dutch Oven with pam. Then in goes the peaches.

Followed by the half box of (cheap) Yellow Cake mix,

and the 2/3 stick off butter sliced on top of the cake mix.

On goes the lid

and into the oven.

1 hour later, out it comes for a 15 minute cool down


I have years of practice, working out how much Ice Cream is needed with the size serving of cobbler I spoon into my bowl.


You can use any canned fruit, Peaches, Pears, Dark Plums, Cherries, Apples, even Fruit Cocktail.
Thanks for looking.
Posted on 2/17/24 at 2:21 pm to MeridianDog
We make an identical recipe in a glass Pyrex dish in the oven using whichever canned fruit pie filling we happen to have at the time and call it “dump cake”. Easy-peasy and always a hit. I even enjoy eating the leftovers straight out of the fridge the next day.
Posted on 2/17/24 at 3:15 pm to MeridianDog
brings back memories, all of them good
how many hobo pack dinners you figure you made over the years?
I can still recite the oath and the law and probably would be better off if I did so every day
how many hobo pack dinners you figure you made over the years?

I can still recite the oath and the law and probably would be better off if I did so every day
Posted on 2/17/24 at 3:31 pm to MeridianDog
My two younger sons went camping with Boy Scouts two weeks ago and one of them was in charge of making the peach cobbler!
One of the adults said his cobbler was very good!
Yours looks good!
One of the adults said his cobbler was very good!
Yours looks good!
Posted on 2/17/24 at 4:25 pm to MeridianDog
That was the best right before a good game of capture the flag. Troop 208.
Posted on 2/17/24 at 4:37 pm to cgrand
quote:
hobo pack dinners
I remember them being called "silver turtles".
Posted on 2/17/24 at 5:47 pm to cbr900racer22
troop 490
scoutmaster was Hank Lacinak who is still alive; I ran in to him at a funeral at st Patrick’s a year or so ago and it was like old times. He had pictures he’d scanned to his phone of us when we were all at the old elks lodge on harrell’s ferry for the first meeting
man I wish I could re live just one of those days with scouting. It was the best childhood ever
scoutmaster was Hank Lacinak who is still alive; I ran in to him at a funeral at st Patrick’s a year or so ago and it was like old times. He had pictures he’d scanned to his phone of us when we were all at the old elks lodge on harrell’s ferry for the first meeting
man I wish I could re live just one of those days with scouting. It was the best childhood ever
Posted on 2/17/24 at 5:53 pm to MeridianDog
Posted on 2/17/24 at 6:52 pm to cgrand
The first campout I ever went on was to the Rolling Fork National Forest a little east of Rolling Fork, MS. I was a young Tenderfoot, age 12, Year 1961. Mr. Delozier was our Scoutmaster of Troop 12 in Clinton. Mr. Taylor and Mr. Callihan (Town Fire Chief) were the Leaders on the campout. We went to sleep that night and woke up to 4 inches of snow on the ground. I really wasn't prepared for that weather. I spent most of the second night shivering beside the fire. Got a Polar Bear Patch though (Camping in below freezing weather).
Anyhow, Mr. Taylor made a stew that second night with stew meat, potatoes, carrots and tomato paste. Was the best campout dinner a tenderfoot could ever experience.
Eventually made Life Scout Rank. Should have made Eagle, but instead, I started working cooking hamburgers.
Both sons made Eagle. Really proud of them for accomplishing that. I went to Philmont with them on a 60 mile Trek. We slept on top of Baldy one night. Both of them worked waterfront for four years at Hood Scout Camp during high school years. They worked three of the four together. Both of them did the mile swim. One saved a kid from drowning and another time, saved a scoutmaster who sunk his boat, panicked and almost drowned.
I was assistant scoutmaster and then Scoutmaster of Troop 88 FUMC.
Good years and glad I made the commitment. I know there were a few men who tried to disgrace Scouting, but I have known some incredible men who served as Scouting leaders.
Yes, I made tinfoil meals, scuzzy eggs with Dutch Oven Biscuits, every stew you could imagine and made numerous scouts put the rattlesnake back where they found him. Camped in a rain storm so bad one night that a scout with an air mattress under his sleeping bag floated totally out of his tent, which he had set up in a dry creek bed, earlier when it was a beautiful sunny day with no rain expected.
We had a 2 gallon campfire coffeepot for the adult leaders. Made coffee right away when we would go camping with the grinds in a sock, tied up and thrown in the pot. parked it beside the fire to keep it warm/hot. When we would run low we would untie the sock, add more coffee grinds and some more water. By the end of a three of four day camp was stout good.
That Lodge scout Dutch oven is the same as the one I showed in my post, I showed mine with the ring of coals around the top. I have used that small one I baked my oven cobbler in to make campfire cobbler a few times. If you are careful you can stack coals on top of the lid.
Anyhow, Mr. Taylor made a stew that second night with stew meat, potatoes, carrots and tomato paste. Was the best campout dinner a tenderfoot could ever experience.
Eventually made Life Scout Rank. Should have made Eagle, but instead, I started working cooking hamburgers.
Both sons made Eagle. Really proud of them for accomplishing that. I went to Philmont with them on a 60 mile Trek. We slept on top of Baldy one night. Both of them worked waterfront for four years at Hood Scout Camp during high school years. They worked three of the four together. Both of them did the mile swim. One saved a kid from drowning and another time, saved a scoutmaster who sunk his boat, panicked and almost drowned.
I was assistant scoutmaster and then Scoutmaster of Troop 88 FUMC.
Good years and glad I made the commitment. I know there were a few men who tried to disgrace Scouting, but I have known some incredible men who served as Scouting leaders.
Yes, I made tinfoil meals, scuzzy eggs with Dutch Oven Biscuits, every stew you could imagine and made numerous scouts put the rattlesnake back where they found him. Camped in a rain storm so bad one night that a scout with an air mattress under his sleeping bag floated totally out of his tent, which he had set up in a dry creek bed, earlier when it was a beautiful sunny day with no rain expected.
We had a 2 gallon campfire coffeepot for the adult leaders. Made coffee right away when we would go camping with the grinds in a sock, tied up and thrown in the pot. parked it beside the fire to keep it warm/hot. When we would run low we would untie the sock, add more coffee grinds and some more water. By the end of a three of four day camp was stout good.
That Lodge scout Dutch oven is the same as the one I showed in my post, I showed mine with the ring of coals around the top. I have used that small one I baked my oven cobbler in to make campfire cobbler a few times. If you are careful you can stack coals on top of the lid.
This post was edited on 2/17/24 at 6:58 pm
Posted on 2/17/24 at 7:28 pm to MeridianDog
That looks soo good, MD

This post was edited on 2/17/24 at 7:38 pm
Posted on 2/17/24 at 9:58 pm to MeridianDog

Son loves to be in the kitchen on Boy Scout campouts. They were supposed to make cherry (I think) cobbler on a Campout this fall, but found out the hard way that they didn’t bring a Dutch oven. One of the new dads helped make a ‘foil pan’, and they made what they’ve dubbed ‘Boy Scout Bars’ They were apparently delicious.
Posted on 2/17/24 at 10:46 pm to LSUGUMBO
A good friend was a long time assistant scoutmaster of the Troop I led. He was fond of telling the scouts to, "Make maximum use of existing resources."
Sounds like what you guys did to come up with the cherry bars. My friend would be proud of you.

Sounds like what you guys did to come up with the cherry bars. My friend would be proud of you.

Posted on 2/18/24 at 12:02 am to MeridianDog
Great post MD. I had hunch you'd eventually elaborate on your old Scouting days in here.
Similar memories in my end
We did Philmont in the summer of 1985 and climbed Baldy, but we didn't sleep up there. We were about to be above the tree line on the way to the top when a storm popped up and we decided to take shelter in the last edge of trees. Storm lasted about 45 minutes. Between the 6 of us, who were becoming hungry, we had 2 bags of M&M's that we were able to stretch just enough to keep everyone satisfied.
Later on, I became a trained Scout leader for 2 of my boys, but neither of them made Eagle. But, the Dutch oven cooking they learned back then has turned them into the good cooks they are today.
Similar memories in my end

We did Philmont in the summer of 1985 and climbed Baldy, but we didn't sleep up there. We were about to be above the tree line on the way to the top when a storm popped up and we decided to take shelter in the last edge of trees. Storm lasted about 45 minutes. Between the 6 of us, who were becoming hungry, we had 2 bags of M&M's that we were able to stretch just enough to keep everyone satisfied.
Later on, I became a trained Scout leader for 2 of my boys, but neither of them made Eagle. But, the Dutch oven cooking they learned back then has turned them into the good cooks they are today.
Posted on 2/18/24 at 1:07 am to G Vice
Great post MD!
I'm confused. Your 1st post says an 8Qt pot, the posted ad is for a 6 Qt pot, then you say that's the pot you used. The pot you show in your oven has a handle which neither the 6 or 8 qt pot has. Something is not right. Please set me straight.
I'm confused. Your 1st post says an 8Qt pot, the posted ad is for a 6 Qt pot, then you say that's the pot you used. The pot you show in your oven has a handle which neither the 6 or 8 qt pot has. Something is not right. Please set me straight.
This post was edited on 2/18/24 at 1:23 am
Posted on 2/18/24 at 8:16 am to Nawlens Gator
I got too complicated, I think. The 8 qt pots I first mentioned were the ones BSA Troop 88 had, I own a 6 qt pot, similar, but not the same brand as the BSA pots, like the one I showed a photo of (With the BSA Logo and charcoal briquettes around the top rim of the lid).
The pot I used to make this cobbler has a cast iron handle like you said, and a slightly domed lid, not the inverted ones most campfire stew pots have - to make it easier to put coals on top of the pot to provide heat from above. The one I used and show in my photos is actually is a 4 or 5 inch deep frying pan that, regardless of what I said is only about 5 quarts capacity.
I avoid using my campfire pot in the oven because it has feet (Just like the BSA pots) to hold it slightly above the coals when cooking. The deep frying skillet/pan I used to make this cobbler has no feet and works better in the oven.
Whew....
The pot I used to make this cobbler has a cast iron handle like you said, and a slightly domed lid, not the inverted ones most campfire stew pots have - to make it easier to put coals on top of the pot to provide heat from above. The one I used and show in my photos is actually is a 4 or 5 inch deep frying pan that, regardless of what I said is only about 5 quarts capacity.
I avoid using my campfire pot in the oven because it has feet (Just like the BSA pots) to hold it slightly above the coals when cooking. The deep frying skillet/pan I used to make this cobbler has no feet and works better in the oven.
Whew....
This post was edited on 2/18/24 at 8:18 am
Posted on 2/18/24 at 9:46 pm to MeridianDog
Here is my Peach Cobbler
2 to 4 servings
A cobbler can be made with a variety of fruits mixed with dough and baked. I use black berry (actually dew berries), peach and apple because they are what I like. The amount of fruit and dough can be varied depending on if you like more fruit or more dough.
Dough
• Melt about ¼ cup of butter in a medium size bowl.
• Add about 1 cup Pioneer Buttermilk biscuit mix in the bowl, Slowly add milk and mix with a fork, until thick and creamy smooth.
• Add about 3 ot 5 tablespoons sugar and mix.
Fruit filling
Use about 1 to 1.5 cups, of one of these suggestions:
1. If using black berries, they should be well sweetened.
2. Fresh fruit can be used. If so, cut up the fruit into thin slices and sprinkle with 3 or more tablespoons of sugar. The sugar will bring out a little juice to flavor the cobbler.
3. 1 or 2 large cans of your favorite fruit “pie filling” in heavy syrup.
4. Or, one of my favorites, is fresh blueberries.
Cobbler Preparation
Select size of baking pan so that after fruit and dough are mixed it will be about 1½” thick. About 9x9 inches.
• Add about half of the Fruit filling to pan and spread evenly.
• Spoon in about half of the dough spreading it over the surface.
• Mix the dough and filling a little but keep the dough evenly spread out.
• Add remaining filling.
• Spoon in some of the remaining dough and mix a little.
• Spoon in the remaining dough on top and spread evenly.
Cooking
Preheat oven to 375 deg. F.........cook about 25 minutes...........until golden brown.
This can also be done using a Dutch Oven and cooking with coals from a campfire. Be careful not to use too many coals (too hot). It is better to take a little longer than to burn the cobbler.
2 to 4 servings
A cobbler can be made with a variety of fruits mixed with dough and baked. I use black berry (actually dew berries), peach and apple because they are what I like. The amount of fruit and dough can be varied depending on if you like more fruit or more dough.
Dough
• Melt about ¼ cup of butter in a medium size bowl.
• Add about 1 cup Pioneer Buttermilk biscuit mix in the bowl, Slowly add milk and mix with a fork, until thick and creamy smooth.
• Add about 3 ot 5 tablespoons sugar and mix.
Fruit filling
Use about 1 to 1.5 cups, of one of these suggestions:
1. If using black berries, they should be well sweetened.
2. Fresh fruit can be used. If so, cut up the fruit into thin slices and sprinkle with 3 or more tablespoons of sugar. The sugar will bring out a little juice to flavor the cobbler.
3. 1 or 2 large cans of your favorite fruit “pie filling” in heavy syrup.
4. Or, one of my favorites, is fresh blueberries.
Cobbler Preparation
Select size of baking pan so that after fruit and dough are mixed it will be about 1½” thick. About 9x9 inches.
• Add about half of the Fruit filling to pan and spread evenly.
• Spoon in about half of the dough spreading it over the surface.
• Mix the dough and filling a little but keep the dough evenly spread out.
• Add remaining filling.
• Spoon in some of the remaining dough and mix a little.
• Spoon in the remaining dough on top and spread evenly.
Cooking
Preheat oven to 375 deg. F.........cook about 25 minutes...........until golden brown.
This can also be done using a Dutch Oven and cooking with coals from a campfire. Be careful not to use too many coals (too hot). It is better to take a little longer than to burn the cobbler.
Posted on 3/11/24 at 12:19 pm to MeridianDog
quote:
MeridianDog
Made this last night. It was fantastic. Thanks!!!

Using the half recipe, I figured the Dutch oven I had was too big, so just used a small square glass baking dish covered with foil. No problems, but I uncovered the last 15 minutes or so to get it browned and it came out looking just like yours. I DID add cinnamon as well.
Posted on 3/11/24 at 1:51 pm to Y.A. Tittle
I certainly hope you had some vanilla ice cream. Thanks for the good words.


This post was edited on 3/11/24 at 1:52 pm
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