Peach Cobbler Sheet Cake

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When it’s nine o’clock on a humid Tuesday evening and the family is clamoring for something sweet, this comforting dessert comes to the rescue straight from your pantry.

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Making a classic dessert from scratch can feel daunting when you only have a single free hour before bedtime. This rustic Peach Cobbler Sheet Cake brings together all the spiced, buttery goodness of a fruit cobbler in a casual single-pan bake. You don’t need fancy decorating skills or expensive tools to pull this together tonight. It’s honestly easy enough for a Tuesday and tastes like a lazy summer afternoon.

Why This Peach Cobbler Sheet Cake Works for Busy Weeks

Prep: 25 min · Serves: 12 · Difficulty: Easy

  • Bakes quickly in a standard sheet pan.
  • Uses common ingredients already in your pantry.
  • Features a sweet spiced cinnamon ribbon inside.
  • Requires zero complicated cake layering skills.
  • Cleans up quickly with minimal sink duty.

This sweet bake brings cozy weekend comfort to any weeknight. If you love rustic stone fruit bakes, you’ll also want to try our classic peach dump cake for another effortless dessert.

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A golden brown slice of Peach Cobbler Sheet Cake topped with fresh peach slices and crumble

Peach Cobbler Sheet Cake


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5 from 10 reviews

Description

This rustic sheet cake combines the spiced, buttery essence of a classic peach cobbler with the convenience of a single-pan bake. Featuring a tender buttermilk base, jammy fruit filling, and a crunchy oatmeal topping, it is an effortless dessert perfect for busy weeknights.


Ingredients

  • 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp fine salt
  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter, softened
  • 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
  • 3 egg whites
  • 1/2 cup sour cream
  • 1 tbsp pure vanilla extract
  • 3/4 cup buttermilk
  • 1/2 cup brown sugar
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 2 tbsp melted butter
  • 3 cups chopped fresh peaches
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice
  • 2 tbsp brown sugar
  • 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
  • 1/4 tsp nutmeg
  • 1 tbsp cornstarch
  • 1 cup old fashioned oats
  • 1/2 cup flour
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar
  • 1/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/2 tsp cinnamon
  • 1/4 cup melted butter
  • 1 cup softened butter
  • 3 cups powdered sugar
  • 1 tsp vanilla bean paste
  • 2 tbsp heavy cream


Instructions

  1. Prep the oven. Preheat your oven to 350°F (177°C) and grease a 9×13-inch sheet pan.
  2. Whisk dry ingredients. Combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in a large bowl.
  3. Cream butter mixture. Beat softened butter and granulated sugar until fluffy, then incorporate egg whites, sour cream, and vanilla.
  4. Combine the batter. Alternately add the dry flour mixture and buttermilk to the wet ingredients, mixing only until just combined.
  5. Create cinnamon ribbons. Mix brown sugar, flour, cinnamon, and melted butter; drop spoonfuls over the batter and swirl with a knife.
  6. Bake the cake. Bake for 30 to 35 minutes until golden and a toothpick comes out clean.
  7. Simmer fruit filling. Cook peaches, lemon juice, sugar, spices, and cornstarch slurry in a saucepan until thickened; chill until cold.
  8. Toast the crumble. Spread the oat mixture on a parchment-lined pan and bake at 350°F for 10 minutes until golden.
  9. Prepare the frosting. Whip softened butter, powdered sugar, vanilla bean paste, salt, and heavy cream until fluffy.
  10. Assemble the cake. Spread buttercream over cooled cake, layer with chilled peach filling, and top with the crispy oatmeal crumble.

Notes

  • Ensure all dairy and egg components are at room temperature to achieve a stable, emulsified batter.
  • Use a kitchen scale to measure flour accurately by weight to avoid a dense or dry crumb.
  • Chill the frosted cake base briefly before adding the fruit layer to maintain crisp, distinct components.
  • Bake the oatmeal topping on a separate tray to ensure the oats achieve a crunchy, toasted texture rather than steaming on top of the cake.
  • Prep Time: 25 mins
  • Cook Time: 45 mins
  • Category: Dessert
  • Method: Baking
  • Cuisine: American

Pantry Lineup

Bowls of flour, fresh peaches, brown sugar, and buttermilk on a white counter
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Baking sweet treats shouldn’t require a special trip to a gourmet grocery store. We rely on classic baking staples to create a base that’s wonderfully tender and rich. Simple ingredients, honest flavor is our motto here, meaning every element works together to build a comforting, homestyle dessert that everyone will love.

  • All-purpose flour: This provides the essential structure for our base cake, our spiced crumb topping, and the thick cinnamon swirl. Using standard white flour guarantees the cake holds up under the weight of the juicy peach filling without collapsing.
  • Fresh peaches: Ripe peaches provide a beautiful jammy texture when simmered, though canned peaches work during the chilly off-season months. We slice them finely so they soften uniformly in the pan, creating a smooth fruit layer.
  • Buttermilk: This tangy liquid keeps the crumb tender while reacting with the leaveners to give the cake a lovely rise. The subtle acidity also cuts through the sweetness of the sugar, creating a beautifully balanced flavor profile in every slice.
  • Sour cream: A scoop of sour cream adds rich moisture so your dessert stays soft for days without drying out. It adds necessary fat to the batter, giving the cake a melt-in-your-mouth quality that oil cannot replicate.
  • Brown sugar: This adds a deep caramel note to both our cinnamon swirl and the crispy oat crumble. Its natural moisture content helps keep the crumble from drying out while baking, creating the ideal chewy-crispy texture.
  • Vanilla bean paste: Real vanilla seeds speckled throughout the fluffy frosting bring a warm, comforting aroma to every bite. It boosts the visual appeal of our buttercream with tiny black flecks, making it look like it came straight from a bakery.
IngredientWhy It Matters
Sour CreamAdds fat and acidity for an incredibly soft crumb
Fresh PeachesSoften into a jammy cobbler layer during assembly
Old Fashioned OatsCreate the classic crispy texture for the crumble
ButtermilkKeeps the sheet cake light, tender, and moist
Brown SugarDelivers a rich caramel molasses flavor to the crumble

From Bowl to Oven

Whisking light and fluffy cake batter for Peach Cobbler Sheet Cake
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Step 1: Prep the Oven and Pan

Start by preheating your oven to 350°F (177°C) so it’s nice and hot when your batter is ready. Generously grease your favorite 9×13-inch sheet pan with softened butter or a quick spray of nonstick baking spray. Taking your time here guarantees that your first slice slides out of the pan cleanly without sticking to the corners.

Step 2: Whisk the Dry Staples

Grab a large mixing bowl and whisk together your all-purpose flour, baking powder, baking soda, and fine salt until combined. This step evenly distributes the leavening agents so your cake rises uniformly without any awkward flat spots or large air bubbles. Set this bowl aside for a moment while we focus on the wet ingredients.

Step 3: Cream the Butter and Sugar

In a separate large bowl, beat your softened butter and granulated sugar together on medium speed for about three minutes. You want this mixture to look pale, fluffy, and noticeably lightened in texture before moving to the next ingredient. Add your room temperature egg whites, rich sour cream, and pure vanilla extract, beating on high speed for two minutes until smooth.

Step 4: Mix the Tender Cake Batter

Turn your mixer to low speed and add half of your dry flour mixture, letting it mix for only five seconds. Pour in half of the room temperature buttermilk, mixing briefly, then repeat this process with the remaining flour and liquid. Stop mixing as soon as the last streak of flour disappears to keep the crumb tender and light. This one bowl, one pan, no fuss approach keeps things stress-free.

Step 5: Swirl the Cinnamon Sugar

Stir your brown sugar, flour, and ground cinnamon together in a small bowl with a fork, then stir in the warm melted butter. Drop small spoonfuls of this sweet cinnamon mixture all over your cake batter in the pan. Drag a butter knife gently through the batter in a figure-eight pattern to create beautiful, spiced ribbons.

Step 6: Bake Your Peach Cobbler Sheet Cake

Slide the pan onto the center rack of your oven and bake for 30 to 35 minutes. You’ll know it’s done when the top looks golden brown and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Let the cake cool completely in its pan on a wire rack while you prepare the remaining layers.

Step 7: Simmer the Jammy Peach Filling

Combine your chopped peaches, lemon juice, brown sugar, cinnamon, and nutmeg in a medium saucepan over medium-high heat. Once the peaches soften and release their sweet juices, stir in your cornstarch slurry and let the mixture bubble for one minute. Transfer this warm, glossy filling to a clean bowl and chill it in the refrigerator until it’s cold.

Step 8: Bake the Crispy Oatmeal Crumble

Spread a mixture of oats, flour, sugars, spices, and softened butter onto a parchment-lined baking sheet in an even layer. Bake at 350°F for about 10 minutes, stirring halfway through, until the crumbs smell toasted and look beautifully golden. Let this crispy crumble cool completely at room temperature to achieve that classic cobbler crunch.

Step 9: Beat the Fluffy Buttercream

Beat your softened butter in a stand mixer for two minutes until it looks incredibly light and creamy. Turn the speed to low, then slowly stream in your vanilla extract, fragrant vanilla bean paste, heavy cream, salt, and powdered sugar. Increase the speed to high and whip the frosting for three full minutes until it resembles fluffy clouds.

Step 10: Spoon Your Vanilla Bean Buttercream

Spoon your vanilla bean buttercream evenly across the cooled cake using a small offset spatula to spread it. Chill the cake in the freezer for five minutes, then spread the cold peach filling over the firm frosting and top with the crispy oatmeal crumble. Pipe a gorgeous decorative border around the edges of the pan using a piping bag fitted with a 1M star tip.

Easy-Baker Notes

A generous square of Peach Cobbler Sheet Cake served on a vintage white plate
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Room temperature ingredients are the secret to a smooth cake batter that doesn’t curdle in the bowl. Cold egg whites or chilly buttermilk can cause your creamed butter to seize, resulting in a dense bake. If your batter looks separated or curdled after adding the liquids, don’t panic. Warm up the bowl slightly by wrapping a warm towel around the base, then whisk in a tablespoon of your flour mixture to help bring the emulsion back together.

Always measure your flour with a spoon and level method rather than scooping directly from the bag with a measuring cup. Scooping packs the flour down, which can add up to twenty percent more flour to your batter and make your dessert dry. If your cake turns out dense and dry, this heavy-handed flour measurement is almost always the main culprit.

Chill your frosted cake for a few minutes before spreading the peach filling on top. This quick chill sets the buttercream so the wet fruit filling slides smoothly across the surface without mixing into your frosting. If you enjoy simple, fruit-forward desserts with zero fuss, you’ll love learning about our easy peach cake which relies on similar pantry staples.

Avoid over-mixing your batter once you’ve added the dry ingredients to the bowl. Stirring too much develops the gluten in the flour, which leads to a tough, bready texture instead of a soft, melting crumb. Mix only until the flour is incorporated, then set your spatula down immediately.

For extra inspiration on how to get the most out of stone fruit season, check out these great tips on prepping fruit for a rustic peach cobbler sheet cake over at Easy Peazy Lemon Squeeze.

Keep your oatmeal crumble extra crispy by baking it on a separate sheet pan rather than raw on top of the cake batter. Baking the crumble separately allows the butter to toast the oats beautifully, creating a crunchy texture that contrasts wonderfully with the soft cake.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you make a peach cobbler sheet cake using boxed cake mix?

You can start with a standard box of yellow or spice cake mix to save time on a busy afternoon. Prepare the cake mix according to the box directions, then swirl the cinnamon-sugar mixture directly into the batter before baking. Top the baked cake with your homemade peach filling and crispy oatmeal crumble as directed.

Can I use fresh peaches instead of canned?

Fresh, ripe peaches are wonderful when they’re in season because they offer a bright, natural flavor. However, canned peaches are a fantastic year-round alternative that saves you the trouble of peeling and slicing. If using canned peaches, drain them thoroughly before chopping to prevent excess moisture from making your cake soggy.

What is the best way to serve it?

This casual cake is best served slightly cool or at room temperature so the buttercream border holds its shape. Slice it into generous squares and serve it directly from the baking pan for a rustic touch. A scoop of vanilla bean ice cream on the side is always a welcome addition for dessert.

How long does it stay fresh?

This dessert stays incredibly soft and delicious for up to five days when stored in an airtight container in your refrigerator. Because of the fresh fruit filling and dairy-based buttercream, it shouldn’t be left on the counter. Slice off a piece whenever a weekday craving strikes and let it sit at room temperature for ten minutes before eating.

How do I keep the cake from getting soggy?

Cooking the peach filling until it’s thick and glossy helps prevent excess juice from soaking into the crumb. Be sure to let the cake, filling, and crumble cool completely before assembling your dessert. This barrier of fluffy vanilla buttercream also prevents the fruit juices from seeping directly into the cake base.

Can I freeze this sheet cake?

You can easily freeze the baked cake base without any of the toppings for up to three months. Wrap the cooled cake tightly in plastic wrap and aluminum foil before storing it in your freezer. When you’re ready to serve, thaw the cake at room temperature, then make the fresh buttercream and peach toppings.

Do I have to use buttermilk?

Buttermilk is highly recommended because its acidity reacts with the baking soda to create a light, tender crumb. If you don’t have any on hand, you can make a quick substitute in under five minutes. Stir one tablespoon of lemon juice or white vinegar into one cup of whole milk and let it sit until slightly curdled.

Simple Swaps

Swap out the fresh peaches for ripe plums, sweet nectarines, or fresh berries to suit whatever fruit you have sitting on your kitchen counter. Blueberries and blackberries pair incredibly well with the warm cinnamon base cake and spiced crumble. If you want to try a different fruit entirely, our popular fresh strawberry sheet cake offers a wonderful way to celebrate early summer berries.

Make a quick brown sugar glaze to drizzle over the top if you want to skip the vanilla buttercream entirely. Mix one cup of powdered sugar with two tablespoons of maple syrup and a splash of milk until smooth, then pour it over the warm oatmeal crumble. This lighter option is wonderful for a casual weekday breakfast slice when you’re enjoying your morning coffee in pajamas.

Add toasted pecans or chopped walnuts to your oatmeal crumble to give this comforting dessert an extra layer of nutty crunch. Stir one-half cup of finely chopped nuts into the oat mixture before spreading it on the baking sheet. This small addition makes the cake taste even more like a traditional, old-fashioned cobbler baked in a cast-iron skillet.

Slice & Serve

This comforting dessert looks beautiful served right out of the baking pan on a casual weekend afternoon. Bring the sheet pan straight to your kitchen table so family members can cut their own thick slices while the kettle boils. If you’re hosting a casual summer gathering, serve this cake alongside a big pitcher of unsweetened iced tea or cold brew coffee.

For a truly special treat, plate each slice with a generous scoop of homemade vanilla bean ice cream or a dollop of lightly sweetened whipped cream. The cold ice cream melts beautifully into the warm, jammy peach filling and crispy oat crumble layers. If you’re looking for a gorgeous alternative for a family Sunday dinner, our elegant peach cobbler pound cake is always a huge crowd-pleaser.

Peach Cobbler Sheet Cake: The Ultimate Peach Cobbler Cake Recipe for Summer!
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Bake It Soon

Baking should never feel like a chore or a test of patience when you want a sweet treat. This simple cake brings together everything we love about stone fruit cobblers with the ease of a casual sheet bake. With a soft spiced base, gooey peach filling, and crispy oats, it’s the ideal dessert for busy families who still love homemade flavor.

Give this comforting bake a try the next time you find a basket of ripe peaches on your kitchen counter. If you fall in love with this combination, make sure to save our gorgeous peach upside down cake recipe for your next weekend kitchen project. Share your beautiful baking creations with our community on Pinterest, follow us on Facebook, or join our friendly chat on Telegram to stay connected.

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Every week, Meagan shares simple cake recipes, time-saving tips, and real-life baking wins from a kitchen that understands busy. You've got this.