Food

Cobbler vs. Crisp | Funny Names for Old-Fashioned Fruit Desserts

Cobbler vs. crisp? Slump vs. buckle? Learn the difference between the many funny names for fruity old fashioned desserts, plus recipes!

Coffee By Design | Portland, Maine

Photo Credit : Katherine Keenan
With New England summer in full swing, our gardens, shopping carts, and countertops are overflowing with fresh produce. If you’re looking to make quick use of the season’s fruits and berries in a traditional yet simple and delicious dessert, turn to the following words: Slumps; Grunts; Buckles; Bettys; Crumbles; Crisps; Cobblers; Pandowdys. Add a few exclamation marks and it sounds like a comic book action sequence, but in truth, it’s a series of names for old-fashioned fruit desserts, distinguished by their topping styles and cooking methods. Sometimes the difference between two dishes is slight enough to be virtually undetectable, and sometimes the passage of time and merging of recipes have resulted in a dish being called a crisp when it’s really a crumble, or a pie when it’s really a pandowdy. So what are the differences between these funny names for old-fashioned fruit desserts? Fear not! I can help. Bear in mind, though, that there are a lot of regional variations in how folks describe these old-fashioned desserts, so you might call it something slightly different.

Guide to Funny Names for Old-Fashioned Fruit Desserts

Grunts

Grunts are made up of a layer of cooked fruit, usually in a cast iron skillet or kettle, topped midway with spoonfuls of biscuit dough. The skillet is then covered and returned to the stovetop, where the steam cooks the biscuits. They supposedly got their name because of the sound the fruit makes while it cooks, or as an ode to the sound the eater makes once he takes his first bite. You be the judge.

Grunt Recipe: Blueberry Grunt

Orchard Fruit Slump
Orchard Fruit Slump
Photo Credit : Heath Robbins

Slumps

Slumps are grunts that are baked uncovered in the oven instead of steamed on the stovetop. Slumps can be made in a casserole dish or a skillet. The supposedly got their name because of the way the dish slumps over once spooned onto the plate, or as an ode to the blissful effect it has on the eater once he takes his first bite. Again, you be the judge.

Slump Recipes: Peach-Blackberry SlumpOrchard Fruit Slump

Cherry Rhubarb Crumble
Cherry Rhubarb Crumble
Photo Credit : Keller + Keller

Crumbles

What are crumbles? Crumbles consist of a layer of fruit in a casserole dish, on which a soft streusel topping made from flour, butter, and sugar has been sprinkled. Nuts are a nice addition, like the slivered almonds pictured in the cherry rhubarb crumble pictured above.

Crumble Recipes: Cherry Rhubarb CrumblePeach-Strawberry-Ginger Crumble

Blueberry Cobbler
Blueberry Cobbler
Photo Credit : Kindra Clineff

Cobblers

What are cobblers? Cobblers are fresh fruit covered with a cake or dropped biscuit topping before baking. The dropped biscuit topping gives the cobbler the appearance of a cobbled road, which is likely how it got its name. Cobblers are one of the most popular old-fashioned fruit desserts, with good reason.

Cobbler Recipes: Blueberry Cobbler, Peach Cobbler, Plum & Raspberry Cobbler

blueberry buckle recipe
Blueberry Buckle
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

Buckles

What are buckles? Buckles are perhaps the easiest of the old-fashioned fruit desserts to identify because they resemble cake more than pie. A buckle is a layer of yellow cake batter, topped with berries and a generous handful of crumb topping. As the cake bakes, it rises up between the berries, creating a buckled surface. Sometimes the berries are also folded into the cake batter. Buckles resemble a berry-studded coffee cake and taste heavenly. Make use of late summer’s blueberries in a buckle come August.

Buckle Recipes: Blueberry Buckle with Maple Whipped CreamButtermilk Apple Buckle

Strawberry Rhubarb Crisp
Strawberry Rhubarb Crisp
Photo Credit : Brenda Darroch

Crisps

What are fruit crisps? Crisps are the same as crumbles, only their streusel topping is certainly heartier and crispier, usually thanks to the addition of oats and nuts. Apple crisp is the perennial old-fashioned fruit dessert favorite in the fall, topped with a scoop of vanilla ice cream.

Crisp Recipes: Strawberry-Rhubarb CrispBlueberry Crisp with Oatmeal ToppingOld-Fashioned Apple Crisp

Apple Brown Betty Recipe
Apple Brown Betty
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

Bettys

What are bettys? Bettys (or “Brown Bettys”) are kissing cousins with bread puddings. Bettys are made of fruit baked between layers of sweet, buttered cracker or bread crumbs. Apple is the most popular Betty. Put her on your list come September when apple season is in glorious full swing, or add one to your Thanksgiving menu.

Betty Recipes: Apple Brown BettyBlueberry Betty

Apple Pandowdy Recipe
Skillet Apple Pandowdy
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

Pandowdys

What are pandowdys? Pandowdys are anything but. This dish turns up as a favorite of John Adams in one of my “president cookbooks,” which claims he celebrated Independence Day with a bowl of the apple variety. Pandowdys start off looking like a pie (bottom crust optional), but the real fun occurs towards the end of baking, when the cook “dowdys” the crust by slashing it and lightly pressing it down so that the bubbling fruit cooks up around the flaky layers. The effect can be decidedly dowdy, but the taste will be divine.

Pandowdy Recipes: Skillet Apple PandowdyElderberry Pandowdy

Make good use of New England’s sweet offerings this summer and early fall with one of these traditional fruit desserts. Which old-fashioned fruit desserts are your favorites? This post was first published in 2011 and has been updated. 

Aimee Tucker

More by Aimee Tucker

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  1. I love fruit. But, I LOVE desserts! Thank you for decoding such a mystery. You *almost* have me wishing away the summer for an exchange of warm apple crisp.

  2. Thoroughly enjoyed finding out the differencebetween the desserts. The recipes sounded marvelous, I hope to try them soon. I love recipes!

  3. I hadn’t heard of some of these desserts but they all sound wonderful. I LOVE fruit desserts like this. Reading this article made me hungry! Yum! I wish there were more recipes so I could try out all the desserts listed.

  4. I really enjoyed this article, but……….I would love to see recipes for good old-fashioned COBBLERS…..especially blackberry. Or is that more “southern” like me??

  5. They are all delicious, no matter how you fix them, and then add a dollop of rich vanilla ice cream or fresh whipped cream, and have yourself a ball with every morsel you put in your mouth.. I have made the craziest concoctions of Old Fashioned Fruit Desserts, am a southern girl from the Heart of the Bluegrass, and still enjoy exploring with the best fruit of the season! And they are the easiest to whip up!

  6. In Canada, Bumbleberry Pie, In Finger Lakes country in New York, I purchased Fruits of the Forest pie. I combined them, put it all in a 9 x 13 pan, topped with a soft sweet, biscuit dough and baked. Fruits I included were strawberries, rhubarb, blueberries, apples, peaches, and whatever else was in my freezer!
    Great hit with the guys at our “Dessert for a dollar” days at church, to raise money for camperships.

  7. What a great informative article!!! I can’t wait to try a number of the recipes!! Thank you!!

  8. My daughter and family took your summer book, went to Portland and did EVERYTHING suggested for a weekend and had “ the most enjoyable fun weekend with the 2kids and Omi in tow.

  9. Wouldn’t it be nice if any NE restaurant you walked into could, after divine dinner offerings, serve deserts of the the types noted in your article. Awful good! -John Gibson

  10. No one else could have given these distinctions so succinctly! Thanks! I’ll now be able to answer some friends’ and relatives’ questions. 🙂