Dewberry cobbler is your reward
Picking dewberries is a wonderful warm-day pastime. When I was young, my friends and I would march out to the wilder parts of my suburban Houston neighborhood—such as the bayou, vacant lots or the rough patch next to the golf course—and brave water moccasins, thorns and poison ivy to score some of these black orbs, warm from the sun and ready to pop in your mouth.
Usually, we’d eat them straight from the bush, smearing our t-shirts and shorts with the dark, sticky juice. But sometimes we’d be more organized and bring a container so we could pick them and then take them home to our parents so they could make dewberry cobbler for dessert.

Spending plenty of time on a farm, I know that when you venture into a bramble you need to wear strong boots filled with sulfur to keep those chiggers at bay. But what was cool at the farm was not cool in Houston, and so we’d usually be wearing at best tennis shoes and at worst flip flops as we made our way through the berry patch. Needless to say, you can get scuffed up something ugly after a bout of picking dewberries if you’re not properly clothed. But no matter—the joy of finding food in the wild mitigated any cosmetic damage done to our legs.
Between my mom’s organic garden in the backyard and my family’s farms, I had plenty of experience with food coming out of the ground. But there was something special about dewberries. Perhaps it was because we suffered greatly to get to them. Or perhaps it was because there were never any grown-ups involved in our foraging adventures. Or perhaps it was just because this wild food tasted so darn good.
Some argue that blackberries and dewberries are one and the same. I don’t know the answer to this. And sadly, I haven’t seen dewberries growing in any New York City vacant lots or in Central Park (though if there are dewberries here, please let me know!) so I can’t do an immediate taste comparison. But we do have blackberries and they are a decent substitute for dewberries.

I like to make a cobbler with my berries, though they could also be made into jam, juice or tarts. What do you make with yours?
And don’t get me wrong—a blackberry cobbler is nothing to sniff at. But I know that it would taste even better if I had made it with berries I had picked myself, berries still glistening with the morning’s mist that gives the berry its proper name—dewberry.
Dewberry cobbler
Ingredients
Filling ingredients:
- 4 cups dewberries or blackberries
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 2 tablespoons cornstarch
- 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon lemon juice
Crust ingredients:
- 1/2 stick of butter
- 1 cup of flour
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1/2 cup of buttermilk
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350° F.
- Place the rinsed berries in a large cast-iron skillet or 9-inch round cake pan, and toss the berries with the sugar, cornstarch, cinnamon and lemon juice. Let them macerate for 20 minutes.
- To make the crust, melt the butter on low in a pan, and then stir in the flour, sugar, baking powder, buttermilk, and salt. The dough will be slightly sticky, moist yet pliable.
- Pat out the dough and place it over the berries.
- Bake 40 minutes or until light brown and bubbling.








Looks like a blackberry. Didn’t they have a Dewberry compete in the first season Of Hell’s Kitchen ?
My husband and MIL say that Dewberries are larger than blackberries, but both are yummy! I remember, as a kid picking berries in Ark. at my grandparents farm.We were dodging snakes and June bugs to get to these treasures!They were worth it!
Definitely making me homesick– and hungry!
Oh, and I grew up west of Houston and never thought of dewberries and blackberries as being the same thing.
I’ll confirm with my experience that dewberries and blackberries, while similar, are definitely not the same. Dewberries are almost like a cross between a raspberry and a blackberry (at least in color, sort of) and they have a little of the tenderness that raspberries have that is sometimes lacking in market blackberries. And they come into season much earlier than blackberries do. But yes. Blackberries would be a good substitute, but I like to think that I might be able to tell the difference if presented with both.
My mom grew up in Wharton, and we’d drive out there to visit my grandmother, and the two of them would go off (I was too young to brave the woods back then) and come home with their hands looking like they were covered in thousands of paper cuts (a price worth paying, I think), with baskets and baskets of dewberries.
I think I’ll be a bit of a Texas snob here and contend that dewberries (true dewberries, that is) can only be found in East Texas. Yeah, yeah. I know you can probably find them elsewhere, but I just can’t think of them as the dewberry of my youth unless they come from Texas… sigh.
We moved to a little town in central Texas (Oldenburg, 7 miles from Round Top) last year. What we thought were wild roses turned out to be Dewberries! And to think we were about to spray them. This is the 2nd year picking and they are on the stove right now getting prepared for jam! And a few cobblers.
Beez–So glad you didn’t spray them! Enjoy your bounty of dewberries!
In abut three weeks or so, we are doing some baking at school (I’m a culinary school student). Now I know what I want to make!
Cheers.