Yeah, that's what we usually had growing up.My mother's cobbler was always made with something that resembled graham cracker-like crust, though I don't know exactly what she used, making it seem essentially like the "dropped pie" model.
I would believe that - and google seems to confirm it (even though it means I've been calling my dump cakes cobblers all these years).
You really know your bake.Here's a selection of names for items in the family:
Cobbler, crisp, crumble, crunch, betty, buckle, long cake, boy bait, grunt, slump, pandowdy, sonker.
And sometimes the differences are very finicky. Like, a grunt is a cobbler, but it is not baked - it is cooked in a closed dutch oven on top of the stove, so the biscuits are more steamed than baked. In a pandowdy, you roll out the biscuit topping in one piece, and partway through cooking you stop, break it up, and push the topping down into the fruit.
The number of people who care about the differences between your dump cake and a cobbler is small.
My mother's cobbler was always made with something that resembled graham cracker-like crust, though I don't know exactly what she used, making it seem essentially like the "dropped pie" model.
You really know your bake.
Im great on a grill, smoker, or stir fry wok. Im not a good baker tho. I only do cornbread.My wife and I are hobby cooks.
But does it bring all the boys to the yard?boy bait,