This slow cooker 3-ingredient peach sweet tea cobbler is exactly the kind of dessert that disappears at a backyard barbecue. It leans into a very American shortcut tradition—using pantry staples to mimic the flavor and texture of a classic Southern cobbler without turning on the oven. Here, canned peaches provide the syrupy fruit base, sweet tea stands in for the usual sugar-and-liquid mixture, and a simple yellow cake mix bakes up into a golden, buttery crust right in the slow cooker. It’s practical, unfussy, and perfect for summer when you want something warm and nostalgic but don’t want to babysit the oven.
Serve this cobbler warm, spooned into shallow bowls or onto small dessert plates so you can catch all the syrupy peach juices. A scoop of vanilla ice cream or a dollop of lightly sweetened whipped cream plays beautifully with the caramelized edges and tender fruit. For a full backyard barbecue spread, pair it with grilled chicken or ribs, corn on the cob, and a big green salad. A cold glass of unsweetened iced tea or sparkling water with lemon helps balance the sweetness, while coffee makes it feel a bit more like a sit-down dessert if you’re serving it after dinner.
Slow Cooker 3-Ingredient Peach Sweet Tea Cobbler
Servings: 8
Ingredients
2 cans (29 ounces each) sliced peaches in heavy syrup, undrained
1 box (15.25 ounces) yellow cake mix
1 1/2 cups prepared sweet iced tea (store-bought or homemade, well chilled)
Directions
Lightly grease the insert of a 5- to 6-quart slow cooker with butter or nonstick spray to help prevent sticking and to encourage those caramelized edges.
Pour both cans of peaches with all of their syrup into the bottom of the slow cooker and spread them into an even layer so the fruit covers the base.
Sprinkle the dry yellow cake mix evenly over the peaches, covering the surface from edge to edge. Do not stir; you want a distinct fruit layer underneath and a cake layer on top.
Slowly drizzle the sweet iced tea over the dry cake mix, trying to moisten as much of the surface as possible without disturbing the peach layer below. Use the back of a spoon to gently press any very dry spots of cake mix into the liquid, but avoid fully mixing it in.
Cover the slow cooker with its lid and cook on HIGH for 2 to 2 1/2 hours, or until the top is mostly set, the edges are deep golden brown, and the peach syrup is bubbling up around the sides. The center should look moist but not soupy; it will firm slightly as it stands.
Turn off the heat and let the cobbler rest, uncovered, for 15 to 20 minutes to thicken. As it cools, the syrup will concentrate and the cake layer will develop a moist, spoonable crumb with sticky, caramelized edges.
Spoon the warm cobbler into shallow bowls or onto dessert plates, making sure each serving gets both golden cake and tender peaches. Serve as-is or top with ice cream or whipped cream.
Variations & Tips
To lean more into the tea flavor, use a strong-brewed black tea for the sweet tea component; you can brew it double strength and sweeten it while hot, then cool before using. For a slightly less sweet dessert, substitute one can of peaches in heavy syrup with peaches in juice, or cut the sweet tea back to 1 1/4 cups and replace the remaining 1/4 cup with plain brewed tea or water. If you prefer a more spiced, almost pie-like profile, sprinkle 1 to 2 teaspoons of ground cinnamon or a pinch of nutmeg over the peaches before adding the cake mix (this technically adds an ingredient, but the base 3-ingredient formula still works as written). You can also use white cake mix for a lighter, more delicate crumb, or a butter-flavored yellow mix for extra richness. For a firmer, more cake-like texture, cook closer to 2 1/2 hours; for a softer, spoon-bread style cobbler, check around the 2-hour mark. Food safety tips: Always use canned peaches that are within their expiration date and whose cans show no signs of bulging, rust, or dents along the seams. Keep the sweet tea refrigerated until you’re ready to assemble the cobbler to minimize any bacterial growth, especially in hot weather. Once cooked, do not leave the cobbler out at room temperature for more than 2 hours; cool leftovers promptly, transfer to a covered container, and refrigerate for up to 3 days. Reheat individual portions in the microwave until steaming hot before serving.