When you want an easy summer dessert without turning on the oven, this 3-ingredient slow cooker blackberry dessert is a smart little trick to keep in your back pocket. Frozen blackberries break down beautifully as they cook, creating a deeply colored, jammy fruit base, while cake mix and butter turn into a cobbler-like topping with almost no effort. It has the spirit of a fruit dump cake, a very American style of home dessert that became popular because it delivers comforting results with pantry staples and minimal hands-on work.

Serve this warm on its own or spoon it into bowls with vanilla ice cream, whipped cream, or a dollop of lightly sweetened Greek yogurt. If you want to dress it up a bit, a few fresh blackberries and a sprig of mint make it look company-ready, and for drinks, iced tea, coffee, or even a glass of cold milk all pair nicely with the rich berry flavor.

3-Ingredient Slow Cooker Summer Blackberry Dessert

Servings: 8

Finished blackberry slow cooker dessert in a serving bowl
Finished blackberry slow cooker dessert in a serving bowl

Ingredients

1 bag (32 ounces) frozen blackberries

1 box (15.25 ounces) yellow cake mix
1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, melted

Directions

1. Lightly grease the insert of a slow cooker. Pour the frozen blackberries into the bottom and spread them into an even layer.

2. Sprinkle the dry cake mix evenly over the blackberries, covering the fruit as completely as possible without stirring.

3. Drizzle the melted butter all over the cake mix, trying to moisten as much of the surface as you can. A few dry spots are fine.

4. Cover and cook on High for 2 to 3 hours or on Low for 4 to 5 hours, until the berries are bubbling around the edges and the topping is set.

5. Let the dessert rest for 15 to 20 minutes before scooping so the juices thicken slightly. Serve warm.

Variations & Tips

Lemon Brightness: Add 1 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest over the blackberries before the cake mix for a fresher, brighter flavor that plays especially well with the berries.

Cake Mix Swap: White cake mix, butter cake mix, or even vanilla cake mix all work well here. Each gives a slightly different sweetness and crumb, but the method stays the same.

Texture Tip: Slow cooker desserts do not brown the way oven-baked cobblers do, so don’t wait for a deeply browned top. Look instead for bubbling fruit and a topping that no longer looks wet and powdery.

Make It Richer: If you like, add a pinch of cinnamon or a very light dusting of nutmeg to the cake mix before adding the butter. It is still simple, but the flavor becomes a little warmer and more rounded.

Serving Tip: This dessert is at its best warm, about 15 to 30 minutes after cooking. If you have leftovers, refrigerate them and reheat gently; the fruit layer will thicken further as it chills.