This ultra-simple slow cooker dessert is the kind of back-pocket recipe that earns a permanent place in summer entertaining, especially when you want something warm and spoonable to contrast with cold vanilla ice cream. With only four ingredients, it leans into the old-fashioned appeal of dump-style desserts: fruit filling, cake mix, butter, and a little spice or nuts if you like. As it cooks, the top develops pale golden patches while the filling bubbles up in deeper copper tones around the edges, giving you a rustic cobbler-like bake that looks wonderfully homespun and requires very little hands-on work.
Serve this warm in shallow bowls with generous scoops of vanilla ice cream, where the melting cream can swirl into the caramelized fruit and cake layers. It also pairs nicely with lightly sweetened whipped cream, toasted pecans, or a drizzle of caramel sauce. If you are putting together a casual dessert table, offer it alongside strong coffee or iced cold brew to balance the sweetness.
4-Ingredient Slow Cooker National Ice Cream Day Swirling Pale Blonde and Copper Bake
Servings: 8
Ingredients
2 cans (21 ounces each) apple pie filling
Directions
1. Lightly grease the insert of a 4- to 6-quart slow cooker. Spoon the apple pie filling into the bottom and spread it into an even layer.
2. Sprinkle the dry cake mix evenly over the fruit, then dust the cinnamon across the top without stirring.
3. Drizzle the melted butter as evenly as possible over the cake mix so most of the surface is moistened. Cover and cook on High for 2 to 2 1/2 hours, or on Low for 4 hours, until the edges are deeply bubbly and the top is set with golden patches.
4. Turn off the slow cooker and let the dessert rest uncovered for 10 to 15 minutes so the filling thickens slightly. Scoop into bowls and serve warm with ice cream.
Variations & Tips
Peach version: Swap the apple pie filling for peach pie filling for a softer, sunnier fruit flavor that is especially good with butter pecan or vanilla bean ice cream.
Nuts for texture: Add a handful of chopped pecans or walnuts over the cake mix before drizzling on the butter if you want a little crunch against the soft filling.
Even topping tip: If you notice dry patches near the end of cooking, do not stir the dessert. Instead, spoon a little of the hot butter from wetter spots over the dry areas, then continue cooking briefly.
Make-ahead serving tip: This dessert holds well on the warm setting for a short time, making it useful for cookouts or family dinners when you want dessert ready before the meal begins. Just keep the lid slightly ajar at the end if you want to preserve some texture on top.