Smoked bourbon peach cobbler lands with that rare mix of rustic and polished: bubbling peaches at the bottom, a biscuit top that bakes up golden and craggy, and just enough wood smoke to turn a familiar dessert into something people remember. The bourbon doesn’t make it taste boozy so much as round and warm, giving the peaches a deeper edge that keeps the filling from tasting one-note sweet.
What makes this version work is the balance between juicy fruit and a topping that can stand up to all that steam. The cornstarch thickens the filling as it bakes, so you get a spoonable, glossy cobbler instead of a soupy skillet. Cold butter in the biscuit dough is just as important; it creates little pockets of steam that help the topping rise even in the smoker, where the heat is gentler and slower than an oven.
Below, I’ll walk through the one part that matters most with smoked cobbler: how to keep the biscuit topping tender while the peaches turn syrupy underneath. There’s also a note on wood choice, because the right smoke brings out the fruit instead of burying it.
The peaches turned jammy without falling apart, and the biscuit topping stayed crisp on top even after we spooned ice cream over it. The bourbon and cherry smoke together were such a good combo.
Save this smoked bourbon peach cobbler for the next cookout dessert when you want bubbling peaches, a golden biscuit crust, and just enough smoke to make people ask what you did differently.
The Smoke Is a Seasoning, Not the Main Event
With cobbler, too much smoke is the easiest way to throw the whole dessert off. Peaches already bring perfume and sweetness, and bourbon adds its own warmth, so the smoke should sit in the background and deepen those notes instead of overpowering them. Fruit woods like peach, apple, or cherry give you a gentle, sweet smoke that reads as polished rather than harsh.
The other thing people get wrong is baking temperature. A smoker set around 350F gives the biscuit topping enough heat to rise and brown while the filling bubbles underneath. If the smoker runs too cool, the peaches release juice before the topping can set, and you end up with pale dough sitting on top of soup.
- Smoked wood chips — Peach, apple, or cherry are the right choices here because they add fragrance without bitterness. Hickory or mesquite will bully the fruit.
- Bourbon — You don’t need much. A quarter cup is enough to sharpen the peach flavor and add depth; any more and the filling can start tasting sharp instead of rounded.
- Cornstarch — This is what turns the peach juices into a glossy filling. Flour won’t thicken as cleanly, and the texture won’t stay as bright.
- Cold butter — Cold cubes are nonnegotiable for the biscuit topping. They melt in the smoker and leave little pockets that make the crust tender instead of dense.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Skillet
The peaches are the backbone, and fresh ones are worth using when they’re in season because they hold their shape and bring a cleaner flavor. If your peaches are underripe, let them sit on the counter a day or two before using them; hard peaches never soften into the same lush filling. Frozen peaches work in a pinch, but thaw and drain them first so you’re not fighting extra water.
The bourbon should be something you’d actually sip, but it doesn’t need to be expensive. A midrange bottle is fine because the alcohol mostly cooks off, leaving behind warmth and a little caramel edge. The cream brings the biscuit dough together; heavy cream gives the topping more richness than milk and helps it brown with a soft, tender interior.
The lemon juice and cinnamon keep the filling from tasting flat. Lemon wakes up the peaches, and cinnamon bridges the fruit, bourbon, and smoke without making the cobbler taste like a spice cake. The sugar levels here are balanced for ripe peaches, so if your fruit is very sweet, you can trim a tablespoon or two from the filling sugar without hurting the texture.
Building the Cobbler So the Top Bakes and the Filling Bubbles
Mix the peaches before the topping goes on
Toss the sliced peaches with bourbon, sugar, cinnamon, vanilla, lemon juice, and cornstarch right in the skillet. You want every slice coated, and the cornstarch should disappear into the fruit juices rather than sit in white streaks. If the peaches look a little dry at first, keep tossing for another minute; the juices will start to release and create the syrup that thickens as it cooks.
Cut the butter in until the dough looks rough
Work the cold butter into the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt until the mixture looks sandy with pea-sized bits of butter still showing. That uneven texture is what gives the biscuit topping lift. When you add the cream, stop as soon as a shaggy dough forms; overmixing turns the topping tough and dense instead of tender and craggy.
Drop the dough, don’t spread it
Spoon the biscuit dough over the peaches in mounds. Leave gaps, because the filling needs places to bubble up and the steam needs room to move through the topping. A fully sealed layer traps moisture and can leave the center of the biscuit pale and gummy.
Cook until the fruit is visibly boiling
Set the skillet in the smoker and let it go until the topping is deeply golden and the peach filling is bubbling all around the edges and through the gaps. Those bubbles are the signal that the cornstarch has activated and the juices have thickened. If the top browns before the filling bubbles, the smoker is running too hot; if the fruit is still quiet after 60 minutes, it needs more time.
How to Adapt This for Different Pans, Fruit, and Diets
Dairy-Free Biscuit Topping
Swap the heavy cream for full-fat canned coconut milk and use a cold plant-based butter with a high fat content. The topping won’t taste exactly the same, but it still bakes up tender and rich. Keep everything cold so the biscuit dough holds its texture in the smoker.
No Bourbon Version
Leave out the bourbon and add an extra tablespoon of lemon juice plus a splash of peach nectar or water. You’ll lose the warm, caramel note, but the cobbler will still taste bright and peach-forward. This is the version to use if you’re serving kids or anyone avoiding alcohol.
Frozen Peaches When Fresh Aren’t Available
Thaw the peaches completely and drain off excess liquid before mixing them with the sugar and cornstarch. Frozen fruit tends to release more water, so skipping that drain step leaves you with a thinner filling. You may need the full 65 minutes to get the center bubbling properly.
Cast Iron to Baking Dish
If you don’t have a cast iron skillet, use a shallow baking dish that fits your smoker and preheat it lightly while the smoker comes up to temperature. Cast iron gives you the best heat retention and the crispiest edges, but the recipe still works in ceramic or metal as long as the dish isn’t too deep.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The biscuit topping softens as it sits, but the flavor holds well.
- Freezer: Freeze baked cobbler in a tightly wrapped pan or airtight container for up to 2 months. Thaw in the fridge before reheating; the topping won’t stay as crisp, but it does freeze better than most fruit desserts.
- Reheating: Warm in a 325F oven, uncovered, until the filling is hot and the top firms back up, about 15 to 20 minutes for a smaller portion. The mistake to avoid is microwaving it straight from the fridge, which turns the biscuit topping rubbery and makes the fruit weep.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Smoked Bourbon Peach Cobbler
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat your smoker to 350°F and add peach, apple, or cherry wood chips for steady smoke.
- Wait for the temperature to stabilize at 350°F, using the smoke drift as your visual cue that it’s running cleanly.
- In a 10-inch cast iron skillet, toss the sliced fresh peaches with bourbon, granulated sugar, cinnamon, vanilla extract, lemon juice, and cornstarch.
- Stir until the peaches look glossy and evenly coated, with cornstarch disappearing into the liquid.
- In a bowl, combine all-purpose flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt.
- Cut in the cold butter until the mixture looks like coarse crumbs.
- Stir in the heavy cream just until a shaggy biscuit dough forms, with no dry flour pockets remaining.
- Drop spoonfuls of biscuit dough over the peach filling, leaving some peach filling visible between mounds.
- Place the cast iron skillet in the smoker and cook for 55–65 minutes at 350°F, until the topping is deeply golden and the peach filling is bubbling.
- Look for cracked, set biscuit edges and active bubbling around the sides as the final visual cue.
- Let the smoked bourbon peach cobbler rest for 10 minutes so the filling thickens slightly.
- Serve warm, topping each portion with vanilla ice cream if desired, while the crust is still warm.