Homemade Peach Cobbler

Lancaster, PA, USA
A cooking post is not something that I ever thought I would post about on this blog. Mostly because I'm pretty new to the cooking world, considering I'm 22 years old but have only really cooked for the last three years. However, I had a meeting at work Tuesday where there was a potluck gathering of food. I wanted to impress my new coworkers with something inherently Georgia, so my mind set to work.


I soon realized that I should just make something, because after all, cooking is not much unlike chemistry--only you get to eat the product at the end of the experiment! I've been obsessed with the farmer's market peaches and decided I should make a cobbler (to give credit where credit is due, Daniel helped me make this decision)! I found a recipe online (here) that is the recipe for Mary Mac's Tea Room's peach cobbler recipe. And thus my cobbler adventure began!

First I gathered up my ingredients.
Things to make a successful peach cobbler: be southern, love peaches, and have a "can-do attitude." ((The being southern part is actually optional))


Next I had to prepare the peaches.
This was perhaps the messiest I've ever gotten while cooking. The peaches were so good and ripe they had juices going everywhere


Then I prepared the dough for the top of the cobbler (twice, because I misread the instructions the first time).

Then I kept hoping this wouldn't turn out awful while slathering the top with butter (this part came only after slathering the inside with butter). 
And I baked it for an hour and have my apartment smell like the beautifulness that can only come from homemade cobbler.

Then I pulled it out of the oven and marveled at the fact that I seemed to have made a perfectly good peach cobbler, just like Mary Mac's. 

And the next day during the meeting, I realized it tasted just as good as Mary Mac's too.

And to quote the lovely Hannah Hart because this did take me all night to make and sometimes it's just better to make a poor man's peach cobbler because we've all got stuff to do...

"Do you ever notice that when people make things from scratch that suddenly means they're better than you? Just 'cause you made it from scratch doesn't mean I couldn't, I just didn't, cause I was doing other things."