This little 3-ingredient strawberry cobbler is the kind of recipe that shows up when money is tight, time is short, and you still want to walk into a potluck carrying something warm and homemade. My grandma taught it to me one spring when we had more family coming than we had dollars in our purse. A pan of this comes out of the oven sweet, bubbly, and golden, with bright red strawberries peeking through a buttery crust. It’s the sort of simple Midwestern church-basement dessert that disappears faster than you’d ever expect, and no one guesses it started with just three things from the pantry and freezer.
Serve this cobbler warm, straight from the baking dish, with a scoop of vanilla ice cream or a spoonful of whipped cream melting into all those sweet, bubbly juices. It pairs nicely with simple, homestyle meals—think roast chicken, ham, or sloppy joes with a big green salad—because it feels familiar and comforting without being fussy. For a spring potluck, I like to set it out alongside a fruit salad or a bowl of lightly sweetened whipped cream so folks can help themselves. A cup of coffee or hot tea on the side makes it feel like an old-fashioned Sunday supper dessert.
3-Ingredient Strawberry Cobbler
Servings: 8

Ingredients
2 pounds frozen sliced strawberries (about 6–7 cups, unsweetened)
1 box (15.25 ounces) yellow cake mix, dry
1 cup (2 sticks/225 g) unsalted butter, melted
Directions
Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Have a 9x13-inch white ceramic baking dish (or similar) ready; there’s no need to grease it, as the butter in the recipe will keep things from sticking.
Spread the frozen sliced strawberries evenly in the bottom of the baking dish. No need to thaw them first; using them frozen helps the cobbler get nice and bubbly without overcooking the fruit.
Sprinkle the dry yellow cake mix evenly over the strawberries. Use your hands or a spoon to gently spread it so the berries are mostly covered, but don’t stir or mix it in—you want distinct layers so the top bakes into a crumbly, cobbler-style crust.
Slowly drizzle the melted butter over the entire surface of the dry cake mix, trying to moisten as much of the mix as you can. It’s fine if a few dry spots remain; those will bake into a slightly crunchy, golden topping.
Place the dish on a baking sheet to catch any bubbly overflow, then bake in the preheated oven for 40–50 minutes. The cobbler is done when the strawberry filling is thick and bubbly around the edges and the top is golden brown and crisp in spots, with bright red filling peeking through.
Remove from the oven and let the cobbler rest for at least 10–15 minutes before serving. This short rest helps the juices thicken so you get nice scoops instead of a runny puddle. Serve warm, scooping down through the buttery crust to get plenty of strawberries and syrup in each portion.
Variations & Tips
If you’d like a slightly tarter flavor, you can toss the frozen strawberries with a tablespoon or two of lemon juice before adding the cake mix. For a sweeter, more jammy filling, sprinkle 1/4–1/3 cup sugar over the berries before adding the cake mix, especially if your strawberries are on the tart side. A white or strawberry-flavored cake mix can be used in place of yellow for a different twist while still keeping it to three ingredients. If you only have salted butter, you can use it; the topping will just have a faint sweet-salty edge that many people enjoy. For smaller households, you can halve the recipe and bake it in an 8x8-inch dish, checking for doneness about 5–10 minutes earlier. Food safety tips: Use frozen strawberries straight from the freezer; do not let them sit out at room temperature for long before baking, as thawed fruit can become mushy and weepy. If you ever substitute fresh strawberries, rinse them under cool water, pat them very dry, and use them promptly; don’t soak them, as that can encourage faster spoilage. Once baked, let the cobbler cool to room temperature, then cover and refrigerate any leftovers within 2 hours. Reheat portions in the oven or microwave until hot all the way through before serving again.