This cake sits somewhere between a classic cobbler and a simple traybake. The peaches sink slightly into the batter during baking, leaving a soft, fruit-topped crumb that holds its shape when sliced.
Spelt flour works particularly well here. It absorbs the peach juices without turning gummy, and its mild nuttiness balances the sweetness of ripe fruit.
The batter takes about 10 minutes to mix. You don’t need a stand mixer or any special equipment. One bowl, a whisk, and a 9-inch baking dish are all you need.
Fresh peaches give the best result in summer, but tinned peaches in natural juice work well year-round. The texture stays consistent either way.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
- One-bowl batter with no stand mixer needed
- Spelt crumb stays moist the next day
- Works with fresh, frozen, or tinned peaches
- Bakes in 25 minutes, slices cleanly when cool

Ingredient Notes
- White spelt flour: White spelt flour gives a lighter crumb than wholegrain spelt. You can substitute wholegrain spelt flour for a denser, nuttier result, but reduce it by 10 g and add an extra tablespoon of milk.
- Peaches: Ripe fresh peaches are ideal in summer. Tinned peaches in natural juice work well year-round – drain them thoroughly before slicing to prevent a wet base.
- Unsalted butter: Melted butter blends into the batter quickly without creaming. You can use a neutral oil such as sunflower oil as a dairy-free swap at the same weight.
- Sour cream: Sour cream adds moisture and a slight tang that balances the peach sweetness. Full-fat plain yogurt works as a direct substitute at the same quantity.
- Light brown sugar: Light brown sugar gives a gentle caramel note that complements peaches. Coconut sugar works as a substitute but darkens the crumb slightly.
- Baking powder: Check that your baking powder is fresh – spelt batters don’t have the same structure as wheat batters and rely on a full lift from leavening. Replace it every 6 months for consistent results.

Spelt Peach Cobbler Cake
Description
Spelt flour keeps the crumb tender and slightly nutty, while fresh peaches soften into a jammy layer as the cake bakes. The batter comes together in one bowl with no creaming required.
Ingredients
Cake batter
Peach topping
Instructions
Prepare
- Heat the oven to 180 C / 355 F. Grease a 9-inch baking dish with butter and line the base with parchment paper.
- If using fresh peaches, halve, pit, and slice each into 6 to 8 wedges. If using tinned peaches, drain and pat dry with kitchen paper, then slice.
Make the batter
- In a large bowl, whisk together the spelt flour, brown sugar, baking powder, salt, and cinnamon until evenly combined.
- In a separate jug, whisk the melted butter, sour cream, milk, eggs, and vanilla extract until smooth.
- Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and fold with a rubber spatula until just combined, about 12 to 15 folds. Stop when no dry flour is visible - the batter will be thick.
Assemble and bake
- Spread the batter evenly into the prepared dish using the spatula.
- Arrange the peach slices on top in a single layer, pressing them gently into the batter. They should sit mostly on the surface, not submerged.
- Sprinkle the 2 tablespoons of brown sugar evenly over the peaches. Dot the small pieces of butter across the top.
- Bake for 22 to 25 minutes, until the edges are set and golden and a skewer inserted into the center of the batter comes out clean.
- Remove from the oven and cool in the dish on a wire rack for at least 15 minutes before slicing. The peach layer firms as it cools.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 8
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 310kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 13g20%
- Saturated Fat 7g35%
- Cholesterol 72mg24%
- Sodium 140mg6%
- Potassium 220mg7%
- Total Carbohydrate 44g15%
- Dietary Fiber 3g12%
- Sugars 24g
- Protein 6g12%
- Vitamin A 520 IU
- Vitamin C 4 mg
- Calcium 80 mg
- Iron 2 mg
- Vitamin D 18 IU
- Vitamin E 1 mg
- Vitamin K 3 mcg
- Thiamin 0.12 mg
- Riboflavin 0.15 mg
- Niacin 2 mg
- Vitamin B6 0.05 mg
- Folate 18 mcg
- Vitamin B12 0.2 mcg
- Phosphorus 130 mg
- Magnesium 28 mg
- Zinc 0.8 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
Additional Notes
- Use ripe but firm peaches - very soft peaches release too much juice and make the base wet.
- Measure spelt flour by spooning into the cup and leveling off, not scooping directly from the bag.
- Room temperature eggs and sour cream blend more evenly and give a more consistent rise.
- Check the cake at 22 minutes - spelt bakes slightly faster than all-purpose flour in cake batters.
- Rest the cake 15 minutes before slicing so the peach layer firms enough to hold its shape.
