There’s a moment every fall when the air shifts. The leaves go golden, the evenings get cool, and suddenly all you want is something warm, spiced, and a little bit magical coming out of your oven.
That’s exactly what this Pumpkin Pecan Cobbler is.
I’ve been making this recipe for years now, and every single time I pull it out of the oven, someone in the room says, “Wait… how did that happen?” Because here’s the thing. This dessert makes its own caramel sauce. Right there in the pan. No stovetop. No double boiler. No extra pots to wash.
Just a tender, spiced pumpkin cake sitting on top of a bubbling, gooey caramel puddle that forms all on its own while it bakes.
Sounds like a trick, right? It kind of is. And it never gets old.

The whole thing takes about an hour from start to finish. Most of that time is the oven doing its thing while you sit back and enjoy the smell of cinnamon and brown sugar drifting through your kitchen.
| Prep Time | 15 minutes |
| Cook Time | 45 minutes |
| Total Time | 60 minutes |
| Servings | 8 |
| Difficulty | Easy |
What You’ll Need: Equipment
Nothing fancy here. Just a few basics you probably already own.
- A 9-inch pie dish (glass or ceramic works best)
- Two medium mixing bowls
- A whisk
- A rubber spatula
- A kettle or small saucepan to boil water
That’s it. Simple setup, big payoff.
The Ingredients
Before we dive in, one important note. Do not use pumpkin pie filling. I know the cans look similar at the store. But pumpkin pie filling already has added sugars, spices, and stabilizers baked in. It will completely throw off the texture and flavor of this recipe.
You want 100% pure canned pumpkin puree. Nothing else.
Also, spoon and level your flour. Don’t scoop directly from the bag. Scooping packs in extra flour and can make the batter too dense.
Here’s the full ingredient list:
| Ingredient | Quantity | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| For the Pumpkin Batter | ||
| All purpose flour | 1.25 cups | Spoon and level the flour |
| Baking powder | 2 teaspoon | Check the expiration date |
| Cinnamon | 1.5 teaspoon | Ground cinnamon |
| Ginger | ½ teaspoon | Ground ginger |
| Nutmeg | ½ teaspoon | Freshly grated or ground |
| Cloves | ¼ teaspoon | Ground cloves |
| Salt | ½ teaspoon | Fine sea salt works best |
| Canned pumpkin | ⅔ cup | Pure pumpkin puree only |
| White granulated sugar | ⅓ cup | Adds clean sweetness |
| Light brown sugar | ⅓ cup | Pack the sugar into the cup |
| Unsalted butter | ¼ cup | Melted and slightly cooled |
| Milk | ¼ cup | Whole milk provides the best richness |
| Vanilla bean paste | 2 teaspoon | Vanilla extract is a perfect substitute |
| For the Pecan Topping | ||
| Pecan halves | ¾ cup | Toast them slightly for extra flavor |
| White granulated sugar | ½ cup | Helps form the caramel sauce |
| Brown sugar | ½ cup | Pack this sugar as well |
| Cinnamon | ½ tsp | Adds a warm crust flavor |
| Salt | pinch | Balances the sweetness |
| Boiling water | 1.5 cups | Must be rapidly boiling |
Let’s Bake: Step-by-Step Instructions
Step 1: Preheat and Prep
Set your oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Place your 9-inch pie dish on the counter. You do not need to grease it. The butter in the batter and the sauce that forms during baking will take care of that.
Also, get your water boiling now. You want it ready and intensely hot when the time comes. A rolling boil, not just steaming.

Step 2: Mix the Dry Ingredients
Grab a medium mixing bowl. Add:
- The flour
- Baking powder and salt
- All four spices: cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and cloves
- Both sugars: white granulated and light brown
Whisk everything together until it looks uniform. If your brown sugar has any stubborn lumps, break them apart with your fingers. You want an even, fluffy dry mix.
Step 3: Mix the Wet Ingredients
In a separate, larger bowl, combine:
- The canned pumpkin puree
- Melted unsalted butter (let it cool slightly first so it doesn’t scramble anything)
- Milk
- Vanilla bean paste or vanilla extract
Whisk until smooth. The mixture will be a beautiful deep orange color. That’s your pumpkin doing its thing.
Step 4: Combine Wet and Dry
Pour the dry mixture into the wet bowl. Grab your rubber spatula and fold gently. Don’t stir hard. Don’t use the whisk.
Stop the moment you can’t see any more white flour streaks.
That’s it. Done.
Overmixing is the enemy here. It activates the gluten in the flour and turns your soft cobbler into something chewy and dense. A few gentle folds is all you need.
The batter will look very thick. Almost like a stiff cookie dough. That is completely normal and exactly what you want.

Scoop the batter into your pie dish and spread it to the edges in an even layer.
Step 5: Build the Pecan Topping
In a small bowl, mix together:
- Pecan halves
- White granulated sugar
- Brown sugar
- Cinnamon
- A generous pinch of salt
Toss until the pecans are coated. Then sprinkle this entire mixture evenly over the top of the raw pumpkin batter. Cover the whole surface, edge to edge.
Do not press the pecans into the batter. Just let them rest on top.

Step 6: The Magic Pour
Okay. This is the part that feels completely wrong the first time you do it.
Measure out exactly 1.5 cups of your rapidly boiling water. Then slowly pour it directly over the sugared pecan topping. Try to pour as evenly as possible across the whole dish.
Then put your spoon down. Step back.
Do not stir. Do not mix. Do not touch it.
The dish will look like a disaster. Pecans floating. Sugar dissolving. Water pooling on top of everything. It looks like you just ruined dessert.
You didn’t. I promise.
This is exactly how it’s supposed to look. As the cobbler bakes, the hot water pushes the dissolved sugars down through the batter. The cake rises to the top. The caramel sauce settles at the bottom. It’s basically science doing your dessert prep for you.
Stirring would break this whole process. So resist that urge with everything you’ve got.
Step 7: Bake
Carefully slide the dish onto the middle rack of your preheated oven.
Bake at 350 degrees Fahrenheit for 45 minutes.
You’ll know it’s ready when:
- The center looks set and doesn’t jiggle
- The edges are bubbling with a dark, rich caramel syrup
- Your kitchen smells absolutely incredible
Pull it out of the oven and let it rest on a wire rack for ten minutes. Don’t skip this part. The sauce needs that time to thicken up slightly. If you scoop too early, it’ll be more soup than syrup.
Serving
Use a large spoon and dig deep. You want to scoop all the way through the cake and get a good hit of that caramel sauce from the bottom.
Serve it warm. This is non-negotiable in my house.
Top it with a scoop of vanilla bean ice cream and watch it melt into the hot syrup. That cold-meets-hot contrast is honestly one of the best bites in all of fall baking. Freshly whipped cream or vanilla custard work beautifully too, if ice cream isn’t your thing.
Storing and Reheating
Got leftovers? Lucky you. Here’s what to know:
Let the cobbler cool completely, then cover the dish tightly with plastic wrap or foil. It keeps well in the refrigerator for up to four days.
One heads up though. The texture will change overnight. The cake absorbs some of the liquid as it sits, and the sauce firms up into something thick and fudge-like when cold. It’s still delicious, but different.
To bring it back to life, scoop a portion into a microwave-safe bowl and heat for about 30 seconds. The sauce will turn glossy and liquid again, just like when it first came out of the oven.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did my caramel sauce disappear?
There are a few possible reasons. The most common one is that the water wasn’t hot enough. You need a full, rapid boil, not just warm water. Second possibility: you baked it too long and the liquid evaporated. And finally, if you’re checking the next day, the cake absorbs the sauce overnight. Reheat it and most of the sauce will reappear.
Can I use pumpkin pie filling instead of pure pumpkin?
No. Pumpkin pie filling has its own sugars, spices, and stabilizers already mixed in. Using it will throw off the entire flavor and texture balance of this recipe. Always go with 100% pure canned pumpkin puree.
Do I really have to leave the boiling water unmixed?
Yes, absolutely. I know it looks wrong. But stirring breaks the self-saucing reaction. The hot water needs to push the dissolved sugars down through the batter naturally as it bakes. Trust it. Walk away. It works.
Can I make this ahead of time?
This one is best baked fresh. The baking powder starts activating the moment it hits the wet ingredients, and the boiling water needs to go in right before the dish goes into the oven. Prepping it in advance will affect the rise and texture. Plan to mix and bake this one on the same day you’re serving it.
Recipe Card: Pumpkin Pecan Cobbler
Prep time: 15 minutes Cook time: 45 minutes Yield: 8 servings
Dry Batter Ingredients:
- 1.25 cups all purpose flour
- 2 teaspoon baking powder
- 1.5 teaspoon cinnamon
- ½ teaspoon ginger
- ½ teaspoon nutmeg
- ¼ teaspoon cloves
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ⅓ cup white granulated sugar
- ⅓ cup light brown sugar
Wet Batter Ingredients:
- ⅔ cup canned pumpkin
- ¼ cup unsalted butter, melted
- ¼ cup milk
- 2 teaspoon vanilla bean paste or vanilla extract
Topping Ingredients:
- ¾ cup pecan halves
- ½ cup white granulated sugar
- ½ cup brown sugar
- ½ tsp cinnamon
- pinch of salt
- 1.5 cups boiling water
Instructions:
- Preheat your oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Place a 9-inch pie dish on the counter.
- Boil your water and keep it at a full rolling boil.
- Whisk all the dry batter ingredients together in a medium bowl.
- In a large bowl, whisk the wet batter ingredients until smooth.
- Fold the dry mixture into the wet mixture until just combined.
- Spread the thick batter evenly into the pie dish.
- In a small bowl, mix the pecans, sugars, cinnamon, and salt.
- Sprinkle the pecan topping evenly over the pumpkin batter.
- Pour exactly 1.5 cups of boiling water over the topping. Do not stir.
- Bake for 45 minutes until the center is set and the sauce is bubbling at the edges.
- Let cool for ten minutes before scooping. Serve warm with ice cream.

Magic Pumpkin Pecan Cobbler
Ingredients
Method
- Preheat your oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Place a 9-inch pie dish (glass or ceramic) on the counter. Do not grease the dish.
- Start your water boiling in a kettle or saucepan; it must be at a rolling boil when needed.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, salt, spices (cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, cloves), and both sugars until uniform and fluffy.
- In a separate, larger bowl, whisk together the pumpkin puree, melted butter, milk, and vanilla until smooth.
- Gently fold the dry mixture into the wet mixture using a rubber spatula. Stop once streaks of flour disappear. The batter will be very thick.
- Scoop the batter into the pie dish and spread it to the edges in an even layer.
- Mix the pecan halves, sugars, cinnamon, and salt in a small bowl. Sprinkle this mixture evenly over the raw batter without pressing it in.
- Slowly and evenly pour exactly 1.5 cups of rapidly boiling water over the topping. Do not stir.
- Bake at 350°F for 45 minutes until the center is set and edges are bubbling with syrup.
- Let the cobbler rest on a wire rack for 10 minutes to allow the sauce to thicken before serving warm.
