The Country Cobbler alla Italiana – Pizza Burger Pasta Cobbler

The Country Cobbler alla Italiana – Pizza Burger Pasta Cobbler

The Country Cobbler alla Italiana—Pizza Burger Pasta Cobbler

Introduction

When everyone’s hungry, you want a dinner that’s hard to mess up and easy to love. This Pizza‑Burger Pasta Cobbler starts with sausage, beef, marinara, and beer, then turns into a thick, cheesy pasta bake topped with savory “cobbles” that brown right on the lid-heat. Bring a Dutch oven and an appetite—this one feeds a crowd.

You may be here for the pasta weight vs volume conversion. Here is a helpful chart. BE AWARE that pasta volume measurements will sometimes not be accurate: 

300 g → Cups Conversion

Elbow Macaroni (regular size)

  • 100 g ≈ 1 cup

  • 300 g ≈ 3 cups

Small Elbow Macaroni

  • 115–120 g ≈ 1 cup

  • 300 g ≈ 2.5 to 2.6 cups

Ditalini

  • 140–150 g ≈ 1 cup

  • 300 g ≈ 2 to 2.15 cups

Affiliate Links

Kitchen Scale: https://amzn.to/4usntLV

Wok Shovel: https://amzn.to/4f3kSn7

12-inch Deep Camp Cast Iron Dutch Oven: https://amzn.to/4wap4H

This is a true Dutch oven bake—the kind where you build flavor in the pot, let the pasta finish in the sauce, then shift to lid heat to brown a cobbled, biscuit-style top. It’s one of those meals that feels like a mashup (pizza night + burger night + casserole comfort), but it cooks with a simple rhythm: brown, simmer, top, bake. Whether you’re cooking over coals at camp or using your oven at home, the goal is the same—bubbling edges, a set sauce, and a golden top you can scoop into bowls.

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The Cast Iron

Cast iron choice (a.k.a. choose your fighter)

For this bake, my cast iron of choice is a 12-inch deep camp cast-iron Dutch oven. Deep walls. Big capacity. Lid made for coals. It’s the setup that lets you brown meat, simmer sauce, cook pasta, add cheese, and still have room for those cobbled drop-dough “river stones” on top—without the whole thing trying to climb out of the pot like it’s late for a meeting.
That said, I know we don’t all own the same iron, and I’m not here to gatekeep dinner. Here’s how the other common sizes behave:

12-inch regular (standard depth)

This one will work just fine, but you’ve got less headroom. Translation: when the sauce starts bubbling and the topping starts puffing, you’re playing closer to the rim.
How to win: keep the top level (don’t mound the filling), leave a few steam gaps between cobbles, and don’t treat the pot like it’s a storage unit. The 12 regular is forgiving—just not reckless.

10-inch deep

A deep 10 will make a great version of this, just in a more compact footprint. You’ll end up with a thicker layer of filling and less real estate on top.
How to win: expect to have a little extra cobble dough (tragic, I know). Either bake the extra as “bonus biscuits” in foil, or make fewer cobbles and give them room to breathe. Crowding the top turns your cobbles into one continuous dumpling hat—and a hat ain’t cobbled.

10-inch regular (standard depth)

This is the “I can do it… but we’re gonna act right” option. With a standard-depth 10, volume is your enemy and boil-overs are waiting in the tall grass.
How to win: scale it down a bit (or cook with intention and don’t fill the pot up), keep the topping modest, and stay on top of your heat. If you overfill a 10 regular, you’ll spend the bake scraping the rim and negotiating with gravity.

Must‑Have Cooking Gear

(You won’t finish the meal without these)

  • Charcoal briquettes or lump charcoal (plan on ~24 coals as a working number)
  • Chimney starter or another safe way to light coals
  • Long tongs (for moving coals and lids)
  • Lid lifter
  • Heat‑resistant gloves
  • Large spoon or sturdy spatula (stirring + scraping the bottom)
  • Meat chopper or sturdy spatula (breaking up sausage and beef)

Must‑Have Prep & Measuring

  • Cutting board
  • Knife
  • Mixing bowl (for the drop dough)
  • Measuring cups and measuring spoons
  • Can opener (if using canned tomato paste)
  • Small containers or zip bags (pre‑measured flour, spices, etc.)

Must‑Have Cleanup & Handling

  • Paper towels (draining meat, general survival)
  • Holding container or bowl for cooked meat
  • Scraper or brush + dish soap + sponge
  • Trash bags

Nice‑to‑Have Cooking Gear

(You can cook without these—but you’ll wish you hadn’t)

  • Coal shovel or scoop (less finger regret)
  • Small metal bucket or pan for staging hot coals
  • Instant‑read thermometer
  • Ladle (cleaner serving, fewer splashes)
  • Aluminum foil (windbreak, lid rest, emergency fix‑all)
  • Headlamp or lantern (because “15 more minutes” happens after dark)
  • Extra spoon or spatula (one for stirring, one for serving)
  • Small seasoning kit (salt, pepper, Italian seasoning, red pepper, etc.)
  • Serving bowls and a real serving spoon (optional—but civilized)

Important Reality Check

This is not an exhaustive list.
There’s always something you’ll forget—usually the one thing you can’t improvise, and usually right when you’re hungry. That’s camp cooking.

Ingredients

(Listed in the order they go into the pot)

Main Dish

  • 1 lb Italian sausage
  • 1 lb ground beef
  • 1 small onion, diced
  • 2 bell peppers, diced (any color)
  • 2–3 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1–2 tsp Italian seasoning
  • 1½ tsp black pepper
  • ½–1 tsp crushed red pepper (optional)
  • 1 tsp fennel seed (optional)
  • 2 Tbsp tomato paste
  • 1 jar (24 oz) marinara sauce
  • 1 can (12 oz) mild lager or amber beer (for the sauce)
  • 300 g (about 10½ oz) dry pasta
  • 2 cups shredded mozzarella
  • ½ cup grated Parmesan
  • Salt, to taste

Cobbled Topping (Choose One)

Option A – Savory Drop‑Dough Cobbles (recommended)

  • 2 cups all‑purpose flour
  • 3 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp kosher salt
  • 1 stick butter (½ cup), cold
  • 1 cup milk, broth, or beer
  • 1 egg, beaten (optional, for brushing)

Optional add‑ins for the dough

  • ½ tsp Italian seasoning or dried oregano
  • ½ cup shredded mozzarella or Monterey Jack
  • 2 Tbsp grated Parmesan

Option B – Crescent Roll Topping

  • 2–3 cans refrigerated crescent rolls
  • 1 egg, beaten (optional, for brushing)
  • Garlic powder, Parmesan, or Italian seasoning (optional)

Option C – Canned Biscuit Topping

  • 2–3 cans refrigerated biscuits
  • 1 egg, beaten (optional, for brushing)
  • Garlic powder, Parmesan, or Italian seasoning (optional)

Small but Honest Note

This list is not exhaustive. Someone will forget something — usually the thing they were sure they packed. That’s outdoor cooking doing what it does best: keeping you humble.

Time to Cook

Step‑by‑Step Instructions

1. Build the Fire

Start your charcoal and preheat your Dutch oven over a steady bed of heat. You want it hot enough to brown meat, not scorch. A good working number is about 24 briquettes total using the “times two” guideline for a 12‑inch oven.


2. Brown the Meats

Add the Italian sausage to the hot Dutch oven, pressing it into a flat layer. Let it sear until a good crust forms before breaking it apart. Once browned, transfer the sausage to a holding container, leaving rendered fat behind.

Add the ground beef directly to the hot fat. Brown well on both sides, then break it up and transfer it to the same holding container with the sausage. Don’t worry about perfect drainage—you want flavor, not dryness.


3. Cook the Vegetables

Add the diced onion to the Dutch oven and sauté until softened and translucent. Stir in the bell peppers and cook until most of their moisture cooks off.

Add the garlic last and cook briefly—just until fragrant. Garlic goes in late so it doesn’t burn and turn bitter.


4. Season and Toast

Stir in Italian seasoning, black pepper, optional crushed red pepper, fennel seed, and tomato paste. Cook while stirring until the tomato paste darkens slightly and begins to stick to the bottom of the pot. This step builds depth and should be done before adding any liquid.


5. Sauce It

Pour in the marinara sauce followed by the beer. Stir well, scraping up anything stuck to the bottom of the Dutch oven.


6. Add the Pasta

Stir the browned sausage and beef back into the pot, then add the dry pasta. Make sure most of the pasta is submerged.

Cover the pot and bring everything to a steady simmer, stirring every 5–7 minutes. Adjust heat as needed to prevent sticking. Cook until the pasta is nearly fully done and the sauce has thickened with very little free liquid remaining.

This is the perfect time to mix your drop‑dough topping, if using, so the flour has time to hydrate.


7. Add the Cheese

Once the pasta is cooked through, remove the Dutch oven from direct bottom heat. Stir in the shredded mozzarella and Parmesan until melted and cohesive. Taste, then add salt only if needed.

Smooth the surface so the topping will bake evenly.


8. Add the Cobbled Top

Choose one topping option:

  • Savory Drop‑Dough: Dollop spoonfuls evenly over the surface, leaving small gaps for steam to escape. Do not seal the top into one solid layer.
  • Crescent Rolls: Shape and arrange over the surface, brushing lightly with beaten egg if desired.
  • Canned Biscuits: Cut into pieces, arrange evenly, and brush with egg if desired.

9. Bake

Switch to a top‑heavy heat setup. Use minimal bottom heat (0–4 coals) and about 16 coals on the lid. Rotate the lid every 5–7 minutes and bake until the topping is deeply golden and cooked through—about 15–25 minutes, depending on your fire.


10. Rest and Serve

Remove the Dutch oven from heat and let it rest uncovered for 10 minutes before serving. This allows everything to set and prevents molten‑cheese regret.

Scoop generously and serve hot.

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Summary

The Country Cobbler alla Italiana is a hearty, Dutch‑oven comfort meal that blurs the line between casserole, baked pasta, and cobbler—on purpose. Italian sausage and ground beef are browned and layered with peppers, aromatics, marinara, beer, and dry pasta, all cooked together until rich and cohesive. The dish is finished with melted cheese and topped with a rough, biscuit‑style “cobbled” crust that turns golden over live fire.

This is not delicate cooking. It’s forgiving, adaptable, and built for outdoor kitchens where heat shifts, pots aren’t level, and improvisation is part of the deal. Whether made with savory drop‑dough, crescent rolls, or canned biscuits, the result is a filling, crowd‑friendly meal that feeds about eight people and tastes even better eaten outdoors.

At its heart, this recipe is a reminder that cobbler doesn’t have to be sweet—it just needs to look cobbled, cook with confidence, and bring people to the table.

The Country Cobbler alla Italiana – Pizza‑Burger Pasta Cobbler

This Country Cobbler alla Italiana is a hearty Dutch‑oven meal that combines sausage, beef, pasta, marinara, and beer into a thick, cheesy bake topped with a savory, biscuit‑style cobbled crust. Everything cooks together in one pot for a forgiving, crowd‑friendly dish that works just as well at camp as it does at home.
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
Servings: 8 People
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Italian

Ingredients
  

  • 1 lb Italian sausage
  • 1 lb ground beef
  • 1 small onion diced
  • 2 bell peppers diced
  • 2-3 garlic cloves minced
  • 1-2 tsp Italian seasoning
  • tsp black pepper
  • ½-1 tsp crushed red pepper optional
  • 1 tsp fennel seed optional
  • 2 Tbsp tomato paste
  • 24 oz marinara sauce
  • 12 oz mild lager or amber beer or broth
  • 300 g dry pasta about 10½ oz
  • 2 cups shredded mozzarella
  • Salt to taste
Savory Drop‑Dough Cobbles
  • 3 cups all‑purpose flour
  • 4 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp salt
  • stick butter 12 tablespoons
  • 1 cup milk or broth, or beer
  • 1 egg beaten (optional, for brushing)
  • ½ cup grated Parmesan optional

Equipment

  • 12‑inch camp cast‑iron Dutch oven with lid
  • Charcoal briquettes or lump charcoal
  • Chimney starter or other safe way to light coals
  • Long tongs (for moving coals and lids)
  • Lid Lifter
  • Heat‑resistant gloves
  • Large spoon or sturdy spatula
  • Meat chopper or sturdy spatula
  • Mixing bowl (for drop‑dough topping)
  • Measuring cups and measuring spoons
  • Cutting Board
  • Knife
  • Scale for the Pasta

Method
 

Build the Fire
  1. Preheat a Dutch oven over a steady bed of heat. For a 12‑inch oven, plan on about 24 charcoal briquettes total.
Brown the Meats
  1. Brown the Italian sausage in the hot Dutch oven until deeply seared. Transfer to a holding container, leaving rendered fat behind. Add ground beef and brown well. Return sausage to the pot.
Cook the Vegetables
  1. Add the onion and sauté until softened. Add bell peppers and cook until most moisture cooks off. Add garlic and cook just until fragrant.
Season and Toast
  1. Stir in Italian seasoning, black pepper, crushed red pepper, fennel seed, and tomato paste. Cook until the paste darkens slightly and sticks to the bottom of the pot.
Sauce It
  1. Pour in the marinara sauce, then the beer. Stir well, scraping the bottom.
Add the Pasta
  1. Stir in the dry pasta and return meats to the pot. Ensure most pasta is submerged. Cover and simmer, stirring every 5–7 minutes, until pasta is nearly fully cooked and sauce has thickened.
Add the Cheese
  1. Remove from direct bottom heat. Stir in mozzarella and Parmesan until melted and cohesive. Taste and add salt if needed. Level the surface.
Add the Cobbled Top
  1. Spoon drop‑dough cobbles over the surface, leaving gaps for steam.
  2. (Or arrange crescent rolls or biscuit pieces evenly if using alternates.)
  3. Brush with beaten egg if desired.
Bake
  1. Switch to top‑heavy heat: minimal bottom heat (0–4 coals) and about 16 coals on the lid. Bake 15–25 minutes, rotating lid occasionally, until topping is golden and cooked through.
Rest and Serve
  1. Remove from heat and let rest 10 minutes before serving.

Notes

A savory take on cobbler made with sausage, beef, pasta, and tomato‑beer sauce, finished with a golden, cobbled topping. Filling, adaptable, and built for Dutch‑oven cooking over live fire.
Alternate Toppings
Crescent rolls (2–3 cans) or
Refrigerated biscuits (2–3 cans)

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