clock menu more-arrow no yes mobile
Cannoli and spumoni from Angelo Brocato.
Randy Schmidt/Eater NOLA

10 Standout Sweet Spots in New Orleans

Where to cap off an evening in New Orleans with dessert

View as Map
Cannoli and spumoni from Angelo Brocato.
| Randy Schmidt/Eater NOLA

Everyone knows that feeling of being completely, almost uncomfortably full after dinner, and then instinctively craving something sweet. This feeling is particularly common in New Orleans, where famed restaurants like Brennan’s and Commander’s Palace are the birthplace of iconic desserts like bananas Foster and bread pudding soufflé.

Still, sometimes the dessert portion of the meal deserves its own stop. It’s best to be prepared with a plethora of options for when those nights strike, so here are some of New Orleans’s best spots to go for dessert to cap off the evening — all of which are open until at least 9 p.m., usually later on weekends. Commit this list to mind, because the postscript is often the best part.

For more sweets, see Eater’s guides to NOLA restaurants where desserts steal the show; the city’s best ice cream and gelato; and where to get sno-balls.

Read More
Eater maps are curated by editors and aim to reflect a diversity of neighborhoods, cuisines, and prices. Learn more about our editorial process.

Angelo Brocato

Copy Link

This iconic family-run Italian bakery and gelateria has been pleasing ice cream fanatics for more than 120 years with classic flavors like Sicilian pistachio, stracciatella (chocolate chip), and salted caramel. Also home to a great spumoni, freshly piped cannoli, and a huge variety of Italian cookies. Be prepared for a line out the door after dinner on weekends, though it’s a pleasant wait.

Cannoli and fig cookies at Angelo Brocato's
Cannoli and fig cookies from Angelo Brocato’s.
Josh Brasted/Eater NOLA

Bar Pomona

Copy Link

Part wine bar, part jam shop, part brunch spot — Bar Pomona does it all. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings, pair a glass of natty wine with fresh soft serve, made in-house. Rotating flavors like strawberry and blood orange can be topped with delights like Luxardo cherries, chili crisp, and chocolate tahini. There’s also tiramisu, and keep an eye out for special appearances by cookies, cake by Bronwen Wyatt of Bayou Saint Cakes, and other occasional sweets. Incredible donuts are available during weekend brunch service.

Jewel of the South

Copy Link

This unassuming Creole cottage may be the best place for a romantic night cap in the French Quarter, if not the entire city. The bar’s extravagant desserts pair just as well with the dreamy courtyard as it does with one of Chris Hannah and team’s refined, precise cocktails. Though the desserts change, expect the incorporation of spirits and savory flavors — for example, an Eccles cake served with Point Reyes blue cheese or a rum baba with Chantilly cream.

Davenport Lounge in the Ritz-Carlton

Copy Link

What pairs well with dessert besides a glass of champagne? An espresso martini, also, but the answer is live music. Wednesday to Saturday nights, catch local crooner Jeremy Davenport’s live jazz at the Ritz-Carlton’s jazz bar and don’t miss the lounge’s equally swoon-worthy powdered beignets. The Ritz Carlton’s iteration comes accompanied by a trio of chocolate, caramel, and vanilla sauces for dipping. For those who are all beignet’d out, there’s also offerings like cafe au lait Doberge cake, strawberry shortcake, and seasonal bread pudding. It’s also one of few places to offer afternoon tea service, with the requisite tea cakes.

Davenport Lounge Bar/Official

This pastry shop is New Orleans’s answer to the French-born Ladurée: Instagrammable, pastel, and displaying rows of treats almost too pretty to consume. Sucré is best known for its creamy gelato, colorful macaroons, specialty chocolates, and photogenic desserts. You won’t find cocktails here, so this is definitely for a more wholesome end to the night, but there isn’t a lack of liquid treats here. Try one of their milkshakes, flavored lattes, Ashwagandha, lavender London fog, or matcha fizz. The French Quarter location is now joined by Magazine Street and a new Freret Street outpost.

Sucré Magazine Street.
Sucré

Drip Affogato Bar NOLA

Copy Link

Not sure if it’s ice cream or coffee you’re craving? Why not both? Drip Affogato Bar has new digs on Camp Street, saying it outgrew its original Warehouse District digs after an interior revamp. Specializing in the traditional Italian dessert, Drip’s gelato flavors may include praline, Bourbon Street beignet, and bananas Foster, just to name a few. Enjoy it in the comfort of this small but mighty café with eclectic décor that feels like it’s straight out of Alice in Wonderland. Many options on the cocktail menu can also double as dessert.

Drip Affogato Bar NOLA

Chandelier Bar

Copy Link

There may be no sophisticated way to eat beignets, however, there is a way to eat them in luxury, and that’s underneath the twinkling crystals at the Four Seasons Hotel’s Chandelier Bar. It’s best to eat acclaimed chef Alon Shaya’s butter-fried beignets, which come served with a side of toasted vanilla sauce for dipping, with an espresso martini to wash it all down. During the holidays, look out for specialty dessert-drink hybrids, like the incredible S’mores milk punch.

S’mores milk punch.
Chandelier Bar

The Chloe

Copy Link

The ice cream sandwich is one of those traditional desserts that takes you back to childhood. Whether it was at the pool, on the porch, by campfire, or at a birthday party, the reliable ice cream sandwich was a summer staple. Luckily, the Chloe’s version can still be experienced at the boutique hotel’s pool, by a fire pit on the St. Charles Avenue porch, or after a birthday celebration in the dining room. It includes a two-inch slice of brown butter ice cream snuggled in between two huge praline crunch cookies, and it tastes even better than childhood. Seasonal hand pies are another highlight.

Piccola Gelateria

Copy Link

Piccola Gelateria is more than excellent gelato, sorbet, and dairy-free vegan sorbet. This sweet, family-run Magazine Street shop also serves stellar sweet and savory crepes, piadina (Italian flatbread), gelato cakes, affogato, and coffee. For the gelato, there’s traditional flavors and others: sea salt caramel, tiramisu, licorice, blueberry, rose petal, king cake, biscotti, and stracciatella. Open until 9 p.m. every night.

The Vintage

Copy Link

Part coffee shop, part café, part bar, the Vintage on Magazine Street thrives with its array of offerings in a city full of people who like to start the day with a cocktail, end with caffeine, and enjoy a beignet at any time of day without waiting in the line at Café du Monde. That said, the options include traditional, beignet bites, and stuffed seasonal flavors like S’more or raspberry-filled. Close out the night (or start the day) in this cozy, Parisian-inspired cafe with a beignet flight, accompanied by some bubbles and good company. Open until 10 p.m. on weekends.

The dessert display at the Vintage.
The Vintage

Angelo Brocato

This iconic family-run Italian bakery and gelateria has been pleasing ice cream fanatics for more than 120 years with classic flavors like Sicilian pistachio, stracciatella (chocolate chip), and salted caramel. Also home to a great spumoni, freshly piped cannoli, and a huge variety of Italian cookies. Be prepared for a line out the door after dinner on weekends, though it’s a pleasant wait.

Cannoli and fig cookies at Angelo Brocato's
Cannoli and fig cookies from Angelo Brocato’s.
Josh Brasted/Eater NOLA

Bar Pomona

Part wine bar, part jam shop, part brunch spot — Bar Pomona does it all. Thursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings, pair a glass of natty wine with fresh soft serve, made in-house. Rotating flavors like strawberry and blood orange can be topped with delights like Luxardo cherries, chili crisp, and chocolate tahini. There’s also tiramisu, and keep an eye out for special appearances by cookies, cake by Bronwen Wyatt of Bayou Saint Cakes, and other occasional sweets. Incredible donuts are available during weekend brunch service.

Jewel of the South

This unassuming Creole cottage may be the best place for a romantic night cap in the French Quarter, if not the entire city. The bar’s extravagant desserts pair just as well with the dreamy courtyard as it does with one of Chris Hannah and team’s refined, precise cocktails. Though the desserts change, expect the incorporation of spirits and savory flavors — for example, an Eccles cake served with Point Reyes blue cheese or a rum baba with Chantilly cream.

Davenport Lounge in the Ritz-Carlton

What pairs well with dessert besides a glass of champagne? An espresso martini, also, but the answer is live music. Wednesday to Saturday nights, catch local crooner Jeremy Davenport’s live jazz at the Ritz-Carlton’s jazz bar and don’t miss the lounge’s equally swoon-worthy powdered beignets. The Ritz Carlton’s iteration comes accompanied by a trio of chocolate, caramel, and vanilla sauces for dipping. For those who are all beignet’d out, there’s also offerings like cafe au lait Doberge cake, strawberry shortcake, and seasonal bread pudding. It’s also one of few places to offer afternoon tea service, with the requisite tea cakes.

Davenport Lounge Bar/Official

Sucré

This pastry shop is New Orleans’s answer to the French-born Ladurée: Instagrammable, pastel, and displaying rows of treats almost too pretty to consume. Sucré is best known for its creamy gelato, colorful macaroons, specialty chocolates, and photogenic desserts. You won’t find cocktails here, so this is definitely for a more wholesome end to the night, but there isn’t a lack of liquid treats here. Try one of their milkshakes, flavored lattes, Ashwagandha, lavender London fog, or matcha fizz. The French Quarter location is now joined by Magazine Street and a new Freret Street outpost.

Sucré Magazine Street.
Sucré

Drip Affogato Bar NOLA

Not sure if it’s ice cream or coffee you’re craving? Why not both? Drip Affogato Bar has new digs on Camp Street, saying it outgrew its original Warehouse District digs after an interior revamp. Specializing in the traditional Italian dessert, Drip’s gelato flavors may include praline, Bourbon Street beignet, and bananas Foster, just to name a few. Enjoy it in the comfort of this small but mighty café with eclectic décor that feels like it’s straight out of Alice in Wonderland. Many options on the cocktail menu can also double as dessert.

Drip Affogato Bar NOLA

Chandelier Bar

There may be no sophisticated way to eat beignets, however, there is a way to eat them in luxury, and that’s underneath the twinkling crystals at the Four Seasons Hotel’s Chandelier Bar. It’s best to eat acclaimed chef Alon Shaya’s butter-fried beignets, which come served with a side of toasted vanilla sauce for dipping, with an espresso martini to wash it all down. During the holidays, look out for specialty dessert-drink hybrids, like the incredible S’mores milk punch.

S’mores milk punch.
Chandelier Bar

The Chloe

The ice cream sandwich is one of those traditional desserts that takes you back to childhood. Whether it was at the pool, on the porch, by campfire, or at a birthday party, the reliable ice cream sandwich was a summer staple. Luckily, the Chloe’s version can still be experienced at the boutique hotel’s pool, by a fire pit on the St. Charles Avenue porch, or after a birthday celebration in the dining room. It includes a two-inch slice of brown butter ice cream snuggled in between two huge praline crunch cookies, and it tastes even better than childhood. Seasonal hand pies are another highlight.

Piccola Gelateria

Piccola Gelateria is more than excellent gelato, sorbet, and dairy-free vegan sorbet. This sweet, family-run Magazine Street shop also serves stellar sweet and savory crepes, piadina (Italian flatbread), gelato cakes, affogato, and coffee. For the gelato, there’s traditional flavors and others: sea salt caramel, tiramisu, licorice, blueberry, rose petal, king cake, biscotti, and stracciatella. Open until 9 p.m. every night.

The Vintage

Part coffee shop, part café, part bar, the Vintage on Magazine Street thrives with its array of offerings in a city full of people who like to start the day with a cocktail, end with caffeine, and enjoy a beignet at any time of day without waiting in the line at Café du Monde. That said, the options include traditional, beignet bites, and stuffed seasonal flavors like S’more or raspberry-filled. Close out the night (or start the day) in this cozy, Parisian-inspired cafe with a beignet flight, accompanied by some bubbles and good company. Open until 10 p.m. on weekends.

The dessert display at the Vintage.
The Vintage

Related Maps