9 Italian Desserts Not to Miss While in Italy (2024)

9 Italian Desserts Not to Miss While in Italy (1)

Photo by Kristi Blokhin/Shutterstock

It’s fair to say that Italians have a sweet tooth. Breakfast is usually coffee and a pastry and, in the summer, Italians will head to their favorite gelateria after lunch or dinner. Traditionally, a meal consists of an antipasto, primo (pasta, soup, or rice), a secondo (a main dish, usually meat or fish), and a dolce (dessert), even if people will often choose just two or three courses at a restaurant. After school, kids usually have an afternoon snack known as a merenda that consists of something sweet like crostata (a baked tart usually made with jam or ricotta).

Italian cuisine is very regional, so you’ll find different desserts in each of the country’s 20 regions. There are even some towns known for a particular sweet. That said, some desserts like tiramisu and gelato have become so widespread that you can find them all over Italy. And nearly every holiday has a dessert, like panettone for Christmas, colomba for Easter, and frappe and castagnole for Carnevale. If you have a sweet tooth, use this guide to Italy’s essential desserts and where to find them.

1. Sfogliatella

Found in pasticcerie and cafés around Naples and the Amalfi Coast, this flaky pastry is shaped a bit like a seashell or a lobster tail (there’s a version called coda d’aragosta, or lobster tail) and filled with ricotta scented with citrus peel and cinnamon. There are two versions: either made with frolla (smooth) or riccia (curly) dough. Legend has it that they were invented by a nun at the cloistered convent of Santa Rosa in the village of Conca dei Marini on the Amalfi Coast.

Where to find it

Now a luxury hotel, Monastero Santa Rosa still serves sfogliatella for breakfast in homage to the nun’s original recipe. Another excellent place to get it is the historic Pasticceria Andrea Pansa in Amalfi.

9 Italian Desserts Not to Miss While in Italy (2)

Photo by Ekaterina Markelova/Shutterstock

2. Panna cotta

Literally translating to “cooked cream,” this soft, silky pudding is as simple as it gets. The main ingredients are heavy cream, sugar, vanilla, and gelatin, which get blended and then set in a refrigerator for a few hours or overnight. It’s believed to originate in Piedmont, though it didn’t enter the mainstream until the 1960s. Often garnished with a fruit coulis or perhaps fresh fruit, panna cotta is available in restaurants and hotels across Italy.

Where to find it

The pastry chef at Rome’s Hotel de Russie makes a fantastic panna cotta with strawberry coulis.

3. Cannoli

One of Italy’s best-known desserts, cannoli (the singular is cannolo) originated in Sicily, but can be found all over the country and beyond. The tube-shaped dessert is made of fried pastry dough filled with whipped ricotta sweetened with sugar and candied orange. You’ll sometimes see versions featuring pistachios, chocolate chips, or candied cherries. The origin can be traced back to the 10th or 11th century, when Arabs ruled Sicily, with one legend saying that cannoli were invented in a Moorish harem as a vaguely phallic tribute to the sultan, while another legend attributes their invention to the nuns of a convent in Caltanissetta.

Where to find it

Look for them at Sicilian pasticcerie such as Pasticceria Cappello in Palermo and Dagnino in Rome.

9 Italian Desserts Not to Miss While in Italy (4)

Photo by stockcreations / Shutterstock

4. Tiramisu

Perhaps the most iconic Italian dessert, tiramisu appears on menus at restaurants not only throughout Italy but also all over the world. An irresistible combination of layers of coffee-soaked savoiardi and mascarpone whipped with sugar and eggs, topped with cocoa powder, it’s either served as slices like a cake or in individual glasses or cups. Its origins are hotly contested between the regions of Veneto and Friuli Venezia Giulia, although the Italian government has officially recognized it as a product of Friuli—a bit surprising, since its name translates to “pick-me-up” in the dialect of Veneto. Countless variations have been born, from matcha tiramisu to deconstructed tiramisu. It’s usually eaten at the end of a meal, though bakeries sometimes sell individual portions.

Where to find it

Bar Pompi is the self-declared king of tiramisu and has versions flavored with strawberry, pistachio, or hazelnut as well as the classic tiramisu. It has six locations in Rome (including one near the Spanish Steps and another near the Trevi Fountain), plus a location in Florence.

9 Italian Desserts Not to Miss While in Italy (5)

Photo by Giuseppe Lombardo

5. Granita

Aside from gelato, granita is the best way to cool down during the heat of a Sicilian summer. Made with water, sugar, and fruit or nuts, it’s slowly frozen and stirred continuously, resulting in a consistency somewhere in between the creaminess of gelato and the granularity of sorbet. In past centuries, it was made with the snow that fell on Mount Etna and derives from the Arab sherbet made with rose water. Nowadays, you can find dozens of flavors, but the most traditional ones are almond, pistachio, coffee, and lemon. Sicilians start their day by dunking a brioche into granita for breakfast, but it can be eaten throughout the day.

Where to find it

Caffè Sicilia in Noto serves a superlative version, but you can find it all over Sicily at gelaterias and little food trucks parked near popular beaches.

9 Italian Desserts Not to Miss While in Italy (6)

Photo by Framarzo / Shutterstock

6. Bonet

This rich, chocolate pudding is served throughout Piedmont, especially in the Langhe hills around Alba. Eaten with a spoon, it’s made like a crème caramel, with crumbled amaretti cookies, eggs, sugar, cocoa, milk, and rum. It’s sometimes served with hazelnuts, which grow in the region. The exact origins of bonet are unknown, but there are references to a chocolate-less version of it being served at noble banquets during the 13th century. Cocoa was added sometime after the European conquest of South America.

Where to find it

Turin’s Farmacia del Cambio, an elegant bar/pasticceria inside a pharmacy that dates back to 1833, is one of the best places to try bonet, but you’ll also see it on menus across the region.

9 Italian Desserts Not to Miss While in Italy (7)

Photo by VPhotography / Shutterstock

7. Delizia al limone

Invented in 1978 by pastry chef Carmine Marzuillo, who worked at the hotel Parco dei Principi in Sorrento, this delightful little cake makes use of the lemons that the area is famous for. Shaped like a dome, it’s composed of sponge cake filled with lemon cream, soaked in limoncello, and topped with pale yellow icing. Usually eaten at the end of a meal, it can be found at restaurants and in pasticcerie all over the Campania region.

Where to find it

For a superlative delizia al limone and many other sweets, head to Pepe Mastro Dolciere in the small town of Sant’Egidio del Monte Albino near Salerno.

9 Italian Desserts Not to Miss While in Italy (8)

Photo by funny face / Shutterstock

8. Maritozzo

A sweet that’s found almost exclusively in Rome, the maritozzo is a soft bun split down the middle and filled with whipped cream. Its origins can be traced all the way back to ancient Rome, but it became popular during the Middle Ages, when the church allowed it to be eaten during the fasting days of Lent. Its name derives from the word marito, which means husband, and during the 19th century, men would propose by hiding a ring in a maritozzo.

Where to find it

You can find traditional versions at old-school bakeries like Regoli and Roscioli Caffè, where they can be eaten for breakfast or as an afternoon snack. Roman chefs also like to play with the recipe by making savory versions with chicken salad or burrata and tomatoes, which you can try at MadeITerraneo run by Michelin-starred chef Riccardo Di Giacinto.

9 Italian Desserts Not to Miss While in Italy (9)

Photo by Tyler Olson / Shutterstock

9. Gelato

Is ice cream the main reason to travel? Perhaps not, but it’s up there. We recently rounded up 20 places with great ice cream in the U.S. alone. Nowhere does it like Italy, though, where gelato is generally made with less cream and less air, thanks to a longer churn period that results in a denser dessert. Flavors and textures range from chocolatey and creamy to fruity and light, and gelaterie across the country dispense their own unique spins into cups and cones.

Where to find it

The title for Italy’s best gelato could be gifted to many places: Milan, Rome, Florence, and Spoleto are among the Italian cities with excellent gelato shops.

This article was originally published in April 2022. It was updated in August 2023. Tim Chester contributed reporting, mostly around ice cream.

Laura Itzkowitz

Laura Itzkowitz is a freelance journalist based in Rome with a passion for covering travel, arts and culture, lifestyle, design, food, and wine.

9 Italian Desserts Not to Miss While in Italy (2024)

FAQs

9 Italian Desserts Not to Miss While in Italy? ›

1. Tiramisu. This iconic sweet treat is easy to make at home with our simple recipe. Make it ahead of time to allow the flavours to mingle and intensify while you're munching on a crunchy bruschetta starter.

What is the most famous dessert in Italy? ›

1. Tiramisu. This iconic sweet treat is easy to make at home with our simple recipe. Make it ahead of time to allow the flavours to mingle and intensify while you're munching on a crunchy bruschetta starter.

What is the king of Italian desserts? ›

Tiramisù (Veneto)

Probably the most famous of all Italian desserts, Tiramisù is a powerful layering of coffee-soaked savoiardi (sponge finger biscuits) and a rich cream made with mascarpone cheese, eggs and sugar, sometimes spiced up with a drop of liqueur.

What is the oldest Italian dessert? ›

It can satisfy a wide variety of palates! In Italy, it is not only eaten as a dessert, but often for breakfast too, with a hot cup of espresso or cappuccino, or with tea in the afternoon. Crostata is perhaps the oldest Italian dessert.

What pastries to eat in Italy? ›

Here are some of our favorite Italian pastries and cakes for you to try:
  • Brioche or Cornetto.
  • Tiramisù
  • Crostata.
  • Cassata Siciliana.
  • Cannoli.
  • Torrone.
  • Panettone.
Apr 17, 2023

What dessert is famous in Rome? ›

Tiramisù The perfect tira mi su (pick-me-up) of coffee, sugar, and cocoa, tiramisù is one of Italy's most iconic desserts.

What is Italy's famous frozen dessert called? ›

Put simply, gelato is Italian ice cream, containing the same ingredients as American ice cream, but in different proportions. Gelato has roots that stretch back thousands of years.

What is a good dessert to serve after spaghetti? ›

End your Italian feast with one of these delectable desserts.
  • 1Vanilla bean & salted caramel semifreddo. ...
  • 2Cassata alla siciliana. ...
  • 3Salted caramel tiramisu. ...
  • 4Baci gelato with hazelnut and white chocolate slab. ...
  • 5Cannoli with vanilla custard. ...
  • 6Baked ricotta, fig and honey cheesecake. ...
  • 7Hazelnut semifreddo. ...
  • 8Bomboloni.

What desserts did Italy invent? ›

NameDescription
Biscotto di CastellammareBiscuit created in 1848 in Castellammare di Stabia, Campania
Biscotto SaluteRusk made with butter, eggs, flour and sugar
BocconottoAbruzzese Christmas pastry filled with almonds and chocolate
BomboloneItalian doughnut, filled with typically custard, chocolate, cream, or jam
39 more rows

What is the dessert after pizza in Italy? ›

If you're serving pizza, the Italian bakery is an excellent place to start thinking about dessert. Classic Italian desserts include tiramisu, cannoli, zeppoles, and gelato – perennial choices that provide the perfect ending to a delightful meal.

What is dessert called on an Italian menu? ›

In Italy, il dolce is not only a sweet way to end a lunch or dinner—it's also the way many Italians start their day. The term dolci literally means “sweets,” though the French term “dessert” is also frequently used in Italy.

What is the biggest meal of the day in Italy? ›

Lunch is the day's main meal, lasting up to two hours! If you plan to eat lunch with locals, block out time. A typical Italian lunch consists of a primo (pasta, soup or risotto dish), a secondo (meat or fish-based dish) and a contorno (side dish).

What are the 3 most popular foods in Italy? ›

When it comes to food and drink, few can top Italy's stellar reputation. Ask anyone to name their favourite dishes and you can guarantee things like pizza, pasta and gelato soon come tripping off the tongue.

What is panna cotta made of? ›

Panna cotta is traditionally made from cream or cream and milk, as well as sugar and gelatin. The dairy and sugar are heated just until they are warm enough to dissolve the sugar and gelatin, then poured into individual ramekins or custard cups and chilled until set.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Lilliana Bartoletti

Last Updated:

Views: 5584

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (73 voted)

Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Lilliana Bartoletti

Birthday: 1999-11-18

Address: 58866 Tricia Spurs, North Melvinberg, HI 91346-3774

Phone: +50616620367928

Job: Real-Estate Liaison

Hobby: Graffiti, Astronomy, Handball, Magic, Origami, Fashion, Foreign language learning

Introduction: My name is Lilliana Bartoletti, I am a adventurous, pleasant, shiny, beautiful, handsome, zealous, tasty person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.