https://www.chefspencil.com
  • Login
  • Register
  • Recipes
    • Chicken Recipes
    • Seafood Recipes
    • Beef Recipes
    • Pasta Recipes
    • Dips & Spreads
    • Dessert
    • Pork Recipes
    • Side Dish
  • Chefs
  • Food News
    • News
    • Guides
      • Gifts & Product Guides
      • Food Substitutes
        • Cheese Substitutes
    • Lists
  • Food Atlas
    • Asian Cuisines
    • African Cuisines
    • European Cuisines
      • Central European Cuisine
      • Northern European Cuisine
      • Eastern European Cuisine
      • Southern European Cuisine
    • Middle East Cuisine
    • South American Cuisine
    • North American Cuisine
    • Central American Foods
    • Caribbean Cuisine
  • Culinary Schools
  • About Us
  • Recipes
    • Chicken Recipes
    • Seafood Recipes
    • Beef Recipes
    • Pasta Recipes
    • Dips & Spreads
    • Dessert
    • Pork Recipes
    • Side Dish
  • Chefs
  • Food News
    • News
    • Guides
      • Gifts & Product Guides
      • Food Substitutes
        • Cheese Substitutes
    • Lists
  • Food Atlas
    • Asian Cuisines
    • African Cuisines
    • European Cuisines
      • Central European Cuisine
      • Northern European Cuisine
      • Eastern European Cuisine
      • Southern European Cuisine
    • Middle East Cuisine
    • South American Cuisine
    • North American Cuisine
    • Central American Foods
    • Caribbean Cuisine
  • Culinary Schools
  • About Us
  • Home
  • North American Cuisine
  • Top 25 Canadian Desserts & Sweets w/ Recipes

Top 25 Canadian Desserts & Sweets w/ Recipes

Posted on Jun 25th, 2023
by Yoda Olinyk
Categories:
  • North American Cuisine
TOP CANADIAN DESSERTS, PLUS A LITTLE SOMETHING EXTRA SWEET

Think of Canada and it will inspire thoughts of snow, hockey, Justin Bieber, and, possibly, multiculturalism. It is multiculturalism that makes Canadian food and culture so diverse.

With influences from England, Scotland, France, America, and Indigenous nations, the cuisine of the True North is a giant cultural poutine of distinct delicacies that range across the country.

But there’s one overriding national gastronomic symbol: maple syrup. No, it doesn’t go in everything sweet, but it does symbolize Canadians’ love of sweet treats.

Here are some of the best desserts and sweets that Canada has to offer.

1. Nanaimo Bars

Nanaimo Bars

Possibly the most famous of Canadian desserts, this no-bake treat is named after the city in British Columbia where it originated. Simply made from a coconut-graham cracker-nut crust, custard filling, and chocolate ganache topping, its’ gooey sweetness is world-renowned.

View Recipe

2. Butter Tarts

Butter Tarts

To raisin or not to raisin? That is the hot debate when talking about butter tarts, debatably Canada’s other most famous dessert. Many say there is hardly anything more Canadian than these tarts made of butter, sugar, syrup, egg, and, depending on what side of the debate the chef stands, possibly raisins in pastry.

So contentious are these sweet delights that even the humble tart’s history and status as a Canadian icon is subject to differing opinions. Regardless of where you fall in these debates, these sweet treats are a delicacy worth trying.

View Recipe

3. Bannock

Bannock

Every nation has a flat bread, but this version originates from Scotland, brought over by Scottish fur traders, and has become a quintessential indigenous food. It’s a simple bread with a wide variety of flavor options and can be baked or fried. Baking results in a heavier, filling bread, while frying makes it light and fluffy. Either way, it’s delicious.

View Recipe

4. Timbits

Timbits

What started as a simple doughnut treat in Tim Horton’s humble donut shop, and named after the legendary National Hockey League player of the same name, grew to become an internationally known treasure with a multi-billion dollar franchise.

Timbit even features in the dictionary now as a noun defined as “trademark Canadian. a small, spherical cake of sweetened dough, cooked in hot fat.” With loads of flavor options, these treats are iconically Canadian.

View Recipe

5. Beaver Tails

Beaver Tails

Is there any animal more Canadian than the beaver? Probably not, so of course it merits a dessert namesake in the shape of its flappy tail.

Kind of a cross between bannock and a doughnut, the beaver tail is the ultimate warm skate shack treat, deep fried and crispy outside and soft and chewy inside, covered with cinnamon and sugar, Nutella, or myriad other delicious flavor options. Oh Canada!

View Recipe

6. Blueberry Grunt

Photo courtesy Kelly Neil

The blueberry goodness of this dessert could make you grunt in delight, but the name actually comes from the grunting sound the blueberries make while cooking under the soft, biscuit or dumpling-like dough.

Though traditionally made with blueberries, which are in abundance in the summer, this stove-top cobbler can also be made with strawberries, saskatoon berries, or rhubarb.

View Recipe

7. Date Squares

Date Squares

The date is possibly one of the most delicious, nutritious yet underrated fruits around. Sandwich cooked dates between two layers of a crumbly oat base and topping, and you have a delicious treat that is almost too healthy to be called a dessert. 

Also known as Matrimonial Cake for symbolic and historical reasons of some debate, it is definitely a Canadian go-to for a quick and popular dessert or snack.

View Recipe

8. Newfoundland Snowballs

Newfoundland Snowballs
Credit: @eastcoast.sweets on Instagram

More a confection than a dessert, these no-bake treats are the top recipe from Newfoundland, as searched on the internet, and it’s clear why. Soft, fudgy, and chewy, these holiday treats are cooked on the stove-top, combining milk, chocolate, butter, and sugar, then mixed with oats and rolled in coconut. They are bite-sized deliciousness, try to eat only five! I mean, one!

View Recipe

9. Persian Rolls

Persian Rolls
Credit: @bapasoven on Instagram

Persians are a popular sweet roll found in Thunder Bay, Ontario, and named after a World War I General who was visiting when the inventor was making his dough. It’s a round or oval fried doughnut similar to a cinnamon bun but with a lightly sweet pink icing made of berries.

Which berries, however, is debated to this day. Invented in the 1940s, the recipe is still the same and relatively secret, so you’ll have to travel to Thunder Bay to sample one. It is worth the trip, though.

View Recipe

10. Flapper Pie

Flapper Pie

If you love cream pies, you will love flapper pie. Once a staple in homes on the Canadian prairies, not so much today, it is delicious and very easy to make! It was invented in the flapper era, hence its name, and is a light dessert made with a classic graham crumb crust, filled with yummy vanilla custard, and topped with light meringue.

It is extra soft and will likely fall apart when you cut, dish, or eat it, but that’s ok, it all comes together in the flavor!

11. Pouding Chômeur

Pouding Chômeur

While the word chomeur means unemployment in French, this dessert is rich with sweetness and warmth. It was invented by Québécois factory workers during the Depression, who used stale bread as the base and poured over a custard made with maple syrup.

The custard syrup sinks through the bread to the bottom while it bakes, resulting in a creamy, soft, and sweet bread pudding. Bon appétit!

View Recipe

12. Tarte au Sucre (Sugar Pie)

Tarte au Sucre

A sweet tooth’s heaven, this traditional pie’s main ingredients are sugar and maple syrup. To make it even better, add butter and cream, some salt and vanilla for flavor if you want, and top it with a flaky pie crust.

This pie is a favorite either on its own or with ice cream or whipped cream.

View Recipe

13. Ice Cream

Ice Cream

You wouldn’t think that a country with six or more months of winter in some cities would love ice cream, but this sweet is so popular that Canada has come up with two of their very own flavors that you’ll have a hard time finding anywhere else in the world. 

Tiger tail (or tiger tiger) mixes orange ice cream with black licorice ribbons to create black stripes, hence the name. On the east coast of Nova Scotia especially, you will find moon mist ice cream, an unusual, but delicious blend of banana, grape, and bubblegum that creates a beautifully colorful swirl that has inspired other foods, yarn, and even hair colors.

14. Tire sur la Neige (Maple Taffy)

Tire sur la neige

When you think of Canada, two of the first things that may come to mind are snow and maple syrup. Well, mix the two together and you have tire sur la neige. Pour maple syrup on snow until it’s thick and gooey, then roll it up on a popsicle stick, and voila, maple taffy!

View Recipe

15. Maple Syrup anything

Maple Syrup

Besides tire sur la neige, basically anything made with maple syrup is a winner in Canada. You can find recipes for just about anything, pancakes, pies, cupcakes, cookies, candy, toffee, fudge, etc. You can sometimes get away with maple flavored syrup in these recipes, but nothing beats authentic maple syrup from the sugar maple tree.

16. Grandpères (Quebec style maple syrup dumplings)

Grandpères (Quebec style maple syrup dumplings)
Credit: @_gennybabz on Instagram

Oh, you can also find maple syrup dumplings, so soft that grandpa doesn’t even need teeth to eat them. Grandpères (grandfather) are made with butter or, if you want to be authentic and aren’t vegetarian, make pork rinds, then use the leftover lard for the dumplings. Then, naturally, you smother them in maple syrup.

View Recipe

17. Saskatoon Berry Pie

Saskatoon Berry Pie
Photo courtesy of Food Meanderings

In the few, short months of the Canadian summer, you can find all sorts of delicious berries. Saskatoons, however, are actually a pome fruit and not a berry! These fruits are super high in antioxidants, vitamins, and other nutrients, which is likely why they use to be used as medicine.

Similar looking to a blueberry, saskatoons have a sweet, nutty flavor, which makes this pie, originating on the Canadian prairies, a unique favorite.

Sadly, the habitat for saskatoon berry bushes is being lost to urbanization, so the berries are becoming very rare. If you ever get a chance to experience this truly Canadian dessert, consider yourself lucky!

View Recipe

18. Figgy Duff

Figgy Duff

This traditional Newfoundland steamed pudding in a bag gets its fun name from two old Cornish colloquialisms: figgy, meaning raisins, and duff, meaning pudding or dough.

Breadcrumbs, raisins, brown sugar, molasses, butter, flour, and spices are steamed in a bag alongside the Sunday dinner vegetables until it’s a bread-like consistency. Top it with maple syrup, whipped cream or custard. The Figgy Duff is such a beloved Newfoundland dessert that a Newfie rock band even named themselves after it.

View Recipe

19. Moosehunters

Moosehunters
Credit: @farmgirlsdabble

Let’s be a bit liberal with the word dessert shall we, so we can talk about some of Canada’s best candy and confections as well?

Sometimes called Fat Archies, Ginger Giants, or Pubnico cookies after the city in Nova Scotia, these cookies go by so many names that you know they must be good if everyone is trying to make them theirs.

A visit to Pubnico’s Historic Acadian Village will get you these freshly baked cookies every day. A load of molasses makes them soft, chewy, and hearty tasting, sometimes zhuzhed up with cocoa powder or icing. They don’t need it though, the original recipe stands the test of time.

View Recipe

20. Ganong Chocolates and Candy

Ganong Chocolates & Candy
Credit: @wanderlustflowerdust

Established in 1873, Ganong Brothers is Canada’s oldest candy company and has a series of accomplishments under its belt. In 1895, they invented their signature candy Chicken Bones, a pink, cinnamon flavored hard candy filled with bittersweet chocolate; they made the first Canadian lollipop in 1895; in 1909, they were the first to wrap and sell milk chocolate nut bars, which is still in production today under the name Pal-O-Mine; and, in 1932, they were the first in North America to introduce heart-shaped boxes for chocolates.

A family-owned company from the outset until 2008, when it hired their first CEO from outside the family, this company is a beloved part of Canadiana.

21. Morden’s Mints

Credit: @MordensofWpg on Twitter

Another famous Canadian confectioner and chocolatier is Morden’s from Winnipeg, Manitoba. Their signature treat is Russian Mints—premium milk chocolate filled with a smooth mint filling.

These mints are so melty and delicious, they won Best Chocolate Piece at the 1984 New Orleans World Fair from over 300 competitors, and they are still a favorite among Winnipeggers today.

22. Coffee Crisp

Coffee Crisp
Credit: @domestica.shop on Instagram

Add a foamy coffee cream between layers of vanilla wafers and coat it in milk chocolate and you have this iconic Canadian chocolate bar which is over 80 years old. Canadian expats all over the world, and even some Americans, lament the fact that it is not found anywhere else except in Canada, showing just how loved it is.

23. Laura Secord Chocolate

Laura Secord Chocolate
Credit: @lalaeatsmore on Instagram

In 1913, a small candy store opened in Toronto named after Laura Secord, the Canadian heroine who helped the British win the War of 1812. The shop had no relation to her at all, and, in fact, most Canadians know the Laura Secord chocolate and ice cream shops better than they know of the woman.

Since then, Laura Secord has grown to over 100 shops and has become Canada’s largest and most-well known chocolatier with over 400 products.

24. MacKintosh Toffee

MacKintosh Toffe
Credit: @hellosweetcandy on Instagram

Originating from Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1890, John MacKintosh and his wife, Violet, wanted to make their own specialty toffee. What they created was a timeless, memorable cross of English butterscotch hard candies and American soft caramel to create a delectable treat that starts off hard and softens as you eat it.

Either soften it first and take a bite, or ‘smack the Mack’, breaking it into smaller pieces. Either way, eating delicious candy is always fun.

25. Jos Louis

Jos Louis
Credit: @andrew.macdougall on Instagram

Pronounced ‘Joe’, this is no relation to the American boxer Joe Louis but is named after Joseph and Louis Vachon of the Vachon company, which created this confection in 1932. These snack cakes filled with cream are coated with a milk chocolate shell and made with red velvet cake, before red velvet was even a thing.


If you enjoyed this article check out our story on the best Canadian foods, a combo of sweet and savory.

Top 20 Canadian Foods

Yoda Olinyk

Yoda Olinyk is a professional chef and recipe developer based in London, Ontario. She has written, edited and published dozens of recipes, including her best-selling cookbook memoir in August, 2020.

Add Your Comment Cancel reply

Recipe Rating




Featured Recipes

Red Velvet Waffles
Red Velvet Waffles
Perfect Pumpkin Cake
Pumpkin Walnut Bread
Tomato Carrot Soup
Potato Crust Pizza
Potato Crust Pizza

2009-2024 © Chef's Pencil   Privacy Policy & Terms of Service  Contact us