From chewy chocolate to decadent pies, tasty ice cream to crunchy popcorn, finding a treat is as easy as pie at these sweet shops in Indiana
All across the Hoosier State you’ll find easy answers to the popular question: “What’s for dessert?” There are an incredible variety of sweet shops in Indiana, many with a long history of serving up delicious goodness that keeps visitors coming back for more. No matter the types of treats that your group enjoys, there is something for everyone at these shops, all a sweet addition to any itinerary.
A Favorite Indiana Candy Store
On Spring Street, just a few blocks from the Ohio River, the aroma of cinnamon candy bubbling in an antique copper kettle wafts onto the sidewalk, luring passersby into Schimpff’s Confectionery.
As a ploy to hook potential customers, the fifth-generation family business in Jeffersonville, Indiana even has a pipe that blows out the tantalizing smell from its storefront kitchen to the street. Warren and Jill Schimpff call it olfactory advertising. The old-time candy store and museum, a Jeffersonville fixture since 1891, is just one of many tempting stops that can sweeten an Indiana itinerary.
Groups that drop by Schimpff’s get a free demonstration of how the store’s signature cinnamon red hots are made, starting with a boiling concoction of sugar, corn syrup, red coloring and precious cinnamon oil (at $50 a bottle). Then the molten mass is poured onto a metal table before the pieces are formed by a molding machine and dusted with sugar granules. Everyone in the audience gets a warm sample.
Schimpff’s also is known for its “fish” hard candy (flavors like butter rum, clove and spearmint), horehound drops and a whole range of chocolates, including bourbon balls, “turtles” and the hand-dipped Modjeska, a caramel-covered marshmallow treat named after a Polish-born actress. The vintage store, with an original tin ceiling and old-fashioned soda fountain, claims to have the country’s largest collection of candy industry memorabilia on public display, with some items in its back-room museum dating to the 1860s. Schimpff’s also serves lunch and has plans to double the seating area.
Sweet Shops in Indiana Serving Up Ice Cream
For nostalgia in downtown Columbus, a must-stop is Zaharakos Ice Cream Parlor and Museum, a beautifully restored relic of yesteryear. “Serving sodas, sundaes and smiles for over a century,” this local institution is the place to have a Green River soda made with syrup and carbonated water dispensed from one of the two elaborate Mexican onyx soda fountains purchased by the Zaharakos family from the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair. The exquisite 1911 double back-bar, with its mahogany, mirrors, marble and stained glass, sets the scene, as do the long onyx counter, 1905 Tiffany-style lamp and melodious sounds emanating from the 184 pipes of the 1908 Welte Orchestrion, a self-playing organ. The maple floor, oak cabinets and tin ceiling are original, too.
Columbus businessman Tony Moravec stepped in to save the aging landmark (founded as a candy store in 1900 by three brothers from Greece) after it closed in 2006 and today Zaharakos shines anew, gloriously reflecting an era when women’s skirts reached to the ground and men had handlebar moustaches. Groups can arrange a tour of the mechanical musical instruments and the country’s largest collection of pre-1900 soda fountains on public display. They can have a meal or make-your-own sundae event in the museum area or upstairs in the sky-lit Green River Room. The premium ice cream is made fresh at Zaharakos, which also dishes up breakfast, lunch and dinner. (Did you know that Indiana is the second-largest producer of ice cream in the nation, after California?).
For heavenly treats made of rich milk fresh from old Bessie, visit the Cowfé at Northwest Indiana’s group-friendly Fair Oaks Farms. The milkshakes and homemade ice cream—everyone talks about the butter pecan—seem to taste better than anywhere else. Another idea: Chocolate milk and a grilled cheese sandwich made from farm-fresh artisan cheese. Top off a hearty meal of fried chicken at The Farmhouse Restaurant with desserts like apple walnut cobbler, cookie dough pizza, or Belgian chocolate and raspberry bread pudding. Witnessing the birth of a calf in the Birthing Barn highlights a tour of this working dairy farm, the largest in the U.S.
Old Fashioned Soda Fountains
At the South Side Soda Shop in Goshen, a college town in Northern Indiana Amish Country, enjoy sundaes and other fountain creations along with a big scoop of 1950s schmaltz. And don’t forget the pies, from peanut butter crème and coconut crème to blueberry crisp and cherry red raspberry; the lemon meringue was featured on the Food Network’s Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives. A short drive down Main Street takes you to Olympia Candy Kitchen, the “Sweetest Little Place in Town Since 1912.” At the small soda fountain, have a chocolate malt or Goshen College sundae (maple syrup, marshmallow, chopped nuts) or quench your thirst with a Green River, cherry phosphate or grape lemonade. The hand-dipped chocolates made from scratch, like turtles and chocolate-covered cherries, are what put the family-owned business, started by a Greek immigrant, on the map. Also in Amish Country, the Wakarusa Dime Store, a charming slice of the past in downtown Wakarusa, is known for its jumbo jelly beans, and you’re free to sample the flavors, which range from cotton candy to root beer. Candies also include homemade chocolate and fudge, plus Turkish Taffy, Necco Wafers, candy cigarettes and other favorites from way back when.
Soda pop connoisseurs who long for the good old days will be in dreamland at Antiqology, an antique candy store and ice cream parlor in Huntington that offers hundreds of vintage pop varieties from around the country and the world. The Midwest’s largest selection of craft sodas includes hard-to-find brands of glass-bottled cream sodas, root beers, colas and fruit-based drinks. Try unusual flavors like lemon meringue, caramel apple and blueberry pomegranate.
Finding Baked Treats is Easy as Pie
You can’t go to Amish Country without digging into a family-style chicken dinner at a place like Blue Gate Restaurant & Bakery in Shipshewana, FarmTable at The Barns at Nappanee in Nappanee or the huge Das Dutchman Essenhaus in Middlebury, the largest restaurant in Indiana (seating over 1,100). Your meal comes with a generous slice of pie, but the hard part is choosing from the more than two dozen varieties—German chocolate, Dutch apple, butterscotch, pecan, rhubarb…. the list goes on and on. These big, group-friendly restaurants have attached bakeries where you can buy some decadent desserts to bring home or eat on the bus.
Amish Country guests also can find delicious baked goods at little stores tucked down country lanes, but perhaps the best-known stand-alone bakery is Rise’n Roll Bakery & Deli in Middlebury, famed for its cinnamon caramel donuts, cinnamon rolls, giant cookies and cashew crunch candy. It’s also a good place to pick up a jar of Amish peanut butter (sweetened with corn syrup and marshmallow crème), sometimes called church spread.
Sugar Cream Pie is the official state pie of Indiana. It can be found in restaurants and sweet shops in Indiana and in particular across Amish Country. A simple mixture of cream, sugar, flour, cornstarch, vanilla and butter or shortening, the smooth velvety pie, pale yellow in color and usually sprinkled with nutmeg, is said to have originated in the kitchens of Amish and Shaker settlers in the 1800s.
It’s been called “desperation pie” because it could be made when fruits were unavailable and be whipped up quickly for unexpected guests. Also called Hoosier pie or “old-fashioned cream pie,” this melt-in-your-mouth classic is likened to a chess or buttermilk pie. Wick’s Pies in Winchester makes more sugar cream pies than anyone—try a slice at Wick’s restaurant in Winchester or check out the factory outlet store. You’ll also find Wick’s pies in grocery stores and restaurants around the state. Among other places to try sugar cream pie—The Falls Restaurant at Clifty Inn in Madison, Nashville General Store & Bakery, Ahlemeyer Farms Old Time Bakery in Columbus and Lisa’s Pie Shop in Atlanta. A fun note on Lisa’s: Her famous Pie in a Jar makes it easy to grab some varieties for the road, crust and all.
For donuts, look no further than Titus Bakery, which has locations in Lebanon and Westfield. They’re best known for the Pershing, a yeast doughnut with swirled cinnamon dough and maple icing. The maple-bacon doughnut is topped with two full strips of bacon. Lovers of quality baked items also gravitate to Bread Basket Café and Bakery in Danville. Owned and operated by three generations of Indiana women, this community favorite is based out of a 100-year-old bungalow, with the living room serving as a dining area suitable for group lunches and breakfasts.
A luscious dessert is the perfect way to top off a meal at one of the much-talked-about restaurants in the Ohio River town of New Albany, which in recent years has become a big foodie destination. If you like bread pudding, try the peach and brandy variety at The Exchange Pub + Kitchen or the bourbon version at new sister restaurant Brooklyn and The Butcher; both occupy restored 1870s buildings. At Tucker’s American Favorites, a steak and ribs restaurant, save room for The Cookie Experience, a giant, baked-to-order chocolate chunk cookie with a heaping scoop of vanilla bean ice cream, topped with chocolate and caramel sauce. For another outstanding cookie experience, try Rookies Cookies, a bakery that opened in 1939, is famous for a small butter cookie with an icing center so soft that it melts in your mouth.
Chocolate Sweet Shops in Indiana
Chocoholics will find many sweet shops in Indiana to satisfy their cravings. DeBrand Fine Chocolates in Fort Wayne, for example, produces some of the finest chocolate in the country—intricately designed works of art crafted with top-quality, sometimes exotic, ingredients. The truffles are silky and rich, the fruit creams burst with intense flavors. They even make gourmet gelato. On guided tours that let you peek beyond the glass and into the kitchens, perhaps you’ll see caramel pretzel bars being en-robed in chocolate or a stream of raspberry truffles on the conveyor; chocolate samples are part of the tour. Afterwards, guests can peruse the chocolate shop or relax over gelato, a sundae or fancy hot chocolate in the elegant, wood-paneled café. Boxes of DeBrand chocolates, distinguished by upscale packaging, are shipped all over the world.
The chocolate trail also goes through South Bend, home showcasing many popular sweet shops in Indiana such as the South Bend Chocolate Company. A factory tour includes the museum, which boasts one of the largest collections of chocolate memorabilia in the world. Check out the outlet store or the company’s downtown café, billed as the “world’s largest chocolate store.” The University Collection has products bearing the Notre Dame logo. Pay tribute to legendary coach Knute Rockne by buying a box of Rocknes, a mound of premium American chocolate blended with coconut, almonds and a cherry flavoring.
Since 1966 Donaldson’s Finer Chocolates in Lebanon has attracted connoisseurs with top-quality products made the old-fashioned way—with fresh creamery butter, rich whole milk, pure cane sugar, the best chocolate and lots of Hoosier pride. George and Peg Donaldson make seven different flavored truffles and eight different creams, but their top seller is the Pecan Carmel Delight (comparable to a turtle).
At Ghyslain Chocolatier in Union City, basic tours focus on the production of not only gourmet chocolates but fine French pastries as well; see the delicate process of hand-painting chocolates in vivid colors. The “Make Your Own Chocolate” tour provides lessons on making an edible chocolate tulip cup that you fill with chocolate mousse, decorate and devour.
Candy, Popcorn and Honey, Oh My!
In Edinburgh, groups get in some tasting during the factory tour at Not Just Popcorn, which makes more than 240 popcorn flavors, including dill pickle and chocolate mint cappuccino. The retail store is next door. In Merrillville at Chicagoland Popcorn, the “Popcorn Flavor Superstore,” the top seller is the Chicagoland Mix, a combination of cheese and caramel popcorn. New among the 125 flavors are Chicken Bacon Ranch and Jalapeno Spinach Dip.
Just across the road is Albanese Candy Factory, a colorful wonderland where free group tours show the “World’s Best Gummies” and other treats being made right before your eyes, samples included.
For something a bit nontraditional among sweet shops in Indiana, make a trip to Newfangled Confections in Indianapolis and try the Frittle. As they say, “This ain’t your grandma’s brittle.” Frittle combines the peanut-buttery sweetness of brittle with peanut fudge. The result is a “kinder, softer brittle” with a crispy-creamy texture and just a hint of salt.
Learn all about the world of honey on a tour at Hunter’s Honey Farm in Martinsville, started by a family of beekeepers four generations ago. See bees making honey in a live observation hive and catch bottling and candle-dipping demonstrations. You can even bottle your own honey.
At the southern end of the state is Santa’s Candy Castle, an enchanting candy store in the town of Santa Claus. Piped-in Christmas music, from “Jingle Bells” to “Come, All Ye Faithful,” greets guests, who find freshly made fudge, blast-from-the-past candies, and entire sections devoted to Jelly Belly and Pez. Frozen hot chocolate, the shop’s specialty, comes in 33 flavors, including salted caramel, gingerbread and roasted chestnut.
With all the yummy treats being turned out by factories and kitchens in towns big and small, every day can be a holiday on a tour through Indiana. And, for icing on the cake, be sure to bring some goodies back home as sweet memories of your trip.
If you’d like more great group travel ideas in Indiana, check out the Indiana Group Tour Planner and be sure to Subscribe to Leisure Group Travel to stay up to date with our latest travel news.