Toast Towers — The Most Unique Dessert in Los Angeles
Los Angeles has no shortage of dessert trends. Ube everything. Mochi donuts. Croffles. Soft serve with seventeen toppings. Most of them arrive, go viral, and disappear within a year. Toast Towers are different. They've been the signature creation at Toasted in Montrose since 2021, and nobody has copied them — probably because nobody else could pull them off the same way.
If you haven't encountered one yet, here's what you need to know.
What Exactly Is a Toast Tower?
A Toast Tower is a thick-cut slab of specialty artisan bread, toasted until the exterior is golden and caramelized, then stacked with ice cream, fresh fruits, cookies, chocolate, syrups, and glazes. It's crowned with a custom Toasted medallion — a small branded wafer that sits on top like a flag on a summit.
The result looks like something between a deconstructed sundae and an architectural project. The first time most people see one arrive at a neighboring table, they immediately ask their server what it is. It doesn't look like anything else on any menu in the city.
Thick-cut bread, toasted to perfection, stacked impossibly high with ice cream and toppings. It's sculpture you can eat.
The Bread Makes Everything
Every Toast Tower starts with the bread, and the bread is non-negotiable. Toasted uses specialty loaves sourced specifically for this purpose — not your regular sandwich bread. The slices are almost an inch thick. When toasted, they develop a deep caramelization on the outside while staying pillowy-soft inside. This contrast is what makes the whole concept work.
Warm, crispy bread against cold ice cream. Crunchy toppings against soft fruit. The temperature and texture play is what elevates a Toast Tower from "interesting idea" to "I need to come back and try another one."
The Full Lineup
Toasted currently serves nine Toast Tower varieties, all available on the full menu. Here are the standouts:
Nutella & Banana — $12 (The Bestseller)
This is where most people start. Rich Nutella spread, fresh banana slices, everything anchored on that thick toasted bread. At $12, it's the most affordable Tower and the highest-volume item on the menu. People come in curious and leave committed. If you're bringing someone who's never been, order this first.
Saffron & Rose — $15 (The Showstopper)
Persian-inspired, with saffron ice cream, rose water drizzle, and crushed pistachios. This is the one that stops people mid-conversation at other tables. The combination of saffron's earthy warmth with the delicate floral notes of rose water is genuinely unlike anything on any menu in Los Angeles. Food bloggers have filmed this one without being asked — they just see it and reach for their phones.
S'mores — $14 (The Nostalgic One)
Toasted marshmallow, graham cracker crumbles, melted chocolate. Campfire nostalgia turned into something you can order at a cafe on a Tuesday morning. Popular with families — kids go wild for it, and adults get a hit of childhood without the smoke smell.
Cookies N Creme — $16 (The Tower)
This one is the true tower — double-stacked bread with cookies and cream ice cream, Oreo crumbles, and whipped cream. It's the tallest, most photogenic, and most indulgent option. If you're sharing with a group, this is the one.
Tiramisu — $14 (The Sophisticated One)
Espresso-soaked bread, mascarpone cream, cocoa dusting. This started as a seasonal experiment and customers refused to let it leave the menu. If you drink your coffee black and roll your eyes at desserts that are "too sweet," this is your Tower.
The Others Worth Knowing
Chocoholic ($16) is for the triple-chocolate crowd. Sea Salt Caramel ($14) hits the sweet-salty balance perfectly. Tutti Frutti ($15) is the most colorful — a pile of seasonal fruits, whipped cream, and honey. Strawberry Delight ($14) is fresh strawberries and strawberry ice cream, straightforward and excellent.
Why Dine-In Only?
This is the question. Every delivery app user asks it. The answer is simple: a Toast Tower has a lifespan of about five minutes.
The ice cream starts melting the moment it touches warm bread. The bread starts losing its crunch. The whole thing is designed to be eaten immediately after assembly, while the temperature contrasts are still alive. Putting a Toast Tower in a delivery bag would be like mailing someone a soufflé. You'd be getting a shadow of the experience, and Toasted would rather not serve it at all than serve it wrong.
Everything else on the menu — sandwiches, coffee, breakfast toasts — ships fine. But the Towers are a sit-down-and-enjoy situation. That's part of what makes them special.
Why Nobody Has Copied Them
In a city where successful food concepts get cloned within months, Toast Towers have remained exclusive to Toasted for four years. Part of it is the bread — sourcing and handling it correctly isn't trivial. Part of it is the execution speed — assembling a Tower while the bread is still warm and the ice cream hasn't melted requires practiced hands. And part of it is just the fact that Toasted figured out something genuinely original, which is harder to replicate than it sounds.
Nine varieties. $12 to $16. Dine-in only, served all day until 30 minutes before closing. That's the full picture. Check the complete menu at Toasted — 2420 Honolulu Ave, Montrose. Open seven days a week.
Written by the Toasted team
Visit Toasted
Stop by for specialty coffee, artisan toasts, and our famous Toast Towers — only available dine-in.
2420 Honolulu Ave, Montrose, CA 91020 · (818) 330-9350