There are places you stumble into by accident and places you seek out on purpose, and then there are the rare spots that become a standing appointment every time you find yourself in a particular zip code. For me, Hatley’s Old Fashioned Ice Cream & Deli on Gus Thomasson Road in Mesquite is firmly in that third category — a cheerful, unpretentious gem that manages to feel like it belongs to another, slower era while still delivering exactly what you need right now.
Mesquite has always had a proud small-town spirit tucked inside its sprawling Dallas-suburb footprint, and Hatley’s captures that spirit perfectly. The moment you walk through the door, you are greeted by the kind of no-fuss, genuine hospitality that chain restaurants spend millions trying to manufacture and never quite pull off. The staff knows regulars by name, the décor leans into classic Americana without being kitschy about it, and the menu is the sort of straightforward, crowd-pleasing lineup that reminds you why simple things done well never go out of style.
Let’s start with the ice cream, because that is legitimately the headliner here. Scoops are generous — we are talking two-handed territory — and the flavors rotate with enough variety to reward repeat visits. On a warm Texas afternoon, which in Mesquite describes roughly nine months of the year, there is nothing better than pulling into the parking lot, walking up to the counter, and ordering a double scoop of something cold and creamy. The banana pudding flavor alone is worth planning a detour around.
But do not make the mistake of skimping on the deli side of things. The sandwiches are built thick and honest, with quality meats and fresh bread that hold their own against any deli counter in the greater Dallas area. Whether you are grabbing a quick lunch between errands on the east side of town or sitting down for a proper midday meal, the food delivers without any fuss or fanfare. It is the kind of lunch that leaves you satisfied rather than stuffed, energized rather than sluggish.
The setting itself adds to the charm. Hatley’s sits in a neighborhood that reflects real, everyday Mesquite — not a manufactured lifestyle district, not a developer’s vision of what a town center should look like, just a genuine local block where people actually live and work and eat. That authenticity is increasingly rare, and it is worth celebrating.
Families with kids, couples looking for an easy afternoon outing, solo diners who just want a good sandwich and a quiet table — Hatley’s accommodates all of them without breaking a sweat. Parking is easy, the price point is refreshingly reasonable, and the whole experience clocks in at the kind of relaxed, unhurried pace that makes an ordinary Tuesday feel like a small occasion.
If you are plotting a Mesquite itinerary or simply looking for a reason to venture east of downtown Dallas, put Hatley’s near the top of your list. It is the kind of place that reminds you why local always wins.