Opening a fourth location!
Pie Junkies Rejoice! After only six years in business, Pie Junkie and Bakery is opening its fourth location, proving how recipes filled with love and family values are the ingredients for success. What better way for a local business to celebrate a sixth anniversary than to open a new location? That’s how Pie Junkie will mark the occasion, with a fourth shop opening just in time for Thanksgiving in Calgary’s Crowfoot Plaza. Grateful to city resident for embracing its passion for pastries, Pie Junkie serves up sweet and savoury offerings all made from scratch, by hand and with no fillers or preservatives. With its famous all-butter pastry, this fall season will see the launch of several Pie Junkie favourites, including bourbon pumpkin, maple pecan and classic apple, while on the savoury side, turkey dinner pie will tempt anyone’s tastebuds. Thinking outside the box, Pie Junkie will also add some new flavour traditions to its menu, with its salted honey, chocolate mocha caramel drizzle and banana toffee pies to delight passionate pastry-loving patrons. Innovative fillings and tantalizing combinations aside, Pie Junkie’s long-standing family recipes are what sets its pies apart, emphasizing tradition and comfort for its customers and bringing pride and passion into each and every item on its menu. The new Crowfoot shop will add to Pie Junkie’s Kensington, Mahogany and Spruce Cliff locations. So, whether you’re looking to satisfy your sweet tooth, serve up a savoury pot pie for dinner or just want to dip your fork into a delicious pie filled with family tradition, visit one of Pie Junkie’s four locations today.
Calgary·Food and the City

Pie Junkie brings real Manchester mince pies to Calgary Julie Van Rosendaal · CBC News · Posted: Dec 21, 2017 8:07 PM MT | Last Updated: January 28, 2018 “I get ridiculously nostalgic about mince tarts,” says Nancy Goemans, owner of Pie Junkie in Spruce Cliff and Kensington. “It makes me cry talking about them.” She did tear up talking about the tarts her parents made every year. Her dad was from Manchester, England, an army cook who was raised on mince pies every Christmas, which he made from his great-great-grandmother’s recipe. When Nancy was growing up in Ontario, her mom and dad would make a big batch of mincemeat every August, jar it and keep it in the cool root cellar — along with the salamis her Italian mother would make — to use the following year. “After my dad passed away and my mom became ill and moved into a home, there was no more mincemeat,” says Goemans. She uses brandy and grated suet — beef fat that’s traditionally used in mincemeat — that she sources from a butcher just for this purpose, reserving the butter for the all-butter pastry they use in all their pies. The filling is uncooked but stored in the fridge, similar to her parents’ process, to allow the fruit to macerate. Each tart is then handmade, the edges of the pastry rustically uncrimped, with a star on top and a snowy dusting of icing sugar. It’s the shop’s second-biggest seller during the holidays, second only to tourtière. They make the tourtière in larger and single-serving sizes with half beef, half pork, onions and a bit of potato, and the traditional cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves as well as some rosemary and thyme — a formula tweaked by Goemans’ French-Canadian friend and business partner, Jo-Anne Caza. “Occasionally I hear a British accent, and I tell them we make a steak and kidney pie with Guinness and a true sweet mince,” Goemans says. “And I promise they’re better than Marks and Spencer’s.”