Lifestyle

12 best shops to find pastry perfection

Is there anything more nostalgic, more all-American, more all-around satisfying than a well made pie? Swirls of meringue float atop lemon curd. Creamy flounces adorn a fresh banana pie. And crumbly, gooey deliciousness oozes from flaky pastry shells everywhere.

Many Bay Area restaurants feature a slice or two on their dessert menus, but this region is also home to some stellar pie-centric bakeries, each with its own spin on the classics. Here are a dozen hot spots to try, from a patisserie in Walnut Creek to an Argentine-inspired bakery in San Mateo and a worker-owned pie shop in Union City, where savory pies compete with the sweets.

The Giving Pies, San Jose

The hardest part about going into a pie shop, of course, is deciding what to order. So many flavors, so little time. And once you commit to that big slice of apple, you might not have room for the berry. Horrors!

Pie fans can (at least partially) bypass that problem at this San Jose shop, which specializes in mini pies — 1.5-inch diameter pies you can devour in just a couple of bites. (Or one. Just saying.) So go ahead and order that apple almond pie — and the blackberry AND the pineapple, too. Minis start at $2.90, but the shop also makes medium versions ($8) as well as large pies ($31) that are 9 inches across and feed six to eight pie lovers.

A mini chocolate salted caramel pie, top left, a mini banana cream pie, top right, and a mini blueberry pie at The Giving Pies in San Jose, Calif., on May 2, 2023. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
A mini chocolate salted caramel pie, top left, a mini banana cream pie, top right, and a mini blueberry pie at The Giving Pies in San Jose, Calif., on May 2, 2023. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

Owner Voahangy Rasetarinera spent years as an IT admin before starting an online pie shop. When production outgrew her home kitchen in early 2021, she opened this brick-and-mortar. As for the name, the company donates a portion of its proceeds to the nonprofit E-Sports, which has helped kids with special needs play sports since the foundation began on a Foster City soccer field in 2000.

The slice: The lemon pie may be a big house favorite, but we’re all about the juicy blackberry with a crumble crust.

Details: Opens at 9 a.m. Mondays, 7 a.m. Tuesday-Friday and 8 a.m. on Saturdays at 569 W. Alma Ave. in San Jose; thegivingpies.com.

Le Gateau Elegant, Walnut Creek

When pastry artist Karen Del Bonta moved her bakery from Martinez to downtown Walnut Creek in 2013, she kept to her French patisserie theme. A large mural depicting a sunny cobblestone courtyard lets visitors imagine they’ve stepped in off the rue to pick up the day’s tarte aux pommes.

Le Gateau Elegant owner and pastry chef Karen Del Bonta in Walnut Creek, Calif., on May 4, 2023. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
Le Gateau Elegant owner and pastry chef Karen Del Bonta in Walnut Creek, Calif., on May 4, 2023. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

As the bakery’s name suggests, those gateaux — Del Bonta’s custom-designed wedding cakes and a Christmas-season Buche de Noel among them — are Del Bonta’s claim to célébrité. But when loyal customers began asking for holiday pumpkin and pecan pies, Del Bonta complied. And soon, her customer requests led to year-round pies ($27-$35) — classic banana, coconut and chocolate cream, as well as fruit pies made with the bakery’s signature buttery streusel topping.

The slice: The pecan pies are a customer favorite, but Del Bonta’s apple pie — with its fresh fruit, butter, sugar and cinnamon filling — is just outstanding. And it’s a harbinger of what’s to come as cherries, peaches and other stone fruit come fully into season, bringing the flavors of summer.

A pecan pie at Le Gateau Elegant in Walnut Creek, Calif., on May 4, 2023. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
A pecan pie at Le Gateau Elegant in Walnut Creek, Calif., on May 4, 2023. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

Details: Opens at 9 a.m. Tuesday-Saturday at 1479 Newell Ave. in Walnut Creek; www.legateauelegant.com.

Lolita Artisanal Bakery-Cafe, San Mateo

Argentina native Silvia Leiva-Browne’s pastry shop and cafe on El Camino Real may be new to customers, but her recipes are time-tested — on two continents. “I grew up in my parents’ bakery. This is my legacy,” she said, explaining that the name Lolita honors her mother. The legacy starts with the famous South American sandwich cookies and extends to a large lineup of small pies, tarts and other pastries.

“We bake throughout the day so there’s always an inviting aroma floating through the air,” she said.

Silvia Leiva-Browne, owner of Lolita Artisanal Bakery, sits with her pies at Lolita Artisanal Bakery in San Mateo, Calif., on Wednesday, May 3, 2023. She named the bakery after her mother, who owned a bakery in Argentina. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group)
Silvia Leiva-Browne, owner of Lolita Artisanal Bakery in San Mateo, displays fruit, pecan and cheese pies and tarts. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group) 

Maple Pecan Tarts ($6), glistening fruit tarts and cheese pies share display space with Alfajores ($2.75-$3) in flavors of dulce de leche (that’s the traditional one), fig and Valrhona chocolate. The Pasta Frola ($4.50) is a popular mini-pie traditionally made with quince; Leiva-Browne substitutes guava, popular here on the Peninsula. And if the Ricotta Cheese Pie ($5.50), with its hint of citrus, sounds Italian, that’s because Argentina is home to a large population of residents with Italian heritage, she said.

The slice: The surprise layer of almond cream adds a sophisticated touch to the Frangipane Fruit Tarts ($5.50). Lolita’s bakes them in apple, apricot and blueberry versions.

Details: Full-size pies and tarts are available by special order. The bakery-cafe at 3790 S. El Camino Real, San Mateo, opens at 7 a.m. Wednesday-Sunday. Takeout from Lolita’s Hillsdale shop, 60 31st Ave., opens at 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday-Sunday. www.lolitaalfajores.com

Gregory’s Gourmet Desserts, Oakland

This longtime Oakland pastry purveyor mimics a speakeasy, what with its narrow staircase leading underground. One might pass it by were it not for the eye-catching mural of Black-American chefs that include James Hemings (chef to Thomas Jefferson), Carla Hall of “Top Chef” fame and a person identified simply as “Gregory.” That would be Gregory Williams, a Brooklyn-raised chef whose inclusion in this pantheon of greats might seem audacious, were it not for the creativity and deliciousness of everything that exits his ovens.

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