Curtis Stone’s pies are a slice of nostalgia and the ideal sweet or savory holiday treat.

Individual Apple Pie

Thomas J. Story

The holidays are built on rituals—decorating the tree, singing carols, baking pies—and for designer Martyn Lawrence Bullard, one of the season’s most enduring tastes is the humble mincemeat pie. “It reminds me of my childhood in Britain,” he says. “That mix of spice, fruit, and pastry is pure nostalgia.”

Curtis Stone and Martyn Lawrence Bullard share a laugh… and some pies.

Thomas J. Story

So when Bullard discovered The Pie Room by Curtis Stone, a Los Angeles mash-up of an Australian pie shop and a neighborhood bistro, Bullard found a new tradition that felt both fresh and familiar, a place where savory and sweet pies carry the same holiday magic.

Chef Curtis Stone with his beautiful baked goods.

Thomas J. Story

Chef Stone, the Australian-born chef who lives in L.A. and is a household name on U.S. food TV, has long helmed the sweet shop. With The Pie Room, formerly the tasting menu restaurant Maude, Stone leans into something more casual yet equally soulful, serving pies that are comforting, transportive, and celebratory all at once.

The charming dining room.

Thomas J. Story

The menu spans the savory comforts of Stone’s native Australia—flaky beef and stout pies, chicken and leek sandwiches, or mushroom and Gruyère quiches—to sweet showstoppers that channel holiday spirit: pumpkin pie or fruit-filled hand pies, perfect for gifting or sharing. The setting works as both a counter for takeaway and a convivial bistro. It’s this balance—tradition reframed for today—that appeals to Bullard. “Curtis has created something that feels celebratory,” he says. “These pies are a little indulgent, a little nostalgic, and absolutely festive.”

Curtis Stone’s Individual Apple Pie

Thomas J. Story

These beautiful single-serving pies are lattice-topped at The Pie Room, but for ease of making, this one skips that step.


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