Vancouver Sun

Pie equals new passion for B.C. filmmaker turned pastry pro

Vancouver native creates a new industry with her elaborate dessert creations

- GEORDON OMAND

Jessica Clark-Bojin remembers having a reputation for her lack of cooking skills.

“I couldn’t crack an egg. I was shooed out at family gatherings,” says the Vancouver native, laughing. “I had no experience in a kitchen whatsoever.”

Now Clark-Bojin is shaking up the baking world with her elaborate pie creations, which range from detailed celebrity portraits to towering three-dimensiona­l “pie-scrapers.”

The former filmmaker’s journey from kitchen klutz to pastry pro started with a New Year’s resolution to cut down on sugar in 2016, when she began experiment­ing with pies to sate her dessert cravings. What began as a creative foray has become a full-time gig.

“It’s the most fun job that I’ve ever had in my life,” she said. “I never thought I’d be doing anything like this.”

Clark-Bojin’s multi-tiered masterpiec­es include Calvin and Hobbes riding a wagon down a hillside and an Aladdin-themed castle. The self-described science fiction nerd has also concocted a glow-in-the-dark Tron apple pie and Star Wars themed fruit turnovers shaped like Jabba the Hut.

Along the way, Clark-Bojin has tapped into her science background as a former university physics student to develop new methods and materials. Her innovation­s include colouring pastry dough, creating pigments that glow in the dark and baking three-dimensiona­l shapes.

“This isn’t cooking. This is chemistry!”

The American talk show The Chew invited Clark-Bojin to New York to present a pie on the show in late 2016, which was followed by an invitation from the Food Network to start making videos for the cooking channel, she said.

Pies are especially challengin­g because pastry dough quickly becomes tough when overworked and its inconsiste­ncy means it often changes shape unpredicta­bly in the oven, Clark-Bojin said.

She said one “aha moment” came while designing an alien face from the sci-fi franchise Predator, when Clark-Bojin came up with a method of blending different layers of pastry together, “like modelling clay,” using an egg mixture.

“That opened a whole new world,” she said.

Clark-Bojin said most of her baking gets done late at night after her five-year-old son, Cillian, is in bed. She described him as her harshest critic.

“He’ll look at something that I’ve been slaving over for days and I’m really proud of and he’ll be like, ‘Hmm. It’s not your best work, mommy,’ ” she said.

Clark-Bojin doesn’t sell her pies directly. She supports her work by offering how-to guides and dough stencils for sale.

Her next task is to simplify her techniques.

“My mission with all of this is not just to be a snooty pie artist,” she said, adding that the overall goal is to create a new industry.

“I want to teach other people and inspire other people to create cool things in this medium that they love with this food that they love.” The Canadian Press

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Jessica Clark-Bojin holds an apple pie bearing a likeness of actor and comedian Betty White. “It’s the most fun job that I’ve ever had in my life,” she says of her offbeat baking enterprise.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Jessica Clark-Bojin holds an apple pie bearing a likeness of actor and comedian Betty White. “It’s the most fun job that I’ve ever had in my life,” she says of her offbeat baking enterprise.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada