Netflix’s Bake Squad star
Maya-Camille Broussard is the owner of the Chicago-based bakery
Justice of the Pies, which specializes in sweet and savory pies, quiches, and tarts. Broussard created her bakery in memory of her late father, Stephen J. Broussard, a self-proclaimed “Pie Master” and self-employed defense attorney. She opened her business with their shared belief that everyone deserves an opportunity to reform their lives.
Broussard actively works to positively impact the local community, including offering an “I Knead Love” workshop several times each year for kids from low-income households to learn basic cooking skills, healthy eating habits, and nutrition. Justice of the Pies has partnered with Maria Kaupas Center, Alternatives Youth, and Jewish Children and Family Services to provide meals for communities on Chicago’s South and West sides. During the COVID pandemic, her bakery has also partnered with Frontline Foods to provide food from restaurants for front-line workers, often with donations from notable names such as Kerry Washington and Mayor Rahm Emanuel.
Maya-Camille Broussard uses her own experience as one of the four professional pastry bakers to compete in the first season of Bake Squad to set a positive example for young bakers. Being hearing impaired, she wants to encourage others with the story of her struggles and successes. She hopes that her presence as a Black woman living with a disability on the series will show others that anything is possible. In her engaging talks, Broussard shares how she uses her bakery and role as a small business owner to advocate for people living with disabilities and food apartheid, especially in communities of color.
In her cookbook,
Justice of the Pies, Maya-Camille Broussard shares more than 85 recipes for pies and other mouthwatering creations and shares the stories of heroes outside the kitchen that inspired these recipes.
Broussard graduated from Howard University in Washington, D.C. with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree and earned her Master of Arts degree in theater from Northwestern University. Before opening Justice of Pies, she ran Congo Square Theatre’s educational outreach program from 2003 to 2008, teaching workshops in lower-income schools.