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These baked piroshki are ultra soft. I made half of them with caramelized apples and half with braised cabbage and beef. Both were excellent fillings. I took these baked piroshki over to my sister’s house still warm from the oven and my sister admitted to eating 6 of them. She loved ’em! Actually everyone did.
Between the two filled 9×13″ pans, I only brought home 6 piroshky/buns. I bet this dough would make great dinner rolls. I’ve also been thinking to wrap the dough around sausages to make pretzel dogs. I can’t stop thinking about this dough!
Ingredients for Baked Piroshki:
2 cups warm milk
1 Tbsp active dry yeast
1/2 cup sugar, divided
6 cups + 2 Tbsp all-purpose flour, (divided into 1 cup and 5 cups + 2 Tbsp) *measured correctly
3 eggs,
1 and 1/2 Tbsp melted butter
1 tsp salt
1 egg, beaten for egg wash
Tip for Success:
A yeast dough will rise much faster in a warm oven. When letting a yeast dough rise in the oven, it should never be hotter than 100˚F. If you have a proofing option on your oven, use it. My old oven didn’t have such a luxury and the low setting was at 150˚F which will start cooking your bread, deactivate the yeast and ruin your buns.
I used to get creative by preheating to low, turning the oven off, propping the door with a wooden spoon and placing my dough over a towel in the oven. I’ve ruined yeast dough before by letting it get to hot and I’d love to spare you the same disappointment.
For the Apple Filling:
Use the apple filling from the fried apple pirojki: 2 medium apples + 1/4 cup sugar. Chop apples finely in food processor then saute with 1/4 cup sugar over medium high heat for 10 min stirring often until most of the juice has evaporated. Set aside to cool. For sweet piroshki, brush the top with sugar water as soon as they are done baking. (1 Tbsp sugar dissolved into 2 Tbsp warm water).
For the Braised Cabbage filling:
Click here for the Braised cabbage with Beef recipe. P.S. Make sure to cut your beef small if using for piroshki.
How to Make the Baked Piroshki/Buns:
Preheat your oven to 360°F at step 13.
1. In the bowl of an electric mixer, add 2 cups warm milk and sprinkle the top with 1 Tbsp yeast. Let sit for 5-7 five minutes.
2. Add 1 cup flour and 1/4 cup sugar. Whisk together until blended and let it rise at room temperature for 30-45 minutes. It will rise faster in a warm place (20 minutes in a 100˚ Foven, but don’t let it get hotter than that or it will start to cook and ruin the yeast).
3. Whisk in the 3 eggs, remaining 1/4 cup sugar, 1.5 Tbsp melted butter and 1 tsp salt. Now using the dough hook, add the flour 1 cup at a time letting it blend into the dough before adding the next cup. (Add the last cup 1/2 cup at a time so you don’t over-do it).
You know you’ve added enough flour when the dough is no longer sticking to the walls of the bowl. So, all together from start to finish, I used 6 cups + 2 Tbsp but it could vary slightly depending on the flour you use. Mix/knead on low speed with the dough hook for 15 minutes. .
4. Cover with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm 100˚ oven for 1 hour (2 hours in a warm room). The dough will triple in volume. Be patient. It’s all worth it in the end. 😉
5. Transfer your dough to a good non-stick surface and cut into 5 equal pieces. Working with one piece at a time, roll each piece of dough into a 13-14″ circle.
6. Cut each circle with a pizza cutter into 8 equal triangles. Place about 1/2 Tbsp of filling onto the middle of the wide portion of each triangle (The OXO mini scoop makes this job easier. I love this little contraption!)
7. To Roll: pinch the two edges together over the filling and seal all the way down. Seal the dough to the base over the filling. Fold in the little corners and roll it forward. Since it helps to visualize, here’s a picture of all the rolling steps from left to right:
8. Once the piroshki are rolled up, place on a parchment lined baking sheet 1/2″ apart with the flap side facing down so they aren’t tempted to unroll. Let the piroshki rise in a warm 100˚ oven for 20 minutes until they look puffy (30-45 minutes in a warm room).
(See how they puff up nicely and are now touching each other? Now they’re ready for the oven)
9. Beat 1 egg and brush the tops of the piroshki with the beaten egg. Bake at 360˚F for 20 minutes or until the tops are golden brown.
If you are making the sweet apple piroshki, brush them with your sugar/water glaze just as soon as they are out of the oven to give them some extra shimmer and sweetness.
Enjoy em!
Baked Piroshki Recipe (2 Filling Options: Sweet or Savory!)

Ingredients
- 2 cups warm milk
- 1 Tbsp active dry yeast
- 1/2 cup sugar, divided
- 6 cups + 2 Tbsp all-purpose flour, (divided into 1 cup and 5 cups + 2 Tbsp)
- 3 eggs
- 1 and 1/2 Tbsp melted butter
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 egg, beaten for egg wash
Instructions
For the Apple Filling:
- You need: 2 Apples and 1/3 cup granulated sugar.
- Chop apples finely in food processor then saute with 1/4 cup sugar over medium high heat for 10 min stirring often until most of the juice has evaporated. Set aside to cool. For sweet piroshki, brush the top with sugar water as soon as they are done baking. (1 Tbsp sugar dissolved into 2 Tbsp warm water).
For the Braised Cabbage filling: visit NatashasKitchen.com for the full Braised cabbage with Beef recipe. P.S. Make sure to cut your beef small if using for piroshki.
How to Make the Piroshki/Buns: (Preheat your oven to 360° F at step 8).
- In the bowl of an electric mixer, add 2 cups warm milk and sprinkle the top with 1 Tbsp yeast. Let sit for 5-7 five minutes.
- Add 1 cup flour and 1/4 cup sugar. Whisk together until blended and let it rise at room temperature for 30-45 minutes. It will rise faster in a warm place (20 minutes in a 100˚ oven, but don't let it get hotter than that or it will start to cook and ruin the yeast).
- Whisk in the 3 eggs, remaining 1/4 cup sugar, 1.5 Tbsp melted butter and 1 tsp salt. Now using the dough hook, add the flour 1 cup at a time letting it blend into the dough before adding the next cup. (Add the last cup 1/2 cup at a time so you don't over-do it). You know you've added enough flour when the dough is no longer sticking to the walls of the bowl. I ended up adding 6 cups + 2 Tbsp but it could vary slightly depending on the flour you use. Mix/knead on low speed with the dough hook for 15 minutes.
- Cover with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm 100˚F oven for 1 hour (2 hours in a warm room). The dough will triple in volume. Be patient. It's all worth it in the end.
- Transfer your dough to a good non-stick surface and cut into 5 equal pieces. Working with one piece at a time, roll each piece of dough into a 13-14" circle.
- Cut each circle with a pizza cutter into 8 equal triangles. Place about 1/2 Tbsp of filling onto the middle of the wide portion of each triangle.
- To Roll: pinch the two edges together over the filling and seal all the way down. Seal the dough to the base over the filling. Fold in the little corners and roll it forward.
- Once the piroshki are rolled up, place on a parchment lined baking sheet 1/2" apart with the flap side facing down so they aren't tempted to unroll. Let the piroshki rise in a warm 100˚ oven for 20 minutes until they look puffy (30-45 minutes in a warm room). The will puff up nicely and will be touching each other. Now they're ready for the oven.
- Beat 1 egg and brush the tops of the piroshki with the beaten egg. Bake at 360˚F for 20 minutes or until the tops are golden brown.
Notes
Tip for Success: Yeast dough will rise much faster in a warm oven. When letting a yeast dough rise in the oven, it should never be hotter than 100˚F. If you have a proofing option on your oven, use it. My old oven didn't have such a luxury and the low setting was at 150˚F which will start cooking your bread, deactivate the yeast and ruin your buns. I used to get creative by preheating to low, turning the oven off, propping the door with a wooden spoon and placing my dough over a towel in the oven. I've ruined yeast dough before by letting it get to hot and I'd love to spare you the same disappointment.
Credits: The dough and apple filling was inspired by my one my readers, Ira, who shared her family’s recipe for baked piroshki. P.S. she said a bread maker works well for the dough. Thank you so much Ira for sharing your brilliant and simple recipe with us!
Hi madam,
I like your piroshki sweet
Hi Natasha! Wondering if I can leave the dough out to rise overnight?
To be honest, I haven’t tried that so I’m not sure how it would affect the recipe or if it’s food safe with the dairy and eggs in the recipe.
Hey Natasha can you please make macaroons
My husband has been bugging me about that too. It’s on the list. 🙂
Thank you for recipe, Natasha!
I have few questions to recipe: for meat and cabbage filling, for some reason the meat chunks looked a bit larger than I’d like, so I’d like to make them smaller. Should I chop that meats very finely, or should I use ground beef? Or would ground beef ruin filling? I just want that meats to spread evenly inside the bun and not be “chunksy” , I not wanting for person to be chewing on one ingredient at time, know? What do you think?
Also, after adjustment with meat, would this be okay filling for fried one, too?
Thanks so much girl!
You could chop the meat into smaller pieces. I haven’t tried using ground meat so I’m not sure if it would change the overall consistency of the braised cabbage. My aunt has even used canned beef which is super tender and when you pull it apart with forks, it blends into the cabbage nicely. Yes you could definitely use the same filling for the fried one, just make sure you don’t add any excess juice if frying since it can cause splatter if there are any leaks.
I’m making the dough as I write. I’m excited to try these. My filling is savory just Ground Beef and Cabbage like my Grandmother made. I don’t have her dough recipe I do know she used sour cream in her dough and fresh cake yeast. My mom says somewhere is her recipe tin and the recipes in there. My mom passed last year in March and I’m cleaning the house I’m really hoping to run across the recipe. We have a Russian cook but, but most are fried and no sour cream these look great can’t wait to taste them. My grand children are coming today so a bit of history for them. Thanks for sharing With love Janice ( family name keseloff from San Francisco Ca. Originally Karrs Russia)
Thank you so much for sharing your story with me. I hope these remind you of your Grandmother’s dough :). It’s wonderful to meet you and I do hope you find the recipe. 🙂
Thank you for the recipe! I am making them for the second time right now…my Russian husband LOVED them last time, they reminded him of his childhood.
I’m so happy to hear that you both enjoy the recipe and that it brings back memories for your husband. Thanks for sharing that with me.
pirohi were good
I’m so glad you liked them! 🙂
I love bread and I’ve always found working with yeast a bit challenging. These ones came out fantastic. I had a breakfast boating trip and made these to eat with jam and they blew away. I made them as buns (no filling) and substitute the milk with soy milk (Silk unsweetened) and lactose free butter as my husb is lactose intolerant.
note: with some scrap dough my hubby did one big roll with prosciutto and peccorino shavings……. OMG absolutely delish !!!
thank you so much for this wonderful recipe…. and the tip of the 100 degree oven!!!!
Wow that sounds incredible to add prosciutto and peccorino shavings! Wow! Wow! You’re making me so hungry!
Natasha, I made these tonight for the first time ever (w/out a visit to my mom’s for help) and they turned out perfect!!! My best critic (my hubby) said they were sooo good and fluffy! Just wanted to share a tip with you that I learned while in the Culinary Academy…to help your dough rise in half the time, just pour warm water in a glass bowl and stick it in the microwave for 2 minutes. Then keeping that bowl in there with the steaming water, stick your dough into the microwave as quickly as possible so that the steam doesn’t escape. I did this with the dough in my mixing bowl as well as my baking pans, when piroshki were ready to be set aside to rise 🙂 Hope you find this process helpful. My dough literally rose in half the time 🙂
Alla, that is a great tip, thanks for sharing :). I will have to try that next time.
We keep our house below 67 degrees in the winter, so I’ve got a couple of other methods of proofing yeast dough as well. Bring a cup of water to boil in the microwave. Put the dough in. Gives a nice moist heat that won’t Dry out the dough. I’ve also put the dough into a preheated dryer after doing laundry. Same with the dishwasher. Perfect temp is around 80 degrees. I make the Savory buns and keep them in the Freezer. Looking forward to the sweet ones this week. Love them!
Those are some really really good ideas!! Thank you so much for sharing that with all of us. You’re so creative! Let me know how to are after the freezer. I haven’t tried doing that yet. Thanks again Conni! 🙂
I tried this today and it was awesome! My MIL, who is very picky about what she eats also loved it! Thanks!
That’s music to my ears. Thank you so much for sharing that with me 🙂
I made these today! I don’t have a mixer and ruined my beater lol I feel like that’s why my dough was so sticky? It was really hard to handle but I managed to flour it enough to be able to roll it . I put the apple filling and I made a date filling too I also made some plain ones. They came out pretty good but since I couldn’t roll them up as well they didn’t have shape lol. They taste great though . Thanks!
I don’t think using a hand mixer would work at all on this dough since it is quite thick for a mixer. If you don’t have a stand mixer, you could mix it together with a spatula or wooden spoon. Also, a bread maker works really well and makes it easy to knead the dough rather than doing it by hand. It sounds like your dough could have used a little more flour (what kind of flour did you use by the way?). It’s perfectly ok to sprinkle your dough and work surface with more flour before rolling it out.
Hi Natasha!! I have made these piroshki before and I absolutely love them!! I was planning on making them this morning but I realized I realized I only have 1 cup of milk, can I make them with water or heavy whipping cream instead? Thanks in advanced!!
I haven’t tested that combination before but if I were to guess, I’d put 2 Tbsp heavy whipping cream in a measuring cup and add water to it to equal 1 cup. Let me know how it goes 🙂
Ready now and very tasty!!!! How can I upload a picture with them?
There really isn’t a way yet to share a picture in the comments (I wish there was!), but you could upload it on Facebook and Instagram or to Flicker and leave a link to the picture. I’d love to see them! 🙂
Can you consider making a video tutorial on these I seem to mess it up all the time!
What part are you struggling with? That is a great suggestion. Thanks Shay! 🙂
Hey Natasha! I’ve been reading this -yet another- mouth watering recipe, and I wonder, would the blintz filling work? Cheese and raisins, or cheese and pineapple? what do you think??
I don’t think it would work unless it was a farmers cheese filling. The cottage cheese would melt in the oven and probably result in a weird texture. You might try replacing it with farmers cheese. Sorry, I don’t have a great recipe for that filling posted yet.
Natash I just would like to say thank you for great recepies I never was able to follow the receipe till now , I never knew I can cook like I cook now thanks to ur web page , pictures it’s very helpful for busy mom of two baby’s like me . 🙂 and congratulation on ur pregnancy !!!!!!!!! Many thanks. !!!!!
About me , I’m 37 , from Ukraine married to wonderful man from California we have two 2 and 5 months old kids
Thank you so much for your sweet comment! It means so much to me and is so encouraging :). God bless you in all of your cooking adventures. I’m so happy you are enjoying the blog.
Just made these for my family today. It took me quite awhile; it was easy, but time consuming. I made two fillings, a cabbage/onion/tomato one and a potato/mushroom/cheddar one. The outside was phenomenal, as I remember from Piroshki Piroshki in the Pike Place Market. These were a huge hit. We served them with borscht. Excellent recipe. I used a Kitchen Aid mixer.
I’m so glad you enjoyed them. And it’s quite a compliment that they reminded you of the piroshki place in Seattle. I know exactly the place you’re talking about. 🙂
Hi Natasha,
I tried this recipe today with minced chicken but the top part of the piroshki was very crispy. I just want to know what should the texture be like… Is it soft and fluffy like a burger bun? I just realized after reading your recipe again that I was supposed to let them sit in the pan for 30-40 mins after forming them and before putting them to bake… Could that have made them crispy? Would love to nail this recipe next time if I can figure out where I went wrong…
Best regards,
Vrinda
You definitely want to let them rise and get fluffy before baking and yes they are supposed to be soft and fluffy and wonderful. 🙂 Did you bake them in the center of the oven?
Dear Natasha, I’m excited to try your recipe in the KitchenAid mixer for the first time, thank you so much for the recipe! I have a couple of questions if that’s OK. Can I make the dough at night and leave it to rise overnight to make pirozhki the next day? If so, should I put it in the fridge overnight? Also, for a big croud, would you recommend doubling the recipe? Thank you so much! Yulia
This will feed a large crowd since it makes two 9×13 pans. How large of a crowd are you talking about? To be honest, I haven’t tried leaving the dough overnight. If you do, you can probably refrigerate it and then let it get to room temp so it can rise. It will take longer to rise if you are taking it out of the refrigerator.
Thank you so much for your quick reply! The group of people can get pretty big since it’s for some activity at church. I’ll probably make the dough in the morning for it to rise faster. I’m not sure myself about doubling the recipe but I guess I’ll play by ear. Thank you so much!