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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!
This was amazing!! Needed a Russian themed food for a book club. Made these exactly as shown in the recipe, using the sirloin steak/cabbage filling recipe link. Completely off the wall delicious!!! This dough recipe is so forgiving. Easy to roll out. I rolled it out on parchment paper and had no problems with sticking. You can fill these with anything your heart desires and it’ll be delicious .
Thank you so much for your thoughtful feedback Mary! I’m so happy you enjoyed that!
Any way to make these dairy free?
Hi Vera, one of my readers wrote in with the following helpful review to make these piroshki dairy free: “I have substituted milk with almond milk and butter with canola/sunflower seed oil. Mine came out amazing. I don’t know how it compares to the original recipe, but I only heard compliments.”
thank you very much!
For a Polish twist, apricot or poppy seed filling would be tasty or even Beirox filling!
mmm that sounds amazing! Thank you for sharing that with us, Kathi!
These are incredible!! So delicious! I had to make them several days in a row because they kept “disappearing” 🧐. Also with a little tweaking to the dough they made AMAZING cinnamon rolls!!! Thanks you so, so much Natasha!!!!
You’re so welcome, Bridgette! I’m so happy to hear you all enjoyed that!
Hi Natasha,
Thanks for the reply on the previous comment — I found the recipe for baked piroshki you mentioned. 🙂
My question is, is it a sweet dough? Would I still need to add sugar if I’m making mine with potato filling? Could I omit the sugar or is it necessary for rising?
Thank you!!
Hi Olga, it is only very lightly sweet and would only seem sweet if you also added a sweet filling. I use the same dough for sweet or savory fillings. Also, I haven’t tried these with potato filling so I’m not sure if it would seem dry with potato or not. The cabbage filling is pretty moist naturally so it works well. I would still try that garlic dip if trying potato filling. The sugar does help with rising. I haven’t tried but I think it could be cut down to 1/3 or 1/4 cup for savory piroshki and still be enough to make the yeast work, but keep in mind 1/2 cup sugar for 40 piroshki is about 1 tsp sugar in each one.
I made these with meat filling. They turned out just ok. They were a little dry after cooling down all the way and lacked flavor. There was too little meat and too much bread.
Hi Bakey, for meat filled piroshki, I always fry them. There isn’t enough moisture in the meat for them to stay very moist inside after baking in my experience (it also can vary greatly on your meat mix and the fat content of the meat mix). Also, I’m not sure what meat mix you are experimenting with, but the one I linked here has great flavor.
This recipe is for baked piroshky, is it not? My meat filling had flavor, I just don’t think that 1/2 Tablespoon is enough filling for the amount of dough that is wrapped around it. I followed the recipe exactly and divided it into 40 triangles. After baking, it puffed up to 7/8 bread and 1/8 filling.
Hi Bakey, yes this one is baked but I always use meat filling in the fried ones because I think it works better.
I have tried making piroshki for years, and never got the bread right. This is the first time my husband said it was close to his Oma’s. Thank you thank you thank you!! (We just use a simple Hamburger, onion, penzeys Krakow Nights and dill in the inside). Amazing and thanks for step by step directions!!!
My pleasure! I’m happy to hear how much you and your husband enjoy the recipe. Thanks for sharing your wonderful review!
What a great recipe!
The dough is beautiful. I let it do its first rise in the fridge overnight, then formed them in the morning.
I filled half with beef/potato and half with stewed apricots and walnuts.
They turned out soft and fluffy and delicious.
I’m glad to hear how much you enjoy the recipe! Thanks for sharing your great review with other readers Susan!
What happens if the dough rises longer than suggested in the recipe?
Hi Lana, it will still work fine. Do you mean after they are filled? They will just be more poofy in the oven, but if you are in the dough stages, nothing will go wrong, just carry on as usual 🙂
They dough turned out well! These are super delicious! Giving you extra great big thumbs up.
I’m glad to hear that Lana! Thanks for sharing!
Hi Natasha! Are we able to fry the piroshki with this recipe?
Hi Cathy, for fried piroshki, please see this recipe which can be made sweet or savory (I have several filling options and recipes on my blog, just type “piroshki” in the search bar at the top right). I hope that helps! 🙂
Your directions and photographs are marvelously done. Even a beginner should be able to follow them. Thanks.
ema39
You’re welcome! I’m glad you find them so helpful! 🙂
I made this dough the other day with no mixer by hand. It was very easy to make and after baking the bread was soft. I only needed 20minutes for cooking time. I used the apple filling but just diced them small.
PSA: if you’re making this dough in advance don’t put it in the fridge to hold off the rising like I did and make it the next day, it will continue to slowlyyy ferment and taste slightly bitter after baking.
Overall great recipe!!!
I’m so glad you enjoyed it!
can i freeze this dough
Hi Shirley, to be honest I haven’t tried freezing this dough so I’m not sure how it would hold up. I wish I had a better answer for you. If you experiment, let me know how it goes!
Can these be made with no filling, for just rolls?
Hi Crystal, yes that should work well 🙂
Natasha,do you mean 100 C or F to let pirozki to rise before putting it in the oven
Hi Yulia, the piroshki should rise at 100˚F. Anything hotter than that would start cooking and ruin the yeast. Sorry I did not specify. I will update that! Thanks Yulia! P.S. for future reference, all of my recipes are in F, unless otherwise noted.
My Russian Grandmother taught me how to make Piroshki from scratch. Over the years, I have tried many differnet doughs. I can see with this one, it will work out well AND how to roll them. Thanks. Your way is much easier than my grandmothers. 🙂
My pleasure Suzanne! Please let me know what you think when you decide to make it!
If I half this recipe how many eggs do I use? Since it’s 3 eggs for full recipe. Do I use 1 or 2? Thanks
Hi Tanya, I have not tried cutting it down that way so I’m not 100% sure. It might be safer to use 2 small eggs or 1 extra large egg.
Hello! Is it possible to freeze the piroshki after adding the filling,the braised cabbage with meat, but before rising? It is just the two of us and we can’t eat that much that quickly. 🙂
Hi Hollie, I have never tried that but I think it’s worth experimenting! Be sure to thaw and then bring it to room temp to let it rise one final time before baking.
OMG, these are delicious! I finally got around to making these with the beef and cabbage filling and they did not disappoint! You’re absolutely right about that dough – it is so fluffy and wonderful and I want to make everything with it!
Awesome, I’m glad to hear you love the recipe Emily! Thanks for sharing your wonderful review!
Hi Natasha:) Is it possible for this recipe to be halved, or if some of the piroshki can be frozen? I really want to make this recipe, but I’m worried that the amount that it makes will be too large for my small family! Would appreciate any advice you can offer – I know with baking recipes that halving the amounts doesn’t always work out well, but I thought I’d ask, just in case!
Hi Emily, sorry for the delayed response but yes you can cut it in half and I have this recipe for basically the same dough that is already halved to make it easy on you 🙂 I hope you love it!!
Awesome!! I’m so excited to make it now!! BTW, your braised beef and cabbage recipe is FANTASTIC! Can’t wait to try these piroshki!!
These are little pillows of deliciousness Natasha! They are heaven! And so is the cabbage and beef filling. I can not tell you how many times I tried to replicate my mom’s piroshki, and never got them so soft. There you have it. Phenomenal! They are sitting on the stovetop and they are just perfect. Mind, they will not be sitting long. I want to make them every day. Thank you so much!
You’re welcome Diana! Your review makes me smile! Thanks for much for sharing 🙂