These Buchty are amazingly soft. Mom made these while our relatives were visiting and I received several phone calls requesting the recipe.

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We’ve always called these piroshki, but they are also known as buchty. They are amazingly soft. Mom made these while our relatives were visiting and I received several phone calls requesting the recipe. There’s a secret ingredient in these.

It is our friend, Canadian flour (i.e. flour made in Canada). Before your criticize my use of this specific flour, hear me out. I’ve tested regular all-purpose flour, cake flour, and Canadian flour. 148 piroshki (buchty) later…

Bleached all-purpose flour works and they turn out good, but not AWESOME. You need around 7 cups of bleached all-purpose flour if you decide to go this route (please please keep reading and maybe I’ll change your mind).

Cake flour buchty turned out really really soft, but the dough was just thick, but still really really soft and they were eaten up anyway. You just need to buy 2 boxes of cake flour (it took the first box, plus another two cups or so; way more flour than the other two. I think it was nearly 9 cups; I got frustrated and stopped counting, plus cake flour is the priciest option).

Canadian Flour (flour that is made in Canada): I returned to what my mom uses and let me tell you they were “let’s do cartwheels for the first time in 10 years” good (I don’t advise that. You’ll probably require physical therapy and look incredibly awkward in the air so try to resist the urge). You will have the urge. Canadian flour is sold at Cash and Carry, at Winco (under the honey dispensers) and I hear it’s sold in Sam’s club. If you know of other places, please let me know!

P.S. It only looks complicated with the 40 pictures. It really isn’t .

Ingredients for Mom’s Famous Buchty/Piroshki:

2 cups warm milk (heated in micro 1.5 minutes in micro)
1 1/3 Tbsp (i.e. 1Tbsp + 1 tsp) active dry yeast
6 1/2 cups + 1 Tbsp bleached all-purpose Canadian flour *measured correctly
1 cup sugar
1 1/2 sticks butter (12 tbsp) (salted or unsalted) melted so it’s warm not hot
3 eggs
1 tsp vanilla

filling:

4 cups pitted cherries or berries or 1 tvorog cheese recipe
Sugar (about 1/2 cup)

glaze:

2 Tbsp water
1 rounded Tbsp sugar

How to Make the Best Cherry Buchty/Piroshki:

Preheat your oven to 360 °F at step 13.
1. In the bowl of an electric mixer, add warm milk and sprinkle the top with 1 1/3 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 minutes. It will rise faster in a warm place – put it in the shade if its warm outside.

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-16

2. Whisk in 3 eggs, 12 Tbsp warm melted butter and remaining 3/4 cups sugar and 1 tsp vanilla

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-17

3. Using the dough hook attachment on low, stir in the flour half a cup at a time. Mix a total of 15 minutes on low speed. You know you’ve added enough flour when the dough is no longer sticking to the walls. Dough will be smooth and elastic. It will feel slightly sticky but should not stick to your hands.

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-18

4. Transfer to a large bowl and let rise 2 hours until it is tripled in volume. Again, it will rise faster in a warm room or outside in the shade on a hot day.

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns

Meet my sweet little niece who happened to be eating lunch at the same counter 🙂

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-2

5. While it’s rising, pit your cherries. I should tell you that the cherry pitter pictured here is great for large scale cherry pitting jobs such as freezing.

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-3

6. On a clean non stick surface, make a log out of your dough and cut into six equal pieces.

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-19

(She liked taking pictures, and poking at the dough. )

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-4

7. Work with one piece at a time and roll into 13-14 inch circles

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-5

8. Use a pizza cutter to cut 8 even triangles

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-6

9. Put 1/2 tsp sugar in the center of each triangle

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-7

10. Place 3-4 cherries over the sugar.

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-12

11. Pinch the two edges together over the cherries and seal all the way down. Seal the dough To the base and the front

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-8

12. Pinch the next two corners together toward the center and roll forward.

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-9

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-10

The goal is to have a tight seal so the cherry juice doesn’t escape during the baking process.

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-11

Preheat oven to 360 °F
13. Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper. Place Piroshki on lined baking sheet with the tail end down, about 1/2 inch apart. Let piroshki rise for 30 minutes to 1 hr while the oven preheats.

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-20

14. Bake for 20-25 min till golden brown. After they are done, brush right away with 2 Tbsp water/ 1 rounded Tbsp sugar mix.

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-13

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-14

Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns-15

Buchty - Sweet Cherry Filled Buns

4.97 from 29 votes
Author: Natasha of NatashasKitchen.com
Prep Time: 3 hours 30 minutes
Cook Time: 25 minutes
Total Time: 3 hours 55 minutes

Ingredients 

Servings: 48 buns
  • 2 cups warm milk, heated in micro 1.5 minutes in micro
  • 1 1/3 Tbsp i.e. 1Tbsp + 1 tsp active dry yeast
  • 6 1/2 cups + 1 Tbsp bleached all-purpose Canadian flour
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 1/2 sticks butter, 12 Tbsp (salted or unsalted) melted so it's warm not hot
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract

filling:

  • 4 cups pitted cherries or berries or 1 tvorog cheese recipe
  • Sugar, about 1/2 cup

glaze:

  • 2 Tbsp water
  • 1 rounded Tbsp sugar

Instructions

  • In the bowl of an electric mixer, add warm milk and sprinkle the top with 1 1/3 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 minutes. It will rise faster in a warm place - put it in the shade if its warm outside.
  • Whisk in 3 eggs, 12 Tbsp warm melted butter and remaining 3/4 cups sugar and 1 tsp vanilla
  • Using the dough hook attachment on low, stir in the flour half a cup at a time. Mix a total of 15 minutes on low speed. You know you've added enough flour when the dough is no longer sticking to the walls. Dough will be smooth and elastic. It will feel slightly sticky but should not stick to your hands.
  • Transfer to a large bowl and let rise 2 hours until it is tripled in volume.
  • While it's rising, pit your cherries.
  • On a clean non stick surface, make a log out of your dough and cut into six equal pieces.
  • Work with one piece at a time and roll into 13-14 inch circles.
  • Use a pizza cutter to cut 8 even triangles.
  • Put 1/2 tsp sugar in the center of each triangle.
  • Place 3-4 cherries over the sugar.
  • Pinch the two edges together over the cherries and seal all the way down. Seal the dough To the base and the front.
  • Pinch the next two corners together toward the center and roll forward.
  • The goal is to have a tight seal so the cherry juice doesn't escape during the baking process.
  • Preheat oven to 360°F
  • Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper. Place Piroshki on lined baking sheet with the tail end down, about 1/2 inch apart. Let piroshki rise for 30 minutes to 1 hr while the oven preheats.
  • Bake for 20-25 min till golden brown.
  • Brush right away with 2 Tbsp water/ 1 rounded Tbsp sugar mix, than serve.
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: Russian, Ukrainian
Keyword: Buchty, Sweet Cherry Filled Buns
Skill Level: Medium
Cost to Make: $
Natasha's Kitchen Cookbook

Be careful with those cartwheels.

 

4.97 from 29 votes (5 ratings without comment)

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Recipe Rating




Comments

  • Tatyana
    January 23, 2013

    Hi Natasha,

    I’ve been craving piroshki s vishnei and came across your blog and this recipe. I live in PA and couldn’t find Canadian Flour here, not even in Russian stores, so I ordered it online, but couldn’t wait for it to arrive and made them with American Flour. They came out delicious! Can’t wait to try them with Canadian Flour next. Thank you for sharing this recipe!

    I also want to thank you for introducing me to Canadian Flour. My family has this favorite tea cake (we call it Keks) that first my mom then me used to make it all the time back in Russia. When we came to US I tried making it and it just wouldn’t come out, I tried all the flour that I could find, it would either not bake through all the way or when it finally would, it just wouldn’t taste the same. WELL…I made it with Canadian Flour. OMG!!! It came out exactly how I remember it. It was PERFECT! My mom said that she couldn’t stop reminiscing while eating it.

    Thank you!!!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      January 23, 2013

      You are welcome Tatyana, I’m glad you love the recipe. Maybe you can share your Keks recipe with me, I never had one before.

      Reply

      • Tatyana
        January 23, 2013

        Yes, sure I’ll share the recipe with you. Let me just make it one more time, trying to find the perfect oven temperature and bake time combination. For some reason I don’t have it written down, had to keep stalking my oven while it was baking 🙂

        Reply

  • yelena S
    January 16, 2013

    Hi Natasha,
    Thank you for creating such a helpful blog. i was wondering can i use a bread maker to mix the Buchty Sweet Cherry Filled Buns dough?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      January 17, 2013

      I haven’t tried it so I’m not sure how that would work out. You would have to transfer it to rise though since a bread maker probably won’t be large enough.

      Reply

  • Oksana Babich
    January 8, 2013

    Hi Natasha! Today I made your poppy seed roulette and loved it. So I looked at these piroshki and wanted to know if I could make these as savory (cabbage filling and meat filling). Would it work? Or would I have to change a few things in the recipe?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      January 8, 2013

      Hmmmm…. I haven’t tried that; the dough is on the sweet side so maybe if you put in less sugar. It will be a good test for me. 🙂

      Reply

  • Galina
    November 21, 2012

    I just made these piroshki for the 2nd time. Can’t stop eating them, they are amazing. Thank u Natasha again for the wonderful recipes.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      November 21, 2012

      We have same problem as you, each time I make them, they go fast :).

      Reply

  • Vera
    November 20, 2012

    Thank you Natasha so much for the wonderful recipe. I’ve been searching for awhile for a good peroshki dough recipe. Yours is the best one out of all that I have tried. Now all of my peroshki turn out beautifully and delicious.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      November 20, 2012

      You are so welcome Vera :D, I will pass this on to my mom.

      Reply

  • lana
    October 31, 2012

    I am just hooked on your recipes (your website too:))…i love to cook and bake and everything that has to do with it….anyways im in the middle of the process still. my dough is still rising and looking gooood!! I’ll try to make these half with apples(since it’s the apple season) and the other half with popppyseeds…will let you know how it came out!!!! Once again, thank you dear, for sharing your great recipes with us!!!

    Reply

    • lana
      November 1, 2012

      So i’m back with the results…and the results that they came out amazingly delicious!!!! I had my in-laws stop by yesterday and they LOVED them so much!! got them impressed once again..lol. Making another batch for our cabin getaway with our friends to McCall this coming weekend. many many many thanks to you!!!!

      Reply

      • Natasha
        natashaskitchen
        November 1, 2012

        You are so welcome Iana, everyone in my family are crazy for about them too 🙂

        Reply

  • alison
    October 26, 2012

    Hi, I wanna try these with tvorog I already have. Do I just add sugar to tvorog or also an egg? How much tvorog you think I’ll need for your dough recipe? Thanks so much!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 26, 2012

      If you use a rounded/heaping tsp in each x 48 buns = about 2 cups of tvorog (farmers cheese)
      Add 1 egg, 1 tsp vanilla and sugar to taste; it depends on how sweet you like it, but you do need the cheese to be sweet for it to be good.

      Reply

  • olga
    October 22, 2012

    If i wanted to use poppy seeds instead, Do i mix poppy seeds with anything or just put plain ol’ store bought poppy seeds?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 22, 2012

      It’s a bit of a process; bring to a boil and turn off and cool 3 times. Then drain well and put through a meat grinder. Mix in condensed milk but not too much; you want it to be thick and spreadable. For 1 cup poppy seeds, it’s about 1/2 can sweetened condensed milk

      Reply

  • alison
    October 19, 2012

    Hi Natasha,
    I will be making these tomorrow with the Canadian flour I just got today. Hey, how do you use the Canadian flour? Do you just replace it with regular flour in any recipe? Or do you only use it when making desert? I never used it before. 🙂

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 19, 2012

      You can just replace it but you usually need just slightly less flour when using Canadian. Hope that helps 🙂

      Reply

  • Alina
    October 19, 2012

    Nataliya thank you so much for this website! I love it, you are amazing with all those receipes!! I just discovered the website thru my neighbor and tried some receipes..I did try cherry bulochki and they turned out soooo good!!! But..my glaze didn’t work…they got shunny for a few minit and then all absorbed..I did s second layer, but they are not shunny like yours.. what would you suggest? Is rounded sugar someting special? I just put 2 tbs water and 1tbs sugar…mixed and brushed…sorry for maybe stupid question..anyway thank you so much for the hard work you did with this website!! We appreciate you!!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 19, 2012

      Oh I meant a heaping (rounded) tbsp. Next time just add a little more sugar to get a shiny glaze. 😉

      Reply

      • Alina
        October 22, 2012

        Thank you Nataliya! It worked! You are awesome!!

        Reply

        • Natasha
          natashaskitchen
          October 22, 2012

          Yay! 🙂

          Reply

  • Olga
    October 18, 2012

    Omg this looks so good. Could I use half ingredients and make half?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 18, 2012

      Yes you can Olga, they are truly delicious 🙂

      Reply

  • Katrina
    October 18, 2012

    I have a quick question if I want let say 24 buns would I just cut all the ingredients in half? Or would that mess up the recipe?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 18, 2012

      In theory it should work but I haven’t tried to do it myself. You might have to do some adjusting since there are 3 eggs in the original recipe 🙂 If you go with 2 eggs, you may need a tad bit more flour.

      Reply

  • :3
    October 13, 2012

    thanks so much for the recipe! ^w^ my friends b-day is today and she asked us (her guests) to bring food from different countrys i got Russia, and this looks really good thanks again for posting it!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 13, 2012

      Let me know what you think. Did you get some Canadian flour? 😉

      Reply

  • Pat
    October 10, 2012

    After reading all the posts, my question is not listed…our church is having a small “Ukie Fest” on 10-21-12 and I have the time now to make these (I bought Red Robin all purpose flour), do these freeze well? Looking for Canadian flour here in New Jersey, have not found it. There are Russian supermarkets north of Philadelphia, PA…may have to make a trip there.

    Glad to have found your site, my grandparents came to USA over 100 years ago and the only desserts we knew were nut/poppyseed/lekvar cakerolls or cookies.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 10, 2012

      Make sure it’s just a flour that’s made in Canada; it doesn’t say “Canadian flour” necessarily. I’m not familiar with Red Robin flour. I’ve never been to PA, sorry. I haven’t frozen these, but I think they’d probably be best fresh. You can probably make them a day ahead and they’d still be great!

      Reply

  • Leah
    October 9, 2012

    Natasha, i have a question.. can i make those with poppy seed filling?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      October 9, 2012

      Yes, you can. Let me know how they will turn out 🙂

      Reply

  • Ella
    September 19, 2012

    Natasha: how can I make these with cheese instead of cherries, do you have recipe for the cream cheese ones? Also, do you need whole milk for these, or is low fat ok?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 20, 2012

      I don’t have a recipe for the cream cheese ones. My mom does but I haven’t tried the recipe myself. I’ll put it on my list. Low fat should be ok, but whole milk (in my opinion) is better. 🙂

      Reply

  • Olga
    September 17, 2012

    Wow, they are awesome, Natasha! Thank you soooo much for the recipe. My sister made them the other day with fresh cherries and cheese feeling, turned out great! I want to try them with canned cherries, do u think i need to add sugar as u do with fresh? Thank u.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 17, 2012

      I think you should add sugar if they are the sour cherries or if they are just marinated in water. If they are marinated in a thicker syrup, you probably don’t need extra sugar.

      Reply

  • Lena
    September 14, 2012

    Is it possible to make these with a hand mixer? no dough hook attachment, etc… or is kitchenAid mixer needed for this?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 14, 2012

      You could always do everything by hand. A hand mixer wouldn’t work after you started adding flour since the mixture would be too thick, unless there’s a dough hook attachment on your hand mixer (there are some fancy hand mixers out there!:) Yes you could knead/mix for 15 minutes by hand but it would probably be a pain in the shoulders.

      Reply

  • Tonya
    September 10, 2012

    Wow they turned out amazing. Thanx Natash. I bought Canadian flour at winco. I didn’t want to buy the whole big bag. So I asked the employee that was filling the bins wit the flour and grains that u buy by pound. And he said that the cake flour they put in bins is the Canadian flour from the big bags :). So that’s what I used. And they turned out awesome.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 11, 2012

      Oh I had no idea they had that in the bins! I’ll ask if it’s the same thing in our Winco. Good to know! I’m so glad you loved the recipe 🙂 I’ll tell my mom.

      Reply

  • Lina
    September 7, 2012

    I want to make these again. Last time I made them, I gave birth two days later. I made so much, that I ended up giving my inlaws and my parents most of them. Now that I have a little infant, this doesn’t seem practical.. Or else, I’d be in kitchen all day long!.. But they are good!

    Reply

    • Natasha
      natashaskitchen
      September 7, 2012

      I bet your in law’s and parents can’t wait for you to make them again 🙂

      Reply

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