This post may contain affiliate links. Read my disclosure policy.
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.
2. Whisk in 3 eggs, 12 Tbsp warm melted butter and remaining 3/4 cups sugar and 1 tsp vanilla
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.
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.
Meet my sweet little niece who happened to be eating lunch at the same counter 🙂
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.
6. On a clean non stick surface, make a log out of your dough and cut into six equal pieces.
(She liked taking pictures, and poking at the dough. )
7. Work with one piece at a time and roll into 13-14 inch circles
8. Use a pizza cutter to cut 8 even triangles
9. Put 1/2 tsp sugar in the center of each triangle
10. Place 3-4 cherries over the sugar.
11. Pinch the two edges together over the cherries and seal all the way down. Seal the dough To the base and the front
12. 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
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.
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

Ingredients
- 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.
Be careful with those cartwheels.
Really good and soft everybody in your family liked them.
I made them today u r just awesome. They r so soft. Thank you alot. God bless you.
That’s awesome!! Did you use the Canadian flour? I’m curious…
Natasha you are the BEST!!!!! Love your site! I was looking forever for a good bulochki recipe and finally I found one! They turned out sooooooo good and it was so easy to make. Thank you so much for all your wonderful recipes I’m a huge fan!!!!!!!
That’s so great! I’m really happy you loved the recipe. It’s our favorite too. And the house smells so good while they are in the oven. mmmm. 🙂
Natasha I was planning to make it tomorrow but my kitchen aid broke :(can I knead it in bread maker?
I haven’t tested this recipe in the Kitchen Aid. If you are using bread maker, choose “dough” setting and let me know how it works out.
This is by far my favorite recipe for bulochki dough!!! Thank you and your beautiful mama so much for sharing! I made them twice this week already and it’s only Thursday lol. I made some with peaches and sugar and some with apples, sugar and cinnamon since it’s apple season, they come out sooooo delish! I use whole milk and King Arthur all purpose flour (no luck getting my hands on Canadian flour). I tried with 2% milk and they don’t come out as soft and fluffy as whole milk. Absolutely LOVE, LOVE, LOVE these! This is for sure one of our family favorites
That’s awesome, thank you for sharing your tips and ingredients you use. Its great to know that King Arthur flour works well :).
what about a cheese (tvorog) mixture? how would you recommend making it that way?
Without testing it myself, I wouldn’t be able to give accurate measurements. I’ll have to get to work on testing this soon! 🙂
looks so delish! have you tried using blueberries or different berries with this recipe?
I haven’t, but other berries would work great as well :).
Can I pre-mix my cherries and sugar in a bowl before putting them into the dough triangles or will the cherries run too much? I’ve made this recipe before following your directions to the T and it turned out great! Just thinking premixing the cherries and sugar will save some time. Thanks! 🙂
I haven’t tried mixing them, but most likely they will run too much.
Can i freeze then, i made double batch and have too much. Already shared with neighboor, they loved it! I freeze roulett with mak but not sure how cherries will be after freezing it.
You should be able to freeze them as well, should not have any effect on the cherries.
Natasha, Can I use a bread maker on dough setting to make this dough? I will be cutting the recipe in half though.
I haven’t tried the bread maker so I’m not sure what difference it will make. Sorry I won’t have a good answer for that until I try it.
If I made the dough n don’t have time to make them. Is it ok to leave it over night? If yes what should I do?
Oh gosh, I’ve never done that before so I have no idea what it would do to the dough to refrigerate it, but if you really don’t have a choice, cover it well and then let it get to room temp before working with it the next day. I just haven’t tried it with refrigerated dough.
U have no idea how happy I am. I was so upset thinking I’m going to only throw away the dough next morning n guess what? It tasted amazing even the next morning!!!:O yay!:)
Oh that’s awesome!! It’s so good to know it worked well even after refrigeration. I was really hoping it would work out for you!! 🙂
Wow these turned out super good!! Cant wait to make them again. Thanks for this delicious recipe. 🙂
You’re welcome Olga; I’m so glad you enjoyed the recipe!
wow…they turned out amazing…for the dough i used all purpose becuase we dont have canadian flour anywhere in pa….the looked a little harder then yours in the picture…thankyou
I tested with both and the all-purpose works, but the Canadian flour has the softest results. I’m glad you loved it 🙂
I was wondering, i made your homemade tvorog and it tastes really good!But i wanted to use this recipie and use tvorog instead of cherries…could you tell me what to do differently to make the piroshki with tovorg and not cherries!
You can totally use tvorog, just make sure to add some sugar to it first :). Let me know how ti will turn out.
Just made them. They are amazing, but of course I put a bit more sugar in there also (my preference since I like sweet), and obviously its not cherry season, so I used the canned cherries. Almost burned my tongue on the hot cherries after they were done. The smell, and how beautifully they turned out made me take that risk.
And you’re right about Canadian flour. My mom always buys that one, and she used to bake a lot. If at all possible, avoid buying at russian stores, they are alot more expensive there. Lucky we have a cash and carry and winco here in WA that carry those.
Also, I am glad that you suggested the parchment paper. I didn’t quite read the instructions carefully on how to roll them up (forgot to fold the corners in), and some of the juice leaked out during the baking. Didn’t alter the taste though in any way.
Yeah cherries can get pretty hot; it’s like a little oven inside the bun 🙂 I’m so glad you enjoyed them even though you burned your tongue; yikes! My bag of flour is from cash and carry too!
Natasha, I would like to make these with a cabbage filling. How sweet is this dough? Should I use less sugar?
The dough isn’t overly sweet but is best with a sweeter filling like cheese or cherries or other fruit. If using cabbage, try using about half the sugar.
Hi Natasha:]]] Do you think it will taste good if I put in strawberry preserve?
If its pretty thick and chunky and not watery, I’d say go for it! 🙂
I made these today with apples! They were absolutely delicious; however, I plan to add more sugar into the batter because 1 cup wasn’t enough sweetness for our family. I will try using this exact recipe with braised cabbage and meat filling next time I make them! 🙂 Thank you for this wonderful recipe. I am so blessed to have found this website. You honestly teach young wives, girls how to make food the way our mothers used to.
I’m very glad you like them Oksana and thank you very much for your sweet comment :D.
Privet Natashenka! I visit your blog so much that I feel like I am part of your family! 🙂 Anyways, do you think I can brush the piroshki with eggwash before placing them in the oven and once they are baked gloss them with the sugar glaze? I plan to make them this Sat!
They really don’t need the egg wash. The piroshki are a beautiful golden brown without it and sugar water glaze at the end makes them nice and shiny :).
Will it be good if I put raspberries instead of cherrys?
Oh that sounds delicious, but I would probably squish them a little to fit inside more since hot raspberries tend to shrink and get juicy.