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Paska (also known as Kulich) is a classic Easter Bread. It’s a wonderful Easter tradition shared by Russian and Ukrainian people. This recipe comes from my aunt Tanya and cousin Lena; thank you so much!
Easter only comes once a year so don’t panic when I tell you how long it takes to make this. First I will tell you how soft and delicious it is. Then I’ll explain how you will feel like a domestic diva once you’ve got this under your belt. After that I’ll convince you that this bread makes for an incredible french toast (like really, really good!).
I’ll also mention that the active time for this recipe is about 30-45 minutes and the rest is oven/rising time. Then, and only then will I tell you that it takes basically half the day to rise. I made it a couple weeks early just so I could photograph it and share the recipe with you. I’m going to make it again for Easter. See, that means it was worth it.
Thank You Lena and Aunt Tanya for this wonderful recipe; It’s a keeper for sure. My parents and sister tried it and were raving about it.
Ingredients for the Kulich/Paska:
2 cups + 2 Tbsp warm milk (I used whole milk)
6 eggs, room temp
1 Tbsp active dry yeast
2 cups sugar
2 sticks unsalted butter, (1/2 lb or 226 grams), melted (if using salted butter, omit the salt)
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 cup sour cream
1 tsp vanilla
9 cups all-purpose Canadian flour, divided ** (measured correctly)
1 to 1 1/2 cups raisins (white or brown)
**On Flour Substitutions:
Canadian flour is made in Canada has a higher gluten content and produces a softer bread than American all-purpose flour. It is available in Cash and Carry, Winco and Canada of course! Several readers have reported great results with American all-purpose flour but because Canadian flour has a higher gluten content, you often need to use more American all-purpose flour, so keep that in mind if you substitute. Read helpful review below:
One of my readers, Natalia, shared this amazing review with her flour substitutions:
“I want to thank you for this wonderful Paska recipe. My family loved it. I made a half of the recipe, That was enough to make two medium and two small breads. I used the King Arthur’s bread flour (4 cups) and 1/2 cup of a/p flour (I was running short on bread flour). It turned out amazing. I’ve never made Paskas before, and it was a success from the first time. Thank you!!!”
For the Topping:
2 cups powdered Sugar
3 Tbsp Lemon Juice
What you’ll need:
3 Large Panettone Paper Molds (4.8″H x 6.75″ W); we purchased them on Amazon
(you can also buy the mini ones and make baby paskas; I Imagine those would be adorable, but you’d need to adjust the baking times for sure). My husband actually discovered these molds and they were great!
How to Make Paska Easter Bread Recipe (Kulich):
1. In a large Mixing bowl, whisk together 2 cups + 2 Tbsp warm milk, 6 eggs, 1 Tbsp yeast, 2 cups sugar, 2 sticks melted butter (just warm, not hot!), 1/2 tsp salt, 1/2 cup sour cream and 1 tsp vanilla. Whisk in 4 cups flour. Your batter will be thick like sour cream. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and let it rise in a warm place or a warm oven (about 100˚F) for 2 hours.
Note: Do not put the mixture in a hot oven or it will deactivate the yeast and it won’t rise; yep we learned this the hard way and an entire batch ended up in the garbage can. So either put it in a warm 100˚F oven or put it in a warm spot in the sun.
2. Add 5 more cups of flour; one cup at a time or until the dough no longer sticks to your hands (it will still feel sticky but won’t stick to your fingers). I find it’s easiest to stir in the flour with a stiff silicone spatula. Dough should be soft. Stir in 1 to 1 1/2 cups raisins. Cover and let dough rise another 2 hours in a warm oven (100˚F).
3. Divide dough evenly into the three paper baking molds; try not to mix it or stomp it down too much. Let dough rise uncovered in a warm 100˚F oven for an additional 2 hours or until the molds are almost full. Remove from the oven and preheat oven to 350˚F.
4. Bake at 350˚F for 30-35 minutes in the middle of the oven until the top is golden brown. Let cool to room temp or just warm and then tear off the wrapper.
5. Once the Breads are at room temperature and wrappers are off, get your frosting ready. In a medium bowl, whisk together 2 cups powdered sugar with 3 Tbsp lemon juice. Add a little water if it’s too thick or a little more powdered sugar if it’s too runny. Pour the glaze over each cooled Easter bread.
Top with sprinkles, which just make these seem so traditional and festive. I remember having lots of sprinkles growing up. I’ll put sprinkles on my next one and post it.
Paska Easter Bread Recipe (Kulich)

Ingredients
- 2 cups + 2 Tbsp warm milk, I used whole milk
- 6 large eggs, room temp
- 1 Tbsp active dry yeast
- 2 cups sugar
- 2 sticks unsalted butter, (1/2 lb or 226 gr), melted (if using salted butter, omit salt)
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1/2 cup sour cream
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 9 cups all-purpose Canadian flour, divided
- 1 to 1 1/2 cups raisins, white or brown
For the Topping:
- 2 cups powdered Sugar
- 3 Tbsp Lemon Juice
What you'll need:
- 3 Large Panettone Paper Molds; we purchased them on Amazon
Instructions
- In a large Mixing bowl, whisk together 2 cups + 2 Tbsp warm milk, 6 eggs, 1 Tbsp yeast, 2 cups sugar, 2 sticks melted butter (just warm, not hot!), 1/2 tsp salt, 1/2 cup sour cream and 1 tsp vanilla. Whisk in 4 cups flour. Your batter will be thick like sour cream. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and let it rise in a warm place or a warm oven (about 100˚F) for 2 hours.
- Add 5 more cups of flour; one cup at a time or until the dough no longer sticks to your hands (it will still feel sticky but wont' stick to your fingers). I find it's easiest to fold flour in with a silicone spatula. Dough should be soft. Stir in 1 to 1 1/2 cups raisins. Cover and let dough rise another 2 hours in a warm oven (100˚F).
- Divide dough evenly into the three paper baking molds; try not to mix it or stomp it down too much. Let dough rise uncovered in a warm 100˚F oven for an additional 2 hours or until the molds are almost full. Remove from the oven and preheat oven to 350˚F.
- Bake at 350˚F for 30-35 minutes in the middle of the oven until the top is golden brown. Let cool to room temp or just warm and then tear off the wrapper.
- Once the Breads are at room temperature and wrappers are off, get your frosting ready. In a medium bowl, whisk together 2 cups powdered sugar with 3 Tbsp lemon juice. Add a little water if it's too thick or a little more powdered sugar if it's too runny. Pour the glaze over each cooled Easter bread. Traditionally, these are topped with colorful sprinkles before the glaze sets.
Natasha,
My husband’s Ukrainian mother made Paska all the time. This is the first time for me that the dough did NOT rise for the first rising. Followed directions and never had a problem before. What could I have done wrong?
Hi Linda, could it be that your yeast is expired or maybe it got too hot while proofing (this can happen in an overly hot environment or if the liquids were hot and deactivated the yeast).
Hello Natasha, your Paska looks delicious and most important to me (since I never baked Paska before) seems relatively easy to make.
I only have a couple of questions, just to be on a safe side and make sure I’m doing everything 100% correctly.
I will probably try to bake only a half of your recipe and I’m always measuring ingredients by weight. According to KING ARTHUR FLOURS Ingredient Weight Chart you linked here, the amount of flour (AP, Bread or mix of both) in your recipe (half of it, 4.5 cups) should be something about 19.125 oz (or probably just 19 oz) is that correct?
Other ingredients are easy to measure, convert to oz and divide, but flour is important and I’d like to confirm directly from you, what do you think?
Thank you Natasha for doing all hard work, tests and explaining everything. I like your recipes, videos and your happy mood & attitude while doing it:)))
Hi Iryna, the weight measurement would be about 550 grams flour when cutting the recipe in half. I added a metric button in the recipe card which might make the weight conversion easier.
Just out of the oven, the whole house smells great, just like my grandmother’s. This was by far much easier. I did an egg wash prior to baking as did my Grandmother. No icing or sprinkles
For us. Did purchase the paper holders from amazon.
I’m so glad you loved the recipe! Thanks for sharing that with us!
I have tried many different kulich recipes over the years, and this recipe is magnificent! Using King Arthur bread flour, the dough comes out silky and smooth, and the loaf comes out of the oven moist and stays delicious for days. Perfection! My only modification was adding citron and blanched almonds to the raisins to give a nod to my Babushka’s paskhas and our family’s palate. Thank you, Natasha, for sharing this most excellent recipe! I will make it again, and again.
I’m so happy you enjoyed this recipe Diane! Thank you so much for your wonderful review and great feedback!
This is my third year making it. Thank you. My family and our church community loves it!
That’s so great! Sounds like you have a favorite! Thank you for sharing that with me Natalia!
It is many years since I made Kulich and I could not remember the correct processes when working with yeast.
I knew there was something wrong with this the minute I cut it because the texture was not right. Most of the Kulich were a bit sunken in the centre too, which I have never seen before.
I think I must have done something wrong. I suspect it is because I did not knead it. I notice someone else asked when you knead this so I am not the only one who didn’t understand your recipe.
Your instructions say to mix this with a spatula and to make sure the mixture does not stick to your fingers – no mention of kneading – so I just touched it to check. I think at this stage I should have kneaded it rather than mixing it with a spatula.
Other kulich recipes online involve lots of kneading, which I discovered too late.
I think you should clarify when and how much kneading is necessary and maybe include a photograph of this process. Currently you only show photos of the dough in the bowl.
Also, despite having two cups of sugar I did not find this sweet enough.
I used fresh yeast as I prefer it, and mixed it with warm milk at the beginning. It might be nice to include the correct process for those who wish to use fresh yeast.
This makes a huge amount and Even though I divided the mixture into two large bowls, it kept overflowing. Lively fresh yeast. I think halving the amount would be plenty unless you are feeding dozens of people. 🙂
I don’t know if I can edit my original post, but having tasted the Kulich again, I have changed my mind and think it IS sweet enough. 🙂
Hi Nicole, I’m glad you liked it!
Hi Nicole, if you felt like the dough needed kneading then most likely you used too much flour. The dough would be too soft to knead at that point normally. I highly suggest this post on how to measure ingredients for cooking. I hope that helps!
I am not new to backing. I have done different kulich recipe.
I was exited to try this recipe because it has sour cream i it. I am thinking that this will make it moist . Just mixed it and realized that I need 6 h to rise the dough. Its late, I will end up backing it at 2 am((Can I put this in the fridge to rise overnight? I know I can do this with bread dough. But this is different, its sweet dough.
Hi Natalia, to be honest I haven’t tried it so I can’t say for sure. If you test it out, please let me know how it goes. It should be ok as long as you let it come to room temp again and rise per the recipe again.
I did put it in the fridge for over night to rise. Next morning, I just let it to warm up to room temp and put it in the oven 100F for 2h. I basically followed your recipe. After 2h I put 5 cups of flour and let it rise again. They were delicious and beautiful. The beauty part as important for as taste! Thank you for sharing this recipe with us.
That’s so great Natalia! Thank you for letting me know that works!
Hi Natasha! I would like to halve the recipe—would you halve the amount of yeast as well? Thanks!
Hi Inna, I haven’t tested that but I belive you would halve all ingrediants. Here’s what one of our readers wrote “I halved the recipe and followed the instructions exactly and it made 12 of the cutest little breads! With the mini molds it only took 17 minutes for them to be completely cooked and perfectly golden!” I hope that helps!
I halved this recipe and used half the amount of yeast and it worked out perfect 🙂
That’s so great! Thank you for the update!!
Thank you both! It came out beautifully! With half the recipe I made 1 big one and 6 little ones; the big one took more like 40 minutes to bake and got a bit dark on the outside (but still delicious!), and the little ones had perfect texture, so I probably should have put less dough in the big mold and made more little ones.
That’s so great Inna!
Hi Natasha! I am doing paska for this weekend. And I only have 4 cups of Canadian flour. I can’t find any Canadian flour locally. What other flour can I use to complement? Bread flour or all purpose flour?
Thank you!!!
Hi Erika, we purchased Canadian flour at our local store. I don’t recall the exact brand. Here is what one of our readers wrote “I used the King Arthur’s bread flour (4 cups) and 1/2 cup of a/p flour (I was running short on bread flour). It turned out amazing. I’ve never made Paskas before, and it was a success from the first time. Thank you!!!” I hope that helps!
Made this recipe this weekend. My first time trying to make this)) absolutely loved it! Thank you so much for the great recipes
I’m so happy you enjoyd that Ina! Thank you or that great review!
Made this recipe this weekend. My first time trying to make this)) absolutely loved it!! Husband is usually not a fan of paska bread, but he loved this one! Btw, I used aluminum foil bread pans, turned out great without needing to adjust cooking times:) Thank you Natasha again for making recipes so easy to follow!
You’re so welcome, Lena! I’m so happy you enjoyed this recipe!
I made this a couple of days ago and it turned out wonderful. I halved the recipe and used Robin Hood All Purpose flour (I’m in Canada). It rose like a charm and has a really delightful texture.
Just to cause further confusion with the name – the part of western Ukraine my family is from would call this Babka (with paska being the less sweet, flatter Easter bread). Thanks for the recipe!
I’m so happy you enjoyed that. Thank you for sharing that with us!
My first time trying to make kulich, came out very good,absolutely loved it! Thank you so much
My first ever attempt at making Kulichi. I must say I was a stressed mess the entire time although the recipe is so easy to follow. The pressure to make a beautiful and tasty Easter bread consumed me but ALAS!!! The bread turned out PERFECT! If you use all the correct ingredients (if you have a “russian” store in your area, most do sell Canadian flour) and follow the steps exactly, you will end up with a perfect Kulich! Thank you Natasha for another great recipe and for bringing a great Easter tradition into my home. My Russian siblings and Italian in-laws gave them a huge stamp of approval as well.
I’m so happy to hear that! Thank you for sharing your great review, Galina!
Preveit, I am Ukraine, my family has been making it for Easter for years!
That’s just awesome!! Thank you for sharing that with me!
Hi Natasha: I am making your Easter bread today. After I add the glaze, what is the best way to store it. We wont serve it until Sunday. I’m sorry if someone already asked…but there are so many comments. Thanks 🙂
Hi Katya, the glaze will dry on the bread and form a nice crust. If it is already glazed, cover loosely but fully with a plastic bag (or place in a cake container so you don’t have anything rubbing against the glaze) and store at room temperature overnight.
First time this year decided to make Easter Bread, was little worry since I never cooked and usually I am not best at baking .. I used King Aurtur floor 1/2 bread and 1/2 all purpose ( I read in comments someone did it ), so bread turn out so so delicious soft and moist even my husband not Easter bread lover, he said this bread is so so good. thank you for your amazing recipe .
Hi Inna, thank you so very much for sharing that with me! I am so happy to hear that and I am sure it will be super helpful for others asking the same questions. Thanks again and Happy and blessed Easter to you!
I made these for my Christian friends celebrating Easter. A fun way to get rid of all the chametz in my house before Passover begins! Absolutely delicious recipe, can’t wait to make this again next year. 🙂 Thank you as always, Natasha, for sharing your lovely recipes.
I’m so happy to hear that! Thank you for sharing your great review!
Hi Natasha,
I am almost never commenting on food blogs, but this time I felt obligated to do so given that this Kulich is such a well-tested and solidly built recipe.
Ever since I have moved to North America, I have been searching for a nice Kulich recipe that would work every time I decided to use it. I have tried hundreds of Easter breads from numerous Russian food bloggers, and none of them was reliable. The description and pictures always look great; however, the results are often disappointing. The instructions are either super vague (add as much flour as it takes; eyeball the amount of flour; leave it to rise for 30 minutes or 8 hours, and etc.), or require hard to find in my area ingredients (fresh yeast, creme fraiche, plugra, whey). At the end, it always felt like I was brewing a love potion with no guaranteed results (the dough doesn’t like drafts, screams, unpredictable movements, bad weather, earthquakes). One of the recipes even suggested that I pray while kneading my dough.
Anyway, eventually I gave up on Kulich, considering it a rocket science. And then, I found your recipe. No vague instructions, simple ingredients, no requirements to become a part of a certain religious denomination… it sounded like I was making an elaborate pizza dough, no magic at all.
I gave it a try, and it was a dream of a perfectionist. “Leave it to rise for 2 hours” – this is exactly how long it took! Everything worked so great I could not even believe it! The next year, i made it again – same amazing results.
Today, I have decided to make it again, and realized that I did not have enough regular flour, and substituted the last cup or so for whole wheat flour. It worked! The dough raised properly, the taste is even better with a little bit of nuttiness, which nicely emphasizes the delicacy and sweetness of this amazing bread.
Thank you so much for this recipe, you literally saved my Easter, and keep saving it a third year in a row!
You’re so welcome Alla! I’m so happy to hear you enjoyed this recipe! Thank you for that wonderful feedback!
Natasha,
I made these a few years ago using cans and they were ok, but I made them this week with mini molds. I experimented with filling, making total of 20. I could have had more, but filled some with a little extra to see time/baking difference. I baked them at 17-18 mins and let them sit. Beautiful golden brown and soft on the inside. The glaze was great. Brings back childhood memories of Ukraine. Thanks for sharing! I’m excited to try the large molds.
You’re so welcome Clara! I’m so happy you enjoyed this recipe!
Dear Natasha,
i trust your recipes as they are really traditional, old school ones. Thank you! I would be really grateful to get the measurments for this recipe in grams and ml-s too – how much milk in ml-s, and how much yeast, sugar, sour cream, flour and raisins in grams. Would it be possible? Thank you!
Hi Rafaela, We are currently working on adding metric measurements to all of our recipes but it is taking some time as we have to add them one at a time. Thank you so much for being patient! In the meantime, check out our post on measuring which should help.
I have one 9.5 inch spring form pan. I was planning on lining 6 inches above the pan with parchment paper to create the mold. Do you think I should half the recipe? Thank you!
Hi Amanda, I haven’t tested these out in a springform but I’m assuming it would work well. One of my readers reported great results using a round springform cake mold but did not state if any adjustments needed to be made in baking time. A wider and shorter paska would need less baking time though than a taller narrower one.
My Mom always used round oatmeal containers.