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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.
Hi Natasha!
I am in the process of making these with my two daughters and we are so excited to taste them! I do, however have smaller molds. How full is each of your 3 large molds before you do the final rise? I’m trying to figure out how many molds I’ll need. they are 3.14”H x 4.33”W. thanks!
HI LIs, in step 3, I have a before and after of the rise and they are filled up about halfway initially. I haven’t tested with the smaller molds so it would have to be an experiment.
Hi Natasha! Thank you for sharing this recipe! This is the best Paska ever!! I’ve made this recipe twice already and I’m always amazed how good it is! Growing up in Ukraine, this brings back so many memories!! My family loves it! Thank you!!
Zoryana
Thank you! I’m so glad you enjoyed this recipe. 🙂
Natasha…Love your site …Wish me luck…a first attempt of a Dutch Girl making Easter Paska for her Ukrainian Husband…it’s going to be great!!! Happy Easter to those you love. :))
I hope it turns out and I hope he loves it! 🙂 Let us know how it goes.
It was the best Easter bread I have ever tasted. I used all purpose flour and it worked fine. Thank you for recipe Natasha!
You’re very welcome! It sounds like you have a new favorite, Anna!
I love to bake!!! I tried your recipe last year also. It just doesn’t bake properly…..the texture is a git gummy but the outside is done. The bottoms burned and they were in the middle of the oven. I think putting them on a baking sheet would have helped. What can I do to improve the texture? I’m determined!!! I bake bread all the time so this is frustrating!
love your recipes.
I’m Ukrainian and would love to produce a perfect Paska!!!!!!
Hi Sylvia, make sure you are using the same size wrappers otherwise you would need to modify the bake time. Also, make sure you add enough flour and not too much. I follow this rule that it should “still feel sticky but won’t stick to your fingers”. Also, make sure you are giving them enough time to rise before baking or they will be denser and won’t bake through properly. Lastly, I suggest using an oven thermometer to make sure your oven is heating properly.
Thanks Natasha. Sounds very good to me. Go start it tomorrow. I hope it will still fresh on Sunday…. what you will recommend?..
When better to start? 🤔
Hi Margarita, One of my readers, Diane, gave the following make-ahead suggestion: “I always bake ahead and freeze it, removing it from the freezer on Holy Saturday to defrost. I usually pop it into the oven to warm it for Easter breakfast. The recipe I use does not have the glaze, but I don’t see why you couldn’t freeze it un-glazed and glaze when you’re ready.” I hope this is helpful.
I love this recipe. I was wondering if I double it do I need to double the rising time as well?
Hi Viktoriya, I don’t imagine you will need to double the rise time. If you experiment, let me know how you liked the recipe.
I have several 5 inch molds. Do you know about how many I could get using this recipe?
Hi Angelina, I do not. We used 3 molds that were 4.8″H x 6.75″ W, so if your 5” molds are similar to these dimensions then you could probably use 3 as well.
I tried making this last year. It was good, but remained partially uncooked in the center. What did i do wrong?
Hi Linda, I would look over the recipe again and make sure you didn’t miss anything. It could be your oven baking unevenly or running a bit hot causing it to bake faster on the outside. I would recommend getting an internal oven thermometer to check this and make adjustments as needed. I hope that helps!
My Nonni always added some rum flavoring (extract, not the liquor) to her paska bread. Do you think it would matter if I added a tsp or 2? I’d then not add lemon to the glaze, but rum extract instead.
Hi Linda! I think that could work. Let us know how it turns out if you experiment.
Hi Natasha!
I’ve recently started using Einkorn flour as a 1:1 substitute in my recipes thanks to a sudden sensitive stomach. Getting old is fun, isn’t it? So I was wondering what your thoughts are in the realm of using it for Paska. Einkorn is naturally low gluten so I don’t want to go through the process without the opinion of a pro. I thought about switching my Baba’s flour without telling her before Easter, but I can’t wait that long. Thank you for your time and amazing recipes!
Hi Beth, I wish I could be more helpful here, but I don’t have expereince with Einkorn. If you happen to test that here, I’d love to know how you like it!
Mine turned out great Natasha but I was taught old school and use large tomato juice cans. Free and they work great!
Glad you loved it, Dale. Thanks for your good comments and feedback!
Hi Dale, This is how my mother used to do it – using the juice cans. I tried Natasha’s recipe to a tee, using the wrappers, and especially using Canadian flour and was wowed with the results. But I certainly felt the nostalgia of the juice cans (de-labled of course) and will try that methodology next.
Hi Natasha,
Thank you for sharing this recipe. I grew up making Paskas with my babushka and mama and this was my first time making it by myself.
I used Bread Flour like someone suggested and baked on 350 for over 40min till brown but it didn’t bake properly. It was still wet inside and there was a hole when I tried cutting the bread the next day. I was so excited about this but it didn’t turn out as expected. What could have gone wrong? Any suggestions?
Thank you!
Hi, it’s probably a difference in the flour. If using Bread flour, typically you would use less bread flour compared to Canadian flour and if using a larger mold, you will need a longer baking time.
Thank you for replying. Next time I’ll try using a different kind of flour.
The molds were similar size to the ones you used.
Anastasiia, I’ve had the same problem with this recipe several years in a row. It’s very frustrating when the outside is so brown but the inside is still wet and has a hole!
In years past this usually only happened to one or two of my paska from a batch. This year my all 3 in my first batch turned out not quite done in the center/with a hole. After Easter I tried the recipe again, with 2 changes: I mixed the dough in my stand mixer rather than by hand, and after putting it into the molds for the final rise, I poked 4 holes in each paska with a toothpick. I figured this would give the air (which was obviously accumulating in the center, causing the hole) somewhere to go. I’m pleased to report that this did work and my after-Easter paska were just perfect!
Thank you for sharing your tips. Ill try poking the dough next time too. These paskas better be amazing after so many attempts of making them:)
I made this for friends of mine from Ukraine — one of whom grew up in Soviet times when Easter wasn’t exactly smiled on. Lyudmila in particular is therefore quite vocal in saying that traditions are important. She also remarked that she’d never made kulich herself for the reason that it takes so long to make — and her mother and grandmother (who survived the Holomodor) were usually the ones making it. So she was pretty impressed that I spent the entire day before Easter shuttling back and forth into my 100 degree attic (whose temperature was perfect for the yeast) to retrieve and replace bowls of dough all day.
I had little idea what I was doing when I made this, although just reading the recipe I knew I was going to need two very big bowls to mix it and that it was going to make a lot of bread.
I’m interested to hear what Iryna thinks, since she herself is a marvelous cook — and my supply of delicious Ukrainian things wrapped in cabbage and of Borshch.
Sadly, Maria is still working out her US “business owner” visa problems and is in Canada at the moment. But I did send her a photo of the result, and she asked me to take her loaf to her business in the US so her employees could get a taste of her home.
And my loaf, which I shared with neighbors and family went quickly. Personally I found the bread reminiscent of the “Sally Lunn” bread I used to eat as a kid growing up in Virginia. Perhaps that’s because it’s a sweet bread and there’s sour cream in it.
Any way you slice it, though, it’s delicious…
Hi Eric, I’m so glad you loved the recipe and thank you for sharing your story
First time kulich making , 10/10 !
It’s moist and delicious! I got lots of thumb ups and earned plenty brownie points . Thank you for this recipe. Definitely goes straight to “to – keep” folder .
That’s so great! It sounds like you have a new favorite!
Thanks for the recipe. I have just finished baking. Perfect Paska! I have added an extra tsp of rum flavoring, a zest of one lemon, 1/2 cup of dry cranberries and dark chocolate chips (as requested by the kiddos). We like all the extra stuff! Best wishes for your family for the Easter tomorrow. We love your website!
Thank you so much for sharing that with me, Yana! I’m so happy you’re enjoying my blog!
Omg!!!! Natasha!!!! I love it!!!! I’m actually sitting now drinking milk with apple pirog and cottage pirojok, made pasha, came out amazing!!!! I made portion and a half so that I could use for some rolls and pirogis. Everyone loved it! Thank you! This is “my” recipe now! I used king author flour.
Milk and pirojok are the best together! I’m so glad you enjoyed it!
Hello! This is my second year making these wonderful Pasky but I seem to keep having the same problem: they are beautifully round when they go into the oven for the final bake at 350 degrees but come out flat. Any suggestions?
Hi Natalie, it sounds like maybe the door could be rising for too long? If you Overproof the dough, you can exhaust your yeast and it won’t rise properly in the oven.
Thank you! Should I do less than 2 hours then?
Hi Natalie, it really depends on the room temperature they are rising in, but if you suspect they are over proofing I would do less time.
I halved the recipe and followed the recipe exactly, but the dough would not rise after I put it in the molds. I didn’t even have it rising in a hot oven, just in the “keep warm” setting. Don’t know what went wrong. Any helpful advice?
I wonder if my oven “keep warm” setting might have been too hot. I tried putting it at 100F but the oven setting would not let me go as low. If I can’t use my oven, what other warm place can I let the dough rise?
it does sound that way, check out our tip for using a warm microwave that we shared in our easy cinnamon rolls recipe.
Some ovens with the keep warm setting still heat to high. Many will heat up to 170°F which will kill the yeast and prevent the door from rising. If your oven heats that high, it’s best to set it to warm then turn it off and prop the oven open with a spoon to make sure it’s not too hot in there. I would test with an in-oven thermometer to see if your temperature is too high.
Hello Natasha! Thank you so much for this recipe! I don’t bake often and this was the first time I baked kulich. I made three of them (based on your recipe) and they look amazing! The only thing is next time I would consider adding a bit more of vanilla and sugar. Can’t wait to share them with my family and friends on Easter day!
I’m so glad you gave this a try and enjoyed it, Irina! Thank you so much for sharing that with me.
The dough rose all three times. But, when baking, the tops were not round, rather somewhat flat. Did this happen to anyone else?
Hi Susan, this can happen if the dough is left to proof for too long and the yeast can become exhausted causing it to go flat in the oven.