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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.
OMG! This was wonderful! Thank you again Natasha for another wonderful recipe!! You transported me back to my childhood memories of this bread for Easter morning breakfast and having it toasted in the oven the next day for an extra dreamy treat with butter! I shared this with my so many people and they all raved about it. I was so proud to share a little bit of Ukrainian culture with my friends. The bread didn’t last long enough to make french toast, so I’ll have to make another batch to do so! Next time I’ll make it without the frosting. (That’s reserved for Pascha!) I’ve been searching for a long time to find a recipe like this and it was worth it. I’ve been following you from the beginning when you only had a handful of recipes on your website. Congrats on all your success! You deserve it. I now have your book and I look forward to making more of your recipes…. I already have so many favorites from your website….like your Borsht!!! PS. I used King Arthur’s bread flour and had no issues. It was truly wonderful.
Hi Katherine! Wow, thank you for this message. I’m so happy to hear that this recipe brought back such special memories for you. Thank you for following along since the early days—and I’m so glad you’re enjoying the cookbook too!
Many thanks for this recipe .
Have tried others but this one resembles the recipe my mum use to make for Pascha
Made it this year and shared it with others at our church and they loved it to.
Warm wishes from Warrnambool Australia 🇦🇺💜
Hi Svet! I’m so glad to hear this one brings back memories for you. Thank you for the feedback.
Third year in a row that I’m doing this recipe, it has become a family and friends favourite 😊
Questions: how long would it keep in the fridge?
Glad to hear that you always love this recipe! This is best fresh or with 1-2 days. One of my readers 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 decided to make it last minute and baked on the Easter night. OMG it turned out perfect. I tried many recipes in previous years and the outcome this year is the best – airy, tasty, moist. I added craisins instead of raising and also added some lemon zest – so good. Thank you very much for the recipe, can’t wait for the next Easter to make this goodie
This was an excellent recipe. Very moist and nicely sweet paska. My best attempt yet and easy, too. I just used a round casserole dish and a cheesecake pan, both with parchment, and while the shape is different, still delicious.
Hello Natasha,
Please share my heartfelt thanks with your family from mine. As an Alaskan Native now living in the Midwest, your channel and recipes have brought so much comfort and familiarity into my home. This recipe in particular transported me straight back to my childhood in our village helping my Godmother and all us girls in the kitchen, baking and preparing for our family’s Easter feast. I added a touch of ground cardamom, just like we used to, and it made the moment even more special. Thank you for stirring up such sweet memories. Blessings to you and your loved ones.
Hello Natasha,
Please share my heartfelt thanks with your family from mine. As an Alaskan Native now living in the Midwest, your channel and recipes have brought so much comfort and familiarity into my home. But this recipe in particular transported me straight back to my childhood—helping my Godmother and all us girls in the kitchen, baking and preparing for our family’s Easter feast. Thank you for stirring up such sweet memories. Blessings to you and your loved ones.
This is delicious! I don’t know how to post a picture. 😒
I’ve been using your recipe for a few years now. This year I got small paper forms and learned I shouldn’t overfill them. But hey, this bread is so delicious, even the breads that blew over the sides are delicious. You are part of our Easter traditions. 🐣
Aw, thank you, Judy! Happy Easter to you and your family. Blessings!
Thanks for this recipe ! Very tasty! 😋 It brought back many memories when my mom made this!
All 3 Paskas turned out perfectly ✝️💜
You’re so welcome Nina! I’m so happy to hear they turned out perfect. Happy Easter!
I don’t see much of a rise after the first two hours..
Hi Nancy, did cover bowl with plastic wrap and let it rise in a warm place or a warm oven (about 100˚F)? That temperature is crucial to the rise. It may need more time if not.
Hi, thank you for the recipe. If I am weighing ingredients, how many grams of flour and how many grams of milk would I aim for?
Hi Misha! Click on “metric” in the recipe card for the conversions.
The recipe is not true to the measurements. The kulich came out flat. After all the effort and time, the outcome was less desirable. I will not try the recipe again.
Hi Elena was your leavening working properly? Did you see it rising properly in the steps?
I had very good results with this recipe. The breads rose very well with proofing. My time in the oven was 35 minutes for the 3 breads baked on a cookie sheet at 350’.
Hi Natasha, I am using your recipe for the first time and came to realize that the lowest my oven goes to is 145 degrees F this is on “warming” setting, and even if I use the actual oven for baking, the lowest it goes to is also 145 F. What do I do? Should I let it stand for less than 2 hours in this case?
Hi Niki! That will not work, higher temperature will kill the yeast. You can use the oven light. The light alone can gently warm the oven to around 75–90°F which is perfect for proofing.
The lowest temp I can set on my oven is 200° , so I set it ti 200 and as soon as it says it’s at 100° I turn it off literally 1-3 minutes.
Natasha, I followed your recipe today and loved the consistency of the dough. Following Step 3, where the breads proofed beautifully almost to the rim tops. I took them out to raise the oven temp to 350* for baking . Unfortunately, the dough flattened! What did I do wrong?
It could be because of temperature shock when you took them out to raise the oven temp. On your next try, preheat the oven before the final proofing stage, let the dough proof on the countertop in a warm spot instead of inside the oven. When using the oven to proof, turn it on for just a minute or two, then turn it off and let the residual warmth do the work. A temp around 80–85°F is ideal.
Thank you, Natasha. I am redoing the recipe today and will follow your advice. Despite the flattening, the bread tastes wonderful.
My next try was a success – left funal stage proofing on the counter , per your advice. Thank you, Natasha!
You’re very welcome! Thank you for the update.
Hi Natasha,
Thank you for this excellent recipe. One question: do I put in whole eggs into the dough or just the yolks (in the photo it looks like yolks only but I’m not sure).
Thanks!
Hi Julia! Yes, you will use the whole egg.
Hi, just to clarify, is there no kneading this dough?
Hi there! Yes, this recipe does not need the traditional kneading.
Hi Natasha! I definitely want to try to make kulich this recipe but I am working all day Saturday, do you think it’s ok to make it Friday for Sunday? Do you have any recommendations on how to store the bread so it doesn’t go stale by Sunday?
Hi Sveta, This is best fresh or with 1-2 days. One of my readers 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.
What size are your large molds. I have 12 ounce molds? If I use those about how many should your recipe make and how long should they bake?
Hi Susan! See the section above “what you’ll need” where I linked the molds I used.
Have you tried a gluten free flour? Will it work? My daughter has a Celiac and she really wants me to bake Paska this year. Let me know if you have any gluten free recipes?!
Thanks
Hi Irina, I have not tested GF flour. One of my readers said, “I make it with gluten free flour and you need LESS flour. It comes out great!” I hope that helps.