This post may contain affiliate links. Read my disclosure policy.
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.
Jesus is risen! Thank you for this wonderful recipe! I made 24 mini Paska, used culinary parchment tulip cups (couldnt find panettone molds in stores and didnt have time to purchase them online). I baked the first 10 minutes at 350 then another 30 minutes at 325. They look lovely. Will glaze them tomorrow. I love your lemon glaze, am not a fan of the usual egg white topping! It’s time consuming but it’s so worth it! I was able to prepare my Easter menu, did the laundry, etc. – this recipe allowed me to do many things! Thanks again! Planning to make it again next week!
He is risen indeed! 🙂 I bet they were adorable as mini Paska! Using the tulip cups is a great idea and thank you so much for sharing your baking times for the mini size. Thank you for the wonderful review! 🙂
By the way I used 9 cups all-purpose flour (couldnt find Canadian flour) and they were wonderful. They were a little bit dry maybe because I baked them for 40 minutes but the tops weren’t brown at all after 20 minutes so I decided to lower the temp. to 325 and baked them longer. Next time I will follow your instruction and bake them at 350 for 15-25 minutes (for mini Paska). Thanks again!
Hi Cher! Thanks for sharing your review and how much flour you ended up using – it definitely is more if it’s not Canadian. I hope you had a blessed Easter!
Trying this now… The papers weren’t available on Amazon this week so I did some searching and found a quick work-around: use a round cake pan and make a tube out of parchment paper that fits into the pan nicely. Gettign ready to move the dough into the tubes and then another rise…fingers crossed!
http://chefindisguise.com/2012/12/27/panettoni/
Hi Julie! I love your work-around idea! Brilliant! Thank you for sharing that tip with us 🙂
So so good! But mine stuck to the paper 🙁 and the tops sunk in any ideas why? I followed your recipe exact
Hi Annie, what kind of flour did you use and did you allow the Easter breads to rise the recommended number of times and amount of time? I’m not sure why else that would happen. What kind of paper did you use?
Hey Nat.
i’m gonna try this tomorrow. The recipe looks interesting. wish me the best. I’ll get you the result.
Advance Easter.
I hope you love it! Have a wonderful Easter!
what is a substitute to Canadian flower/
Hi Andrey, please see the note on Canadian flour above. 🙂
Thank you for recipe. I making them right now. But for some reason they cracked on a top:( it smells amazing tho;)
Hi Lesya, did you allow them to rise the correct amount of time? Sometimes if you hurry that process, you don’t allow the gasses to escape the dough and it can lead to cracking. I hope that makes sense 🙂 have a wonderful Easter!
My dough didn’t rise the first time at all. 🙁 I don’t know why.
That is a real bummer :(. It is likely one of 2 reasons, either your yeast was old or your dough got too hot (this is why it is important to put the dough in a warm spot that isn’t greater than 100˚F and why the butter should be melted and not hot) – high temperatures can ruin the yeast and stop it from rising. Think of it as cooking the yeast. To keep yeast fresh, once the package is opened, it should be stored in the refrigerator in an airtight container, preferably a dark container. I hope that helps.
Just made this recipe – it tastes like the Paska I had growing up!!! Thanks for sharing your recipe. I also went by your photos and used only the yolks, the bread turned out great, and I did not need to add any extra all purpose flour.
Nancy, I’m so happy to hear that! Thank you for sharing your great review and have a blessed Easter 😀.
I just wanted to thank you from the bottom of my heart for posting this recipe. As a child, it was a Good Friday tradition to go to my Baba’s house and spend the day in her kitchen making Paska. She didn’t speak english, and didn’t have a recipe written down because it was something she knew by heart from making with her mom every year. My dad translated the recipe based on what she told him, but my mom and I were never sure we had the right measurements. This is her recipe, I just know it…it’s the only one I’ve ever found that uses sour cream like hers did. I haven’t even made it yet but I know just how delicious it is, and it’s definitely worth the time and effort put in. The only thing she did different was put Oetker Vanilla Sugar on after the egg wash. Thank you again, for bringing a fond childhood memory back to life. I can’t wait to make this!
That is so sweet! I really enjoyed reading your story and thank you so much for sharing that with me :). I hope the aroma of these in your kitchen brings many more sweet memories flooding back.
hello! I am wanting to make this for easter, but I am wondering if I can leave the dough in the fridge over night?
Hi Miranda, 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.
Making these today. First time. Somehow I missed that i needed to let it rise a second time still in the bowl. :/ I already distributed it into the molds to rise. Currently in the three molds in a warm oven with a damp towel on top. Will this cause a huge problem? Should I just let it rise for four hours instead of 2? Your help is much appreciated! 🙂
Hi Natalie, sorry I couldn’t get to your question sooner. Punching the dough down and letting it rise again helps the air bubbles to escape and you have a softer bread with less air pockets if you let it rise the extra time. I think it will still work but the results are better if you let it rise in the bowl.
If you live in Idaho, Meridian Sur La Table has 3-4 different sizes of these paper panetonas 🙂
Awesome!! Thank you Lana! I think the Sur La Table stores have them in other locations too. I want to say I’ve seen them in Cali also! 🙂
Yes I think all Sur La Table stores have them, Natasha I was wondering how I post pic on Instagram, to share what I baked? 😛
If you could tag it with #natashaskitchen I would love to see it! 🙂
I made this recipe last year and ended up having to add a lot more flour than the recipe calls. This year the same thing happened. Just now I finally read the comments and read the difference between Canadian flour and all purpose flour. Wow! Haha it all makes sense now!!
The paski still turned out amazing tho!! Thank you so much for such a wonderful recipe!
PS I bought my molds at http://www.kingarthurflour.com since Amazon was out. They are just as good as the ones I bought on Amazon last year!
Yes, I actually discovered that through trial and error on another recipe where I ended up adding way more flour than was called for because the original recipe author used Canadian flour. I rarely use Canadian flour unless I truly feel the results are best with Canadian (I try to avoid specialty products normally). I’m so happy you loved the recipe! 🙂
Got up at the crack of dawn to whip up this bread this morning… Did not disappoint! This was the first time baking a bread for me… ever, and I found that it wasn’t too difficult at all. Tastes MUCH better than a store bought one we were gifted. Thanks Natasha!
Kitti, thank you for the nice review and you are welcome 😀.
Hello,
What size in inches are the panettone molds?
Thanks
I never measured but according to the seller that I purchased them from on Amazon, they are: 6.75 inch by 4.25 inch high, which sounds right! 🙂
I made this wonderful recipe today and used the mini molds since that was all that was available from Amazon. 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! Just thought I’d pass that info along to anyone else who is thinking of using the mini size. The bread was absolutely delicious and I am so thankful to have found this recipe so I can share this tradition with my son. I grew up having this and when my Baba passed I was never able to find a recipe that actually worked and tasted the same! This was just like it! I look forward to making this again and trying some of your other wonderful recipes! Thanks so much!!!
That’s so awesome of you to share your experience with making the small breads!! Thank you!! 🙂
Hi,
Is it ok to use American Flour? I cannot find Canadian flour.
Thanks
Hi Elli, Canadian flour produces the best results because it has a higher gluten content. I think the next best thing would be bread flour, but the amount of flour might be slightly more with bread flour to account for the difference in gluten.
Thanks, I actually ended up using regular, all purpose flour and its a little more wetter than traditional paska, probably because of that. But everyone still really loved it, came out great!
I’m so glad you all loved it :). Yes, with all-purpose flour, you usually need a little more flour than with Canadian because of the higher gluten content, but I’m so happy to hear you still had great results 🙂
Hello Natasha,
I was unable to find Canadian flour so I purchased bread flour instead. How much cups of bread flour do you think I would need?
Without testing it and measuring it out myself, I can’t tell you exactly how much it will be. I would definitely recommend following the instructions and photos in the post to get your dough to the right consistency.
Also didnt have time to get the paper molds on Amazon so I used a bundt pan and a springform circle cake pan and it worked great too
I know, I was so bummed to see they are out – what bad timing!! Thank you for sharing that it worked in the springform pan – what size were your pans? Also, did you alter the bake time at all? Thanks Elli! 🙂
It was a nine inch cake pan, and 12 cup bundt pan. I did grease them very well! I think it was exactly 35 min for both, though my circled “paska” came out a little darker than my perfectly golden “bundt” paska, but thats ok because i just covered it up with the glaze and way too many sprinkles lol
Thank you so much for sharing that! You’re awesome! Sprinkles are so classic with these!
For the 2nd addition of flour I did end up using 5 3/4 cups of flour, forgot to mention
Hi Natasha. I’m making the bread as I type this. It is in for its second rising. It needed more than 5 cups for the second flour addition. It just was very runny. I followed the directions exactly. I probably ended up adding about 1.5 cups of flour to make it “soft”. Still sticky but not runny. Not sure what I did..
Hi Anya, what kind of flour did you use exactly – Canadian? American? Also, how did you measure it exactly – what method did you use for measuring?
Hello Natasha:) I was just wondering where you buy your canadian flour if you can share thanks alot:)
It is sold in Cash and Carry, our Winco has it and besides going to Canada, you can also purchase it on Amazon: It doesn’t say “Canadian flour” necessarily, it is just made in Canada and has a higher gluten content. I think the next best thing would be bread flour, but the amount of flour might be slightly more with bread flour to account for the difference in gluten.
Hello, Natasha!
I like this recipe a lot!!! This year i wanna try it again, but if i double or triple all ingridients… is it ok? Everything gonna be the same?
Viktoria, I haven’t tried that but should work fine. Keep in mind that it will take longer to rise.