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My husband remembers having poppy seed buns just like these growing up in Ukraine. He requested that I re-create his childhood memory and then just inhaled these as soon as they came out of the oven.
I loved seeing that satisfied and very smug grin on his face as he was chomping into these. My son really loved them too so I guess this means we’re passing on the tradition! 🙂
You might recognize the dough from my baked apple and braised cabbage piroshki that I posted last year. I also used this same dough for the super soft, melt in your mouth cinnamon rolls with salted maple glaze. Now I wish I hadn’t looked at those cinnamon rolls; they’ve induced some fierce pregnancy cravings!
What I love about this dough:
(1) It’s versatile – you can use it for sweet (cherries, apples) or savory treats
(2) You don’t need any special flour (all-purpose is just fine)
(3) It’s soooo soft
Ingredients for Sweet Poppy Seed Buns Dough:
2 cups warm milk (I used 2%)
1 Tbsp active dry yeast (I used Red Star Brand)
1/2 cup granulated sugar, divided
6 cups all-purpose flour, (divided into 1 cup and 5 cups) *measured correctly
3 large eggs
1 and 1/2 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted
1 tsp salt
1 egg, beaten for egg wash
1 Tbsp dry poppy seeds to sprinkle over the top
1 Recipe for Poppy Seed Filling (click here for tutorial)
3/4 cup raisins (white or brown raisins work)
Tip for Success with Yeast Doughs:
A yeast dough will rise much faster in a warm oven and can cut your prep work in half. When letting a yeast dough rise in the oven, it should never be hotter than 100˚F. If you have a proofing option on your oven, use it. My old oven didn’t have such a luxury and the low setting was at 150˚F which will start cooking your bread, deactivate the yeast and ruin your buns.
I used to get creative by preheating to low, turning the oven off, propping the door with a wooden spoon and placing my dough over a towel in the oven. I’ve ruined yeast dough before by letting it get to hot and I’d love to spare you the same disappointment
How to Make Sweet Poppy Seed Buns (pirohi):
Preheat your oven to 360°F at step 13.
1. In the bowl of an electric mixer, add 2 cups warm milk and sprinkle with 1 Tbsp yeast. Let sit 5-7 min.
2. Add 1 cup flour and 1/4 cup sugar. Whisk together until blended and let it rise at room temp 30-45 min or 20 minutes in a 100˚ oven.
3. Whisk in the 3 eggs, remaining 1/4 cup sugar, 1.5 Tbsp melted butter and 1 tsp salt. Now using the dough hook, add the next 5 cups of flour 1 cup at a time letting it blend into the dough before adding more.
You know you’ve added enough flour when the dough is no longer sticking to the walls of the bowl – flour measurements could vary depending on the flour you use. Mix/knead on low speed with the dough hook for 15 minutes
4. Cover with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm 100˚F oven for 1 hour (2 hours at room temp). The dough will triple in volume. Be patient. It’s all worth it in the end.
5. Transfer your dough to a good very lightly floured non-stick surface and cut into 2 equal pieces. Working with one piece at a time, roll dough into a large circle a little less than 1/4″ thick. Cut out circles 2 1/2 to 3″ in diameter using a wide drinking glass or small bowl.
6. Mix raisins into poppyseed filling. Place 1 heaping tsp (or a flat mini-ice cream scoop) of popyseed filling into the center of each round. Pinch two ends together over the filing and pinch down the sides to seal in the filling. Fold the two corners up and place the filled bun onto the 9×13 rimmed baking sheet, sealed-side-down.
7. Let the piroshki rise in a warm 100˚F oven for 20 minutes until they look puffy (or 30-45 minutes in a warm room. Beat 1 egg and brush the tops of the puffy piroshki with the egg wash then sprinkle on the poppy seeds. Bake at 360˚F for 18-20 minutes or until the tops are golden brown.
Sweet Poppy Seed Buns (Pirohi)

Ingredients
- 2 cups warm milk, I used 2%
- 1 Tbsp active dry yeast, I used Red Star Brand
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar, divided
- 6 cups all-purpose flour, (divided into 1 cup and 5 cups)
- 3 large eggs
- 1 and 1/2 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 egg, beaten for egg wash
- 1 Tbsp dry poppy seeds to sprinkle over the top
- 1 Recipe for Poppy Seed Filling, click here for tutorial
- 3/4 cup raisins, white or brown raisins work
Instructions
Preheat your oven to 360°F at step 13.
- In the bowl of an electric mixer, add 2 cups warm milk and sprinkle with 1 Tbsp yeast. Let sit 5-7 min.
- Add 1 cup flour and 1/4 cup sugar. Whisk together until blended and let it rise at room temp 30-45 min or 20 minutes in a 100˚ oven.
- Whisk in the 3 eggs, remaining 1/4 cup sugar, 1.5 Tbsp melted butter and 1 tsp salt. Now using the dough hook, add the next 5 cups of flour 1 cup at a time letting it blend into the dough before adding more. You know you’ve added enough flour when the dough is no longer sticking to the walls of the bowl - flour measurements could vary depending on the flour you use. Mix/knead on low speed with the dough hook for 15 minutes.
- Cover with plastic wrap and let rise in a warm 100˚ oven for 1 hour (2 hours at room temp). The dough will triple in volume. Be patient. It’s all worth it in the end.
- Transfer your dough to a good very lightly floured non-stick surface and cut into 2 equal pieces. Working with one piece at a time, roll dough into a large circle a little less than 1/4" thick. Cut out circles 2 1/2 to 3" in diameter using a wide drinking glass or small bowl.
- Mix raisins into poppyseed filling. Place 1 heaping tsp (or a flat mini-ice cream scoop) of popy seed filling into the center of each round. Pinch two ends together over the filing and pinch down the sides to seal in the filling. Fold the two corners up and place the filled bun onto the 9x13 rimmed baking sheet, sealed-side-down.
- Let the piroshki rise in a warm 100˚F oven for 20 minutes until they look puffy (or 30-45 minutes in a warm room. Beat 1 egg and brush the tops of the puffy piroshki with the egg wash then sprinkle on the poppy seeds. Bake at 360˚F for 18-20 minutes or until the tops are golden brown.
- Pour yourself a tall glass of cold milk and enjoy!
Notes
A yeast dough will rise much faster in a warm oven and can cut your prep work in half. When letting a yeast dough rise in the oven, it should never be hotter than 100˚F. If you have a proofing option on your oven, use it. My old oven didn’t have such a luxury and the low setting was at 150˚F which will start cooking your bread, deactivate the yeast and ruin your buns. I used to get creative by preheating to low, turning the oven off, propping the door with a wooden spoon and placing my dough over a towel in the oven. I’ve ruined yeast dough before by letting it get to hot and I’d love to spare you the same disappointment
Natasha thanks for the recipe it was amazing and the buns turned out just right !
You are welcome Roxie, thank you for the great review 🙂
Hello, Natasha, its so difficult for me to write in English…, But I love your recipes and way how you explain them. This dough is the best which I tried. God will bless Your family forever!!!!!!!! My husband, Serhiy, and I have Derek 8, Salem 6, Shulamith 3 and expecting on June- Hadassah. I love to cook for my “big” family. God be with you always! Thanks again.
Nina, thank you for such a great review, God bless your family also and congratulation on the new baby :).
so if the dough isn’t rising to the size yours did, does that mean I overheated the dough while it was rising?
It is possible – does your oven have a higher than 100°F low setting? How long has it been rising? You might just give it a little more time to see if it rises more.
I have old oven that doesn’t have a lower setting than 150°.Also, it was rising for 2 hours in a warm oven, not hot. I heated it to 150, Turned it off, gave it some air and then Put dough in there and let it rise. I think I figured out my problem. I think my yeast was expried. I was researching and found that yeast can stop working. I tried activating some more in a cup and it hardly foamed. So I will buy new yeast tomorrow. You are awesome, I appreciate the fast response.
No problem :). I’m glad you figured it out :). Also, when my previous oven had a warm setting of 170, I would put a wooden spoon in the door and set the mixing bowl over a towel when rising so it wasn’t directly on a hot rack. Hope that helps 🙂
Hi Natasha,
I am from Vancouver, Canada. I am of Ukrainian descent and try to keep all the
Ukrainian traditions for my children and grandchildren. My children have kept on asking me to bake some prune buns like Baba used to make. I love your website and when I saw your bun recipe I thought it was time to try. I baked them yesterday using plum butter from a Polish deli. DELICIOUS, They were a hit and everyone especially my 5 year old grandsons loved them. Thank-You.
Hi Gloria! I’m so happy to hear that you all loved the buns :). Did you add prunes to them in baking or just use plum butter? Plum butter sure sounds delicious too! Thanks for the great review 🙂
I just used the plum butter, i will use prunes next time. Do you ever try to reroll the scraps?
Yes, I just add them to the remaining dough and keep working on the rest :).
Natasha, Going to make the buns again tomorrow. If I wanted to add prunes to the plum butter should I plump them first or just cut and add to plum butter? Thanks for your help.
To be honest, I haven’t tried using prunes or plum butter, but I think it would be fine even without plumping them first (I assume you mean in hot water). We usually add raisins to the filling and don’t plump them first.
i proof my dough in the oven also, however I just turn the light on for heat. It seems to work fine. Thanks for this recipe. It brings back lots of childhood memories & I just love poppyseed anything.
You must have a good light :-). It’s nice to find something that works well for you. My husband and I love all the poppyseed baked goods also!
hello,
I like your blog,delicious recipes….
I have just one question, when you say cups,
What is the exact measurement??? please
Thanks a lot
Jujud
We use standard measuring cups and it depends on whether you are talking about liquid or dry ingredients.
For liquid ingredients, it’s 8 oz or 240 mL.
For dry ingredients, it varies by weight, but I use a standard US measuring cup similar to these:
OXO Good Grips Plastic Measuring Cups, 6-Piece, Black
It’s 5:22 right now. husband will be home at 9, we have lots of apples….. i think you know where I’m going with this… 😉
p.s. your site is the reason he says to me: “honey, i think my pants shrunk after the wash.” (no, no they didn’t) 😉 lol
Lol. That’s pretty funny. Apple buns sound so so good!
Once you start brushing the buns with an egg, they do fall. Should I wait for them to rise again before putting them in the oven?
They shouldn’t fall; I haven’t had that experience before. How much are yours falling? I usually wait to brush the tops until just before I put them into the oven.
Thank you for the recipe, turned out great! You were right, the dough is so easy to work with. I made the dough in a breadmaker although I altered the recipe a little: used a total of 6 cups of flour, 3/4 cup sugar as I prefer my yeast dough a little sweeter, and increased yeast to 1.5 Tbsp. I used half the dough to make piroshki and with the other half I made a Nutella Pecan Braid. I’ve maid the braid before using a different recipe but this one came out superb!
Anya tell me more about your nutella pecan braid! That sounds delicious! Do you have a recipe you could share?
Natasha, I got the idea for the Braid from two sources. First is the braid itself from Inspired by Charm, here is the link http://www.inspiredbycharm.com/2013/09/braided-nutella-bread.html and the second was from A Spicy Perspective, where it is actually shaped into a wreath. http://www.aspicyperspective.com/2013/12/chocolate-cinnamon-bread-wreath.html
Thank you so much for sharing that! 🙂
Hi Natasha,
your sweet poppy seed buns looks so delicious. I am wondering about two things. What size of baking pan did you use? Did you have any trouble having one of them tearing the other bun when you were taking out the buns?
It was a standard 9×13 baking pan and no, I didn’t have any problems with them tearing when you take them out. They separated quite nicely and you get 3 or 4 sides (depending on their position in the pan) that are super soft and airy. I hope you love them! 🙂
Hi Natasha,
thank you for answering my questions. God Bless you and your household.
Hi Natasha.
Do these stay soft even a couple days after baking? I’m afraid that this batch is too much for my tiny family…how can i cut the recipe in half? Or can it be frozen for later?
thanks!
You could cut the recipe in half. If you want to see the dough portion cut in half; it is the same dough that I used for these cinnamon rolls: https://natashaskitchen.com/2014/04/22/cinnamon-rolls-with-salted-maple-glaze/.
Just gorgeous, love the poppy seed topping!
Thanks so much Laura 🙂
First batch just came out of the oven. I am eating one and it is heavenly good! cant wait until my bf comes home to eat these. Thanks a lot for the recipe Natasha! You are such an inspiration!
You are very welcome 🙂 and thank you for the great feedback, your comment is music to my ears.
My Hungarian husband is going to LOVE these! I can’t wait to try out these buns and the filling! Mmmmm. There is just something about stuffed rolls that is irresistible!
I hope you and your husband enjoy these! I think they’d probably be familiar to him 🙂
I hope that you are keeping well. When are you due for this little baby girl? ( that’s the Russian in me)
Everyone is convinced it’s a girl. I’ll find out in another month or so what we’re having. I am due March 7th 🙂
These take me right back to my childhood! I can almost smell them. I would really love to make them myself but sadly I don’t have any suitable machinery for grinding those darn poppies. Food processor is really useless, eh?
You must be feeling better, Natasha, judging by all the incredible goodies you’ve been producing! 🙂
I’ve been satisfying cravings all week long. 🙂 I guess pregnancy is good for blogging after all! 😉 I tried to do it in my new food processor and it didn’t work. I have not however tried a professional grade blender like Blendtec. Might be worth a shot. A mortar and pestle would work but it would be a little tedious.
I’ve had great success with my Nutribullet, which comes with a milling blade. Also, it’s a bit tedious as it is small, but you can use a spice grinder as well, with a little sugar added in to help.
I like the tip about the sugar and it’s great to know that the nutribullet works. Thanks so much for sharing!
I should add that the poppy seeds must be ground in the nutribullet fitted w/milling blade BEFORE cooking. Then the ground seeds can be simmered with whole milk and honey until the milk is absorbed. When finished, add in golden raisins and a little grated lemon zest. That’s how my mother always prepared the poppy filling.
That’s a great idea to cook it in whole milk and honey. That sounds so yummy! How long do you cook it and do you recall what proportions of poppy seeds to milk to honey you use? Can you tell I want to try your method? 😉
Oh, you know how it is with Mama’s recipes – handful of this, pinch of that! 😉 I usually start with a pound of ground poppy seeds, add milk to the top plus 1″ (like cooking rice), then add honey to taste, starting with about 1/3 cup. Bring to a simmer and let it cook about 20 minutes or until the milk is absorbed. Taste and add more honey if needed. Add the raisins and zest of 1 lemon, then simmer for an additional 5-10 mins. This can be made ahead of time and kept in the refrigerator for a couple of days,but I’ve never tried to freeze it so I don’t know if that would work.
Thank you so much for sharing! I sure appreciate it! I’m definitely going to try this 🙂
Oh! Almost forgot – before using, Mom would add an egg white as a binder, especially with something that takes lots of filling like poppyseed roll. Then the yolk could be used as an egg wash on top.
Thank you so much for sharing!! 🙂
I don’t know if you might have heard of canned poppyseeds. I have been baking with it a lot and it works great, tastes amazing and no hassle of grinding!
What brand do you use/like and where do you buy it?
Looks delicious. Could I substitute poppy seed filling for anything else? Like jam or fresh fruit i.e. apples or plum?
Yes! You can use thick jam, fresh or frozen pittted cherries (add a little sugar on the center of the dough round before adding the cherries). You can also peel, core and mince apples in a food processor and put 1/4 tsp sugar into the middle of the dough round then top with a heaping Tbsp of minced apple. Enjoy! I think plum would work too, just make sure to use enough plum or it won’t seem substantial enough; a heaping Tbsp with 1/4 tsp sugar should do fine.
Thank you Natasha for sharing this recipe! Lately I’ve been craving a poppy seed filled dessert and this just further propelled my desire to have a warm, out of the oven pirozhok with some milk, yumm!
Mmm you sure paint a good picture! 🙂
Yumm!! Can’t wait to give these a try.. Would the amount of flour still be the same if I use Canadian flour?
From my experience, you usually use less Canadian flour than American all-purpose. Add flour until the dough is just barely sticking to the bowl.
Running to Safeway for that milk right now! I was drooling while reading your post. Thanks!!
Haha sounds like a serious craving! 😉 just be sure to wipe your keyboard. Lol