Polish / Ukrainian Paska Easter Bread With Saffron and Raisins

Created By: Anonymous
Pro Chef Or Baker?: No
This Cookbook Belongs To: You
Is This Recipe In Your Cookbook?: Yes
Origin: Poland / Ukraine
Region: Unknown
Local Name: Paska
Primary Ingredients: Saffron, Lemon Zest
Primary Spices: Saffron, Vanilla, Lemon Juice
Total Time: 3 Hours 45 Minutes
Skill Level: 1.5
Categories: Dessert, Breakfast, Special Occasion, Party
Intro By Creator: Not Available.

Creator's Notes & Tips

Makers 4 loaves if using coffee cans. 

Grease loaf pans well.

Remove the rim from a coffee can and bake these loaves in them for an authentic round loaf, be sure to keep the loaves below 1/2 full in the can or you will have a mushroom top.

This bread makes extra-ordinarily good cinnamon buns.

This bread also makes the most supreme French Toast.

Finished loaf from a coffee can
Makes the best French Toast!
Ready to eat... just like that!

How To Make It Delishier

Ingredients
  • 1⁄2 cup water, warm
  • 2 teaspoons sugar
  • 2 1⁄2 tablespoons yeast
  • 1 cup milk, scalded
  • 1 1⁄3 cups flour, sifted
  • 1⁄2 cup butter, melted
  • 1⁄4 cup vegetable oil
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla
  • 1 lemon, zested
  • 2 teaspoons lemon juice
  • 1⁄2 teaspoon saffron thread (to taste)
  • 10 egg yolks
  • 2 eggs
  • 3⁄4 cup sugar
  • 2 teaspoons salt
  • 1 -2 cup seedless raisin, soaked
  • 1⁄4 cup flour
  • 5 – 5 1⁄2 cups flour, sifted
  • 1 egg white, beaten
Instructions
  1. Scald the milk and leave to cool.
  2. Set raisins in water to reconstitute.
  3. Combine warm water, sugar and yeast. Let stand until frothy, approximately 10 minutes.
  4. Beat the cooled milk and first amount of flour well with beaters in a very large bowl with a tight fitting cover.
  5. Add the yeast mixture to the milk and flour, beat well then cover and let stand for at least 30 minutes or up to 2 hours.
  6. In a small bowl mix together the warm melted butter, oil, vanilla, lemon zest, lemon juice and saffron. Allow this mixture to steep and strengthen its flavor.
  7. Meanwhile, separate the eggs and put the yolks in a medium bowl with the two whole eggs (reserve the whites for another use, but you do need one later). I TRY TO BUY FREE RANGE EGGS FOR THIS USE SO THAT I AM SURE TO HAVE THE YELLOWEST YOLKS. Beat the eggs and yolks until they are frothy but not stiff. Add the sugar and salt and continue beating until both are dissolved.
  8. Add the butter/oil/saffron mix to the eggs and beat well.
  9. Now, combine the egg/butter mixture into the yeast and flour that was set aside earlier and beat this well.
  10. Take this moment to drain and pat dry the raisins that have been soaking, and toss them in the second amount of flour so that they do not sink (THIS MAY BE AN OLD WIVES TALE, BUT I DO IT ANYWAYS BECAUSE MY MOM TOLD ME TO, AND AT THIS POINT I THINK YOU SHOULD TOO).
  11. Begin adding the flour to the egg/butter/yeast mixture one cup at a time and beat well between each cup. Beat until you can beat no more.
  12. I don’t have a Kitchen Aid so at about 3 cups I have to stop beating with beaters and resort to stirring by hand. I find that a flat hand held spatula helps, but you’ve got to do it to get all the flour in and distributed evenly.
  13. When all the flour is blended evenly you add the raisins to the batter, you want to distribute them throughout, but don’t want to break them either, so be gentle.
  14. This will be less like a dough and more like a very thick batter, but with oiled hands and a floured board you should be able to knead it.
  15. Turn this batter out onto a WELL FLOURED BOARD, and with oiled hands knead it LOTS AND LOTS AND LOTS.
  16. Oil the dough and place it back into the bowl, cover it tightly and let it stand until it has doubled (60 min).
  17. Punch the dough down and form it into loaves.
  18. Let the loaves double in size (50 min).
  19. Bake the loaves in a preheated 400F oven for 15 minutes, brush with some of the egg whites (beaten) then turn down the oven to 350°F Continue baking for 30-40 minutes until the loaves are hollow sounding.

Creator’s Comments: Not Available.

Your notes:
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Saffron is very expensive but it has VERY strong flavor. The original recipe will result in a strong Saffron flavoring. If you just want a hint of Saffron to add dimension, then use much less. 1/4 or even 1/8th of a teaspoon.

We didn’t have a coffee can so we used 9″ and 6 1/4″ spring form pans.

We buttered the pans bottom and sides with fingers and sprinkled with as much flour as would stick to the butter.

We laid the dough to about 1″ from the top. If you want the traditional “muffin top” look, then make sure to lay the dough to about 1/2″ from the top.

Also, instead of using 1-2 cups of raisins, we used a total of 1 cup raisins and 1/2 cup candies fruit. The ratio depends on how much you’d like in your Paska.

What you still need to get before you start:

Saffron?
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