Saturday, April 19, 2014

Georgian Orthodox Easter and Paska Recipe

I am going to share some of my Georgian Orthodox Easter traditions. It is very different than Easter in the US. We do not have bunnies or kids hunting for eggs in the bushes. Preparation normally starts on Friday night. We color the eggs and make Paska, which is an Eastern European Easter bread.

Mom usually boils the eggs and dyes them red using red onion skins. Sometimes she places cilantro leafs, or other plants that have interesting designs, against the egg and then wraps the egg tightly in a fine net (usually pantyhose). The resulting egg is imprinted with the pattern of the leaves. Next, she makes Paska. The recipe is at the end of this post. 

It's a Georgian tradition that after the Easter mass we come home and start the game of breaking the eggs. Each person gets an egg and then we alternate hitting eggs the tip-to- tip and bottom-to-bottom. The first person with the unbroken egg is declared the winner! One year, my neighbor got a wooden egg that resembled a real egg and broke all of our eggs (obviously). We quickly realized his ploy!



P.S. If you like decorate your Easter table then, two weeks prior, you can sprinkle wheat seeds on a cotton ball in a container. The cotton ball should be moist with water. What grows in two weeks is called Jejili (grass), which is used as a table decoration. See the image below. 


Paska Bread Ingredients
  • 2 tsp yeast
  • 500 ml of milk
  • Around 500 g of flour
  • 200 g of sugar
  • 5 eggs
  • 250 g of (melted) butter
  • 2/3 cup of resins
  • 1/4 tsp cardamom
  • 1/4 tsp nutmeg
  • 1/4 tsp salt
Preparations
Pre-Ferment: Add yeast to 1/2 cup of warm milk. Next, add flour so that the consistency is like light a pancake batter. Wait for the mixture to rise. Keep it in a warm room.

Dough:In a separate bowl, beat the eggs and sugar very well. Next, use the wooden spoon to add the melted butter, salt, cardamom, nutmeg and the pre-ferment. Next, add more flour untill you reach the pancake butter consistency. Wait for it rise for the second time. Next add rasins and let it rise third time. Several options are available for forming the loaves. If you have tin can forms, pour the dough into forms wrapped in parchment paper. You can also form the dough into a braided loaf or however else you please. Here, we assume you are using forms. Make sure that you fill the forms halfway. Put the filled forms in a warm place and let the dough rise again. After the dough rises in the forms, bake them in the oven at 355F for 35 minutes and then lower the temperature to 320F for 25 minutes. Happy Easter!


2 comments:

  1. Could you please revise your ingredients list and directions for this recipe, it's very confusing. The amounts do not add up. For example, in the ingredients you list 180 ml of milk, which is less than 1 cup, but then in the preparations you say to add yeast to 1 cup of milk and then later on you need to use the remaining milk for the rest of the recipe. ??? You also say to mix the pre-ferment with 1 cup of oil, I assume you mean the butter/egg mixture? I would appreciate it if you could clarify your list of ingredients and instructions so that I could make this recipe successful. Thank you so much!

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  2. Hi, I revised the recipe. Sorry for such a long delay :)

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