Paskha

| April 4, 2010 | 1 Comment

In Russia, Paskha is made from Tvorog, a sweet farmers' cheese.

Paskha is a traditional dessert served for Easter in Russia as well as other Eastern European countries to break the meat and dairy fast. The name of the dish comes from “Pascha“, the Eastern Orthodox celebration of Easter.

Special Equipment

Paskha cheese mold or a clean 1-quart terra-cotta flowerpot with a drainage hole
Cheese-cloths
Weights (either a large soup or vegetable can)

Ingredients

1 lb tvorog or farmers’ cheese
4 oz. cream cheese, cubed and softened
1 cup (200 grams) granulated sugar
3 large hard-boiled egg yolks, crumbled
3/4 cup (175 ml) heavy cream
1/3 cup (25 grams) almonds
1/4 cup (30 grams) raisins
1/4 tsp lemon zest
1 tsp vanilla extract
Sliced or chopped candied fruits

Directions

Place the farmer’s cheese, cream cheese, sugar and egg yolks into the bowl of a food processor and pulse until smooth. Add the cream and continue to pulse. Transfer mixture to a large bowl. Add the almonds, raisins, lemon zest, vanilla extract and stir to combine.

Line a paskha mold or a clean terra-cotta flower pot with a double layer of cheesecloth. Add mixture to mold. Cover with an additional cheese-cloths over the top of the paskha and weight down with a soup or vegetable can.

Place paskha in refrigerator with a large plate underneath, allowing liquid to drain, for at least 12 hours or overnight.

To serve, carefully invert mold and remove cheese-cloths. Decorate with additional nuts and/or candied fruit.

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Category: Holidays, Recipes

About the Author (Author Profile)

Suzanne Urpecz, creator and editor of The Hungarian Girl. Click on my About page for more info.

Print Friendly
Be Sociable, Share!

Related posts:

  1. Sweet cheese filling
  2. Körözött: cheese spread
  3. Almond cake
  4. Vanilla Crescents
  5. Rakott krumpli

Comments (1)

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  1. andre says:

    finally got recipe for paska been looking for age,s thank you for the time doing this haven,t had it in years and can still remember the great taste.even my father tried finding it in babousa,s old hand written recipe books so once again thank you looking forward to my 4 yr old son tring it. even though it ain,t easter it is now on menu for christmas dinner sat
    kind regards andre and son

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