In many European countries, particularly in Central and Eastern Europe, there are various traditions surrounding the use of bread during the Easter holidays. Traditionally the practice of eating Easter bread or sweetened "communion" bread traces its origin back to Byzantium, Eastern Catholicism and the Orthodox Christian church. The recipe for sweetened or "honey-leavened" bread may date back as far as the Homeric Greek period based on anecdotal evidence from classical texts.

Easter bread
German Osterzopf with cranberries and pistachios
TypeBread
Other informationPrepared for Easter

Belarus, Bulgaria, Croatia, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Russia and Ukraine

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Kozunak, kulich, and paska

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A Kozunak is the traditional Easter bread in Bulgaria, kulich is one of different traditional Russian Easter breads. Kolach is a traditional Czech bread made at Christmas in the shape of a ring. Usually, three rings are stack on top of each other to represent the Holy Trinity. Ukrainian Easter breads are also called Paska, where often a rich, white bread is served and decorated on the top with symbols, including crosses, flowers, braids, wheat, or other designs representing aspects of Orthodox and Eastern Catholic faith.

Romania and Moldova also have a traditional Easter pastry called Pască (the term Pasca is "Easter" in the Eastern Orthodox faith, similar to Pâques in French. It is derived from the Hebrew pesah). The Romanian Pască is made with cheese (and may also include fruits, nuts, or chocolate for decoration). It is usually found alongside another traditional sweet bread which Romanians make for Easter and Christmas called Cozonac.[1]

Pinca and Poprtnik

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Pinca is a variety of Easter bread popular in Austria, Croatia and Slovenia. Poprtnik is a variety native to Slovenia. It is decorated with intricate floral designs and may also incorporate various symbols associated with Easter.

Syrnyk

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Syrnyk is a quickbread with cheese (similar to a cheesecake) that in Ukrainian Orthodox culture is often included in Easter food baskets which are taken to church to be blessed on Easter along with ham, sausages, relishes, chocolate, cheeses and other foods that were forbidden during Great Lent. The quickbread dough is made with eggs and butter, cottage cheese, cream cheese, honey, walnuts, almonds, candied orange peel, cream and cinnamon.[2]

Poland

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Baba or babka is a Polish cake made for Easter Sunday,[3] but it is not to be confused with the Polish-Jewish babka bread. A traditional babka is tall and cylindrical, often baked in bundt-type pan. It frequently contains raisins, succade, or orangeat, and may be iced on top. It is also made in the western parts of Belarus and Ukraine and is much sweeter than a paska.

Germany

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Easter bread as typically served in northern Germany for either breakfast or tea

During the weeks before Easter, special Easter bread is sold (in German: Osterbrot, listen). This is made with yeast dough, raisins, and almond splinters. Usually, it is cut in slices and spread with butter. People enjoy it either for breakfast or for tea time (in German: Kaffee und Kuchen, lit.'coffee and cake').

Netherlands

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The Dutch Easter bread is the so-called 'stol', a fruit bread with raisins and usually filled with almond paste. It is the same type of bread also eaten as a Christmas bread.

Italy

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Casatiello

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Casatiello

Casatiello (Neapolitan: casatiéllo;[4] Italian: casatello) is a leavened savory bread originating from Naples prepared during the Easter period. Its basic ingredients are flour, lard, cheese, salami, cracklings, eggs and black pepper. The bread's name derives probably from the Neapolitan word caso (Italian: cacio, 'cheese', hence casatiello), an ingredient that is part of its dough.[5]

Colomba di Pasqua

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Italian traditional Easter bread, the colomba di Pasqua. It is the Easter counterpart of the two well-known Italian Christmas desserts, panettone and pandoro.

Colomba pasquale or colomba di Pasqua (lit.'Easter dove') is an Italian traditional Easter bread, the Easter counterpart of the two well-known Italian Christmas desserts, panettone and pandoro. The dough for the colomba is made in a similar manner to panettone, with flour, eggs, sugar, natural yeast and butter; unlike panettone, it usually contains candied peel and no raisins. The dough is then fashioned into a dove shape (colomba in Italian) and finally is topped with pearl sugar and almonds before being baked. Some manufacturers produce other versions including a popular bread topped with chocolate.[6] The colomba was commercialised by the Milanese baker and businessman Angelo Motta as an Easter version of the Christmas speciality panettone that Motta foods were producing.[7]

Pastiera

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Pastiera

Pastiera is a type of Neapolitan tart made with cooked wheat, eggs, ricotta, and flavored with orange flower water. It is usually eaten at Easter.[8] Various writers repeat legends about the origin of pastiera. One story connects it to the siren Parthenope, whom the Neapolitans thanked for her sweet singing by giving her ricotta, flour, eggs, milk, spices, and sugar; Parthenope gave these ingredients to the gods, who made pastiera out of it.[9][10][11] Another story connects it to a spring celebration of the goddess Ceres.[10]

Penia

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Penia is a sweet bread that originated in rural Italy and is made during the Easter holiday. Ingredients include sugar, butter, eggs, anise seeds and lemons.[12]

Pizza di Pasqua

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Pizza di Pasqua

The pizza di Pasqua (lit.'Easter Pizza') is a leavened savory cake typical of some areas central Italy, based on wheat flour, eggs, pecorino and parmesan, traditionally served at breakfast on Easter morning, or as an appetizer during Easter lunch, accompanied by blessed boiled eggs, ciauscolo and red wine [13] or, again, served at the Easter Monday picnic. Having the same shape as panettone, the pizza di pasqua with cheese is a typical product of the Marche region, but also Umbrian (where, as a traditional food product, it obtained the PAT recognition). There is also a sweet variant, with candied fruits or without, sugar and a fiocca, that is a meringue glaze with sugar beads.[14] According to religious tradition, the pizza di pasqua should be prepared on Maundy Thursday or Good Friday to be eaten only at Easter, that is, at the end of the period of fasting and abstinence dictated by lent.[15] Once ready, then, it was customary to bring the pizza di pasqua to the church, so that it would be blessed together with the other foods to be consumed on Easter day.[16]

Sardinia

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In Sardinia, Italy, bread is a part of a wide social context. It is the most important food in Sardinia, as well as all over Italy and the Mediterranean. "Bread is a nexus of economic, political, aesthetic, social, symbolic, and health concerns".[17]: 29  Bread is symbolic for life. A peasant proverb mentions, "Chie hat pane mai non morit — one who has bread never dies".[17]: 29  The Easter holiday is one where bread brings itself into the symbolic realm. Bread is significant for religious purposes. Luisa Fois described bread in her life after she was married and for the Easter holiday. The bread was made into a cross to represent the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Since they were married, they needed to eat it together. They would share their lives now, and they must share their "cross" together (their life's burden) as well. "Bread was a product of their union, and its shared consumption reaffirmed their interdependence".[17]: 30  From this we gather that bread also displays a message, rather than being an item purely for consumption and nutritional purposes. Two kinds of Easter bread are described in Counihans article. One contained two points, and an egg covered with a cross. "The egg and the points that recall birds in flight speak of fertility, sexuality, and procreation — basic themes in Easter and its pagan precursors".[17]: 41  The second bread was designed to have no overall shape, but was rather baked to encircle an egg, with the initials BP put on it. The initials BP stand for buona Pasqua or "happy Easter". "Letters rather than forms express meaning. Letters are symbolic of civilization and ... meaning".[17]: 41 

Types

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Image Name Native name Cuisine Reference
 
Paska Паска

Paska
პასკა
Ukrainian
Belarusian
Slovak
Georgian
 
Kulich Кулич Russian
 
Cozonac Козунак Bulgarian
Macedonian
Romanian
Moldovan
 
Pasca (cheese-filled) Pască

Паска

Romanian
Moldovan
Ukrainian

(Bukovinian)

 
Babka Baba wielkanocna

Бабка

Polish
West Ukrainian

(Galician, Hutsuls)

[18]
 
Kolach Колач
Kolač
Fonott kalács
Serbian
Hungarian
 
Pinca Pinca
Пинца
Croatian
Montenegrin
 
Easter breads Velikonocni kruhki Slovenian
 
Tsoureki
also called paskalya çöreği
τσουρέκι
չորեկ
Greek
Armenian
[19]
 
Hot cross bun British
 
Mazanec Mazanec Czech
 
Paasstol Paasstol Dutch
 
Easter Dove Colomba di Pasqua Italian
 
Pizza di Pasqua Pizza di Pasqua Italian
 
Pizza di Pasqua (sweet variant) Pizza di Pasqua (sweet variant) Italian
 
Folar Folar de Páscoa Portuguese
 
Hornazo Hornazo Spanish
 
Easter Bread Osterbrot German

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Pasca–Romanian Easter Bread with Cheese and fruits". Archived from the original on 17 September 2012.
  2. ^ Fieldhouse, Paul. The World Religions Cookbook. Greenwood Press. p. 85.
  3. ^ Davidson, Alan (21 August 2014). The Oxford Companion to Food. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-104072-6 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ "Casatiéllo napoletano o Tòrtano? Quali le differenze?" (in Italian). 27 March 2016. Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  5. ^ D'Avossa, Laura (8 March 2020). "Il Casatiello Napoletano, Le Origini, La Storia, La Simbologia". napolinpillole.it (in Italian). Archived from the original on 7 November 2021. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  6. ^ "Flamigni Panettone Box". Archived from the original on 4 September 2011. Retrieved 13 April 2011. Chocolate version of Panettone
  7. ^ Porzio, Stanislao (2007). Il panettone. Storia, leggende, segreti e fortune di un protagonista del Natale. Datanova. ISBN 9788895092317.
  8. ^ Francesconi, Carola Jeanne (1995). La vera cucina di Napoli (in Italian). Roma: Newton. p. 258. ISBN 8881830213.
  9. ^ Marlena Spieler, Neapolitan Culture, Cuisine, and Cooking, 2018, ISBN 9781442251250, p. 19–20
  10. ^ a b Eli Rogosa, Restoring Heritage Grains, ISBN 1603586717, p. 206–207
  11. ^ Pasquale Guaglianone, Il naufragio previsto. Principessa Mafalda: l'ultimo tragico viaggio, 2012, ISBN 888901346X, p. 59
  12. ^ "Penia | Traditional Sweet Bread From Italy | TasteAtlas". www.tasteatlas.com. Retrieved 4 March 2023.
  13. ^ "La cucina delle feste: la crescia di formaggio" (in Italian). AIFB - Associazione italiana food blogger. 11 April 2014. Retrieved 9 May 2019.
  14. ^ "Torta di Pasqua dolce: la ricetta tipica della 'pizza' della colazione pasquale umbra" (in Italian). assisi news. 14 April 2019. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  15. ^ "A Fano non é Pasqua senza la pizza al formaggio!" (in Italian). DestinationeFano. 23 March 2018. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  16. ^ "Pizza di Pasqua (Crescia al formaggio)" (in Italian). Il Datterino di Artusi. 31 March 2018. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  17. ^ a b c d e Counihan, Carole. The Anthropology of Food and Body: Gender, Meaning, and Power. New York: Routledge, 1999
  18. ^ Panasiuk, Liudmyla (22 April 2019). "Великдень у традиціях. Забуті українські звичаї Пасхи від етнографів". Ukrainska Pravda.
  19. ^ Davidson, Alan (1 January 1981). National & Regional Styles of Cookery: Proceedings : Oxford Symposium 1981. Oxford Symposium. ISBN 978-0-907325-07-9.
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