Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (2024)

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Let’s visit Moravia, the eastern part of the Czech Republic today! I have a toothsome recipe for Moravian kolache (plural) for you, a sweet treat made from yeast dough. They’re characterized by double filling: cream cheese inside, plum jam on the top.

Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (1)

Table of Contents hide

➜ Moravian kolache or Dvojctihodné koláče?

➜ Pronunciation

➜ Ingredients

➜ Instructions

➜ Useful tips

Moravian Kolache – Moravské koláče

➜ Moravian kolache or Dvojctihodné koláče?

I’ll tell you a little secret. The Czech Republic contains three historical areas, Bohemia, Moravia, and Silesia. These kolache are called Moravian only by us Bohemians, but in Moravia, they call them Dvojctihodné koláče.

The word Dvojctihodné means that they are filled with two different varieties of filling. You will find creamy cheese filling inside, usually made from Czech tvaroh, which is a type of fresh cheese. Plum jam is then placed on the top and the whole beauty is sprinkled with streusel topping (drobenka).

Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (2)

NOTE: It takes some time to make Moravian kolache because they are based on yeast dough. Plan ahead!

TIP: Here is a recipe for classic Czech kolache

➜ Pronunciation

I recorded a short audio clip on how to pronounce the Czech word "moravské koláče".

➜ Ingredients

You’ll need ingredients for yeast dough, two kinds of filling (cream cheese and plum jam), and a streusel topping. Plus, one egg for the egg wash to brush kolache before putting them to bake into the oven.

Ingredients for yeast dough:

Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (3)
  • All-purpose flour
  • Granulated sugar
  • Butter, unsalted
  • Fresh yeast, or active dry yeast
  • Milk, lukewarm
  • Lemon zest, freshly grated
  • Egg yolks
  • Vanilla essence
  • Pinch of salt

You’ll find the exact amount of ingredients below in the recipe card, which you can also print out.

Fillings:

  1. The Moravian kolache inside filling: Czechs usually make a quark filling out of tvaroh, called tvarohová nádivka. However, tvaroh is not a usual ingredient worldwide. I recommend using any tried cream cheese filling (or ricotta filling), which works fine for you. TIP: A proven substitute for tvaroh in the USA is farmers’ cheese.
  2. Plum jam is the top filling: We can get plum jam or plum butter in the Czech Republic almost in every store. If you’ve trouble buying plum jam in your country, use any solid jam you can get.

Ingredients for streusel topping:

That’s easy: grab all-purpose flour, a piece of butter, and granulated sugar, mix everything, and you’ll get a beautiful topping for your kolache!

➜ Instructions

Let’s roll up our sleeves and move to the kitchen! We’re gonna make the yeast dough first.

STEP 1: Place flour in a mixing bowl, make a dimple in the middle. Put crumbled yeast there, sprinkle with 1 teaspoon of sugar, pour over 1/2 cup of lukewarm milk (photo 1). Mix with a fork until a runny batter is created in the middle (photo 2). Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let rise in the warm place for 30 minutes (photo 3).

Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (4)

STEP 2: Meantime, melt butter over low heat, mix it with egg yolks, rest of lukewarm milk, vanilla essence, lemon zest, and salt. Whisk until combined.

Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (5)

STEP 3: Add whisked butter-egg liquid to the bowl with flour and activated yeast, add sugar.

Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (6)

STEP 4: Knead a smooth dough: Start mixing with a fork, then use your hands to make a nice dough. It takes about 5-8 minutes. Or use a kitchen mixer with proper attachment if you have one. Let the dough rise for 45 minutes.

Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (7)
Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (8)

⤍ Learn how to make dough rise in the oven.

STEP 5: Meanwhile, make cream cheese (tvaroh, quark) filling. Get plum jam ready.

STEP 6: Make streusel topping: just mix flour, butter, and sugar using your fingers, create small coarse crumbles.

STEP 7: When the dough has risen, dump it on the worktop. The dough should not stick, if it does, flour the worktop a little.

Roll the dough out into a square about ¼ inch thick – the rolled dough can’t be too thin! Divide into 16 equal pieces.

Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (9)

STEP 8: Place 1-2 teaspoons of cream cheese filling in the middle, then fold the opposite sides and seal together carefully, shape the filled dough pieces between your palms into a ball.

Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (10)
Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (11)

STEP 9: Transfer the kolache to a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Place each kolach with the seamed side down. Let the kolache rise for another 30 minutes.

Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (12)

STEP 10: Preheat oven to 340 °F (170 °C).

STEP 11: For an egg wash, whisk one egg in a bowl using a fork. Press each kolach in the middle, for example with a joint of your index finger.

STEP 12: Brush kolache with egg wash and fill holes with plum jam. Sprinkle with streusel topping.

Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (13)

STEP 13: Bake kolache for 20-25 minutes until golden brown.

Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (14)

➜ Useful tips

  • Make the cream cheese filling ahead, so that it’s at room temperature when you start filling the kolache. If you used too cold cream cheese filling, the yeasted dough could not bake properly.
  • If the plum jam is too thick, mix it with a spoon of rum. Rum thins the jam and adds a wonderful flavor to the filling. If the jam is too thin or runny, add gingerbread crumbs (that’s how plum jam is thickened in the Czech Republic).
  • Short education around the kolache word. Koláč is a kolach and means 1 piece in Czech. Koláče or kolache are 2 and more pieces. Sometimes, I see the form kolaches, the double plural version used mostly by US people.

If you want to try another Czech delicacy, see the recipe for české vdolky, little fry cakes!

More Czech yeast dough pastries:

  • Jidáše – Czech Easter food
  • Wallachian frgál – sweet goodness from Moravia
  • Vánočka – Christmas sweet bread
  • Czech plum kolaches
  • Poppy seed kolache

Tried this recipe?

Leave a review down in the comments! ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

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Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (15)

Moravian Kolache – Moravské koláče

Sweet yeast pastry with double filling. Authentic Czech recipe.

5 from 3 votes

Print Pin

Prep Time: 20 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 25 minutes minutes

Leavening:: 1 hour hour 45 minutes minutes

Total Time: 2 hours hours 30 minutes minutes

Servings: 16 pieces

Author: Petra Kupská

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: Czech

Keyword: české koláče, czech kolache, moravian cooking

Ingredients

Yeast dough:

  • 4 cups (520 g) all-purpose flour
  • ¾ cup (180 ml) milk lukewarm
  • 1 and ½ oz (40 g) fresh yeast or 2 teaspoons of dry active yeast
  • 1 stick (110 g) butter unsalted
  • 2 egg yolks
  • ½ cup (100 g) granulated sugar
  • lemon zest freshly grated from 1 lemon
  • vanilla essence
  • ½ tsp salt

Cream cheese filling (any tried which works for you - about 7 oz / 200 g)

    Plum jam (about 7 oz / 200 g)

      Streusel topping:

      • 1 stick (110 g) butter
      • ⅔ cup (130 g) granulated sugar
      • 1 cup (130 g) all purpose flour

      You’ll also need:

      • 1 whole egg for egg wash
      • flour to dust workspace

      Instructions

      • Place flour in a mixing bowl, make a dimple in the middle. Put crumbled yeast there, sprinkle with 1 teaspoon of sugar, pour over ¼ cup of lukewarm milk. Mix with a fork until a runny batter is created in the middle. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let rise in the warm place for 30 minutes.

      • Meantime, melt butter over low heat, mix it with egg yolks, rest of lukewarm milk, vanilla essence, lemon zest, and salt. Whisk until combine.

      • Add whisked butter-egg liquid to the bowl with flour and activated yeast. Add sugar.

      • Knead a smooth dough: Start mixing with a fork, then use your hands to make a nice dough. It takes about 5-8 minutes. Or use a kitchen mixer with proper attachment if you have one. Let the dough rise for 45 minutes.

      • Meantime, make cream cheese (tvaroh, quark) filling. Get plum jam ready.

      • Make streusel topping: mix flour, butter, and sugar using your fingers to create small coarse crumbles.

      • When the dough has risen, dump it on the worktop. The dough should not stick, if it does, flour the worktop a little.

      • Roll the dough out into a square thick about ¼ inch – the rolled dough can’t be too thin! Divide into 16 equal pieces.

      • Place 1-2 teaspoons of cream cheese filling in the middle, then fold the opposite sides and seal together carefully. Shape the filled dough pieces between your palms into a ball.

      • Transfer the kolache to a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Place each kolach with the seamed side down. Let the kolache rise for another 30 minutes.

      • Preheat oven to 340 °F (170 °C).

      • For an egg wash, whisk one egg in a bowl using a fork. Press each kolach in the middle, for example, with a joint of your index finger.

      • Brush kolache with egg wash and fill holes with plum jam. Sprinkle with streusel topping.

      • Bake kolache for 20-25 minutes until golden brown.

      Notes

      • Makes 16 Moravian kolache.
      • Make the cream cheese filling ahead, that it’s at room temperature when you start filling the kolache. If you used too cold cream cheese filling, the yeasted dough could not bake properly.
      • If the plum jam is too thick, mix it with a spoon of rum. Rum thins the jam and adds a wonderful flavor to the filling. If the jam is too thin or runny, add gingerbread crumbs (that’s how plum jam is thickened in the Czech Republic).

      DISCLAIMER: Because I come from Central Europe, my recipes are based on metric units such as grams or milliliters. Check out how I convert metric units to the U.S. system:

      Conversion chart

      Nutrition Disclosure

      Do you like the recipe?I would be happy for your feedback! Please, rate the recipe and share your opinion or questions in comments bellow. Thank you very much.

      Moravian Kolache Recipe – Moravské koláče - Cook Like Czechs (2024)

      FAQs

      Are kolaches Polish or Czech? ›

      A kolach, from the Czech and Slovak koláč (plural koláče, diminutive koláčky, meaning "cake/pie") is a type of sweet pastry that holds a portion of fruit surrounded by puffy yeast dough. Common filling flavors include tvaroh (a type of cottage cheese), fruit jam, poppy seeds, or povidla (prune jam).

      What does kolache mean in Czech? ›

      Kolaches are a traditional Czech dessert. The name originates from the Czech word “kolo,” which means “circle.” In Czech, a single one is called a kolache, and more than one is called kolaches – though in America, you may hear them called kolaches.

      What are the different types of kolaches? ›

      The most common flavors are: prune, poppy seed, cream cheese, and apricot. I've also seen blueberry, cherry, and lemon. I'm willing to talk about savory kolaches with eggs, bacon and sausage, but honestly, I didn't grow up on those.

      What is kolache dough made of? ›

      For the dough

      Whisk flour, yeast, and salt together in bowl of stand mixer. Whisk milk, melted butter, sugar, egg, and egg yolks in a 4-cup measuring cup until sugar has dissolved.

      What is the difference between a kolach and a kolache? ›

      Kolache is the plural form of kolach, which indicates one, single pastry despite many Texans still adding an extra “s” to indicate many “kolaches” (plural).

      What is the difference between danish and Czech kolache? ›

      In appearance, they resemble a danish, but there is a difference: danish dough is light and flaky whereas a kolache tends to be slightly more dense and sweet with the dough being similar to brioche.

      What does babushka mean in Czech? ›

      "A woman's headscarf, tied under the chin." Baba, in Slavic languages like Polish and Russian, means old woman or grandmother. Babushka is the Russian diminutive of baba.

      What is a sausage kolache called in Czech? ›

      IF YOU MEET A CZECH TEXAN, he or she will politely inform you it's incorrect to use the term sausage kolache when referring to a sausage-stuffed kolache. When you scrunch up your face with confusion, the person will then kindly explain that the correct term for this savory pastry is klobasnek.

      What does babi mean in Czech? ›

      The informal “grandma” is “babi”. But some sources indicate that only we in Pilsen (like Karel Gott who was also born in Pilsen) are using the short word “babi” for “babička”.

      What is a kolache with meat called? ›

      Klobasneks are much more commonly known as kolaches in Texas, but should not be confused with traditional Czech kolaches, which are also popular and are known by the same name. Klobasneks are similar in style to sausage rolls, but the meat is wrapped in kolache dough.

      Are kolaches German or Polish? ›

      In fact, this staple of Central Texan gastronomy actually hails from Czech Republic, where a koláček (the diminutive form of koláč, pronounced kolach; plural koláčky) is a round yeast pastry with a sweet filling in the center!

      What country invented kolaches? ›

      Czech immigrants brought with them the koláč, round pastries filled with preserved fruit, nuts, or sweetened soft cheeses. The traditional 'big three' flavors are apricot, prune, and cheese. South Texans think of meat fillings when they think of kolaches, but traditionally kolaches are only filled with fruit.

      What is Russian kolache? ›

      Kolach or kalach is a traditional bread found in Central and Eastern European cuisines, commonly served during various special occasions – particularly wedding celebrations, Christmas, Easter, and Dożynki. The name originates from the Old Slavonic word kolo (коло) meaning "circle" or "wheel".

      What is the history of kolache in Czech Republic? ›

      Its name is derived from the Czech word kola, meaning wheels, referring to the traditional, round shape of the pastry. The pastry originated in the 1700s in the Czech Republic, where round breads are some of the earliest ritual foods, usually symbolizing the sun and the moon.

      What are the most popular kolache flavors? ›

      Fruit Kolaches
      • BLACKBERRY & CREAM CHEESE KOLACHES. ...
      • BLACKBERRY KOLACHES. ...
      • CHERRY & CREAM CHEESE KOLACHE. ...
      • LEMON & CREAM CHEESE KOLACHES. ...
      • LEMON KOLACHES. ...
      • PRUNE (PLUM) KOLACHES. ...
      • PUMPKIN KOLACHE. ...
      • RASPBERRY & CREAM CHEESE KOLACHE.

      Do Polish people eat kolaches? ›

      The Ministry writes that the custom of kolach/korovai making has been present in present-day eastern Poland (particularly in Podlachia, Suwałki Region, Lublin Voivodeship, Mazovia) since the Middle Ages and is also celebrated by Serbs, Bulgarians, Ukrainians, and Belarusians.

      Is kolache German or Polish? ›

      Kolaches are Czech pastries made of a yeast dough and usually filled with fruit, but sometimes cheese.

      How can you tell Czech from Polish? ›

      What's more, the Czech language does not have nasal vowels as Polish does. Czech distinguishes long and short vowels, while Polish doesn't. Additionally, Polish preserved the phonetic difference between 'i' and 'y', while in Czech, they have merged into one single vowel.

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