Praise the Lord, Who preserved the children in the flame of fire of the burning furnace and came down to them in the form of an Angel, and supremely exalt him to the ages
Ode Eight : Heirmos Sunday of Thomas Matins
Christ is Risen!! Truly He is Risen!!
We are still working our way through our last loaf of Tsoureki (recipe here) . We stashed our last loaf in the freezer and will enjoy it at the end of the summer. Itβs a tradition we began a few years ago when we found a loaf in the freezer at the end of the summer. We were so happy to find it that we do it every year now π
If one can live in the world and yet not mix with it β just as the oil and water do not mix in the oil-lamp β then he can live in God. He is in this world but not of this world.
Mother Gavrilia
Christ is Risen!! Truly He is Risen!!
Each year we bake enough Tsoureki (Greek Easter Bread) for our feast and friends. We also always try to have enough leftover to enjoy in the coming weeks. In my next few posts I will share some of the ways we love to enjoy it! If you have never made Greek Easter Bread you can find the recipe here and a video tutorial here.
Over the years I have found many fun ways to eat our leftover loaves. This week and next I will share them with you! Today we had Tsoureki French Toast for breakfast! It’s super versatile and that citrus flavor stands up to cooking, nicely. I hope you Enjoy!!
Love, my child hospitality, because it opens the gates of paradise. Being hospitable you can be rewarded with receiving angels. Hospitality is the greatest virtue.
Elder Amphilochius of Patmos
Having received many questions about baking Greek Easter bread from my IG post – I put together a little video while we were baking yesterday. I hope you find it helpful.
βThus on Easter we celebrate Christβs Resurrection as something that happened and still happens to us. For each one of us received the gift of that new life and the power to accept it and to live by it. It is a gift which radically alters our attitude toward everything in this world, including death. It makes it possible for us joyfully to affirm: “Death is no more!” Oh, death is still there, to be sure and we still face it and someday it will come and take us. But it is our whole faith that by His own death Christ changed the very nature of death, made it a passageβa “passover,” a “Pascha”βinto the Kingdom of God, transforming the tragedy of tragedies into the ultimate victory. “Trampling down death by death,” He made us partakes of His Resurrection. This is why at the end of the Paschal Matins we say: “Christ is risen and life reigneth! Christ is risen and not one dead remains in the grave!β
Father Alexander Schmemann
This year the lenten quarantine left our store supermarket with absolutely no flour. Not only ours, but every supermarket in our area for days has had no flour. We were all so disappointed that we might not be able to bake Tsoureki, a traditional sweet bread that we eat only once a year on Pascha. It’s kind of a big deal in my family, especially the french toast it becomes the day after Pascha!
Luckily my sweet friends who own a local farm to table brewery / restaurant heard of my poverty! Every year I have invited them to our Pascha dinner. They are neither Orthodox, nor Christian, just good friends. They brought me 10 pounds of flour early this morning.
I got right to baking. My arms are sore from all the zesting and kneading 8 loaves of bread… but my house smells delicious!
βThus on Easter we celebrate Christβs Resurrection as something that happened and still happens to us. For each one of us received the gift of that new life and the power to accept it and to live by it. It is a gift which radically alters our attitude toward everything in this world, including death. It makes it possible for us joyfully to affirm: “Death is no more!” Oh, death is still there, to be sure and we still face it and someday it will come and take us. But it is our whole faith that by His own death Christ changed the very nature of death, made it a passageβa “passover,” a “Pascha”βinto the Kingdom of God, transforming the tragedy of tragedies into the ultimate victory. “Trampling down death by death,” He made us partakes of His Resurrection. This is why at the end of the Paschal Matins we say: “Christ is risen and life reigneth! Christ is risen and not one dead remains in the grave!βΒ
Father Alexander Schmemann
This year the lenten quarantine left our store supermarket with absolutely no flour. Not only ours, but every supermarket in our area for days has had no flour. We were all so disappointed that we might not be able to bake Tsoureki, a traditional sweet bread that we eat only once a year on Pascha. It’s kind of a big deal in my family, especially the french toast it becomes the day after Pascha!
Luckily my sweet friends who own a local farm to table brewery / restaurant heard of my poverty! Every year I have invited them to our Pascha dinner. They are neither Orthodox, nor Christian, just good friends. They brought me 10 pounds of flour early this morning.
I got right to baking. My arms are sore from all the zesting and kneading 8 loaves of bread… but my house smells delicious!
I am sharing the original recipe. I’ve changed a couple things to make it more my own. But this is by far one of the best Tsoureki recipes around! I love the citrus sweetness of it. You can find it over at Saveur I’ve been baking since I found it in 2007 and I look forward to it all year long.
As soon as the first batch cooled, I sent my daughter down the street to drop off a loaf for my friends, who made the bread possible. I will miss them and all my extended family and friends sitting around our table and throughout the house and yard tomorrow. ΞΞ±ΞΉ ΟΞΏΟ ΟΟΟΞ½ΞΏΟ ’ – may we celebrate Pascha next year in our churches!
Add flour and knead until the dough just no longer sticks to your hands when kneading.
Return dough to floured surface. Divide into 6 parts, rolling into ropes about 15″ long. For each loaf, tightly braid 3 ropes, then press 1 dyed egg (if using) near the end of each braid. Set bread aside to rise again for 1 hour on a lightly greased cookie sheet.
Preheat oven to 350Λ.
Brush bread with beaten egg, sprinkle with cumin seeds, and bake until golden, 40β50 minutes.