‘Show him the spiced plums, mother. Americans don’t have those,’ said one of the older boys. ‘Mother uses them to make kolaches,’ he added. Leo, in a low voice, tossed off some scornful remark in Bohemian. I turned to him. ‘You think I don’t know what kolaches are, eh? You’re mistaken, young man. I’ve eaten your mother’s kolaches long before that Easter Day when you were born.’
– Willa Cather’s novel My Antonia (1918), about Bohemian immigrants in Nebraska in the 1880s
Sometimes there is a fine line between cakes, breads, and pastries. The Czech koláč (koláče plural) –- the hacek mark over the letter “c” makes it a guttural “ch” -— consists of a large sweet yeast dough round topped with pools of a sweet mixture (or several types), while its diminutive koláček (koláčky plural) denotes smaller individual versions. In America, the names were anglicized, depending on the part of the country, as kolache or kolacky (typically used for both large and small cakes as well as both plural and singular).
Round breads are some of the earliest of ritual foods, variously symbolizing the sun, moon, and female. In this vein, the Slavonic word for wheel (kolo) gave its name to an ancient Eastern and Central European ritual round savory bread loaf. Then, around the 15th century with the arrival in Eastern Europe of yeast breads enriched with butter, eggs, and sugar (the first light cakes in the region), the name kolo was applied to round sweetened yeast loaves enjoyed for celebrations from the Balkans to the Baltic Sea, including the Polish kolacz (pronounced kowatch), Russian kulich, Ukrainian kolač, Serbo-Croatian kolač, Hungarian kalacs, and Yiddish koyletch (an early synonym for egg challah, considered a cake by Sephardic Jews). Distinct from the unadorned yeast cakes of Eastern Europe (or those additionally flavored with raisins), varieties from Bohemia, Moravia, and Slovenia were paired with povidla (plum butter made from cooking down Italian plums without the addition of sweeteners). Some speculate that originally people simply spread the beloved povidla on chunks of baked sweet bread to enhance the gastronomic experience. Then around the 18th century bakers began making indentations in the dough rounds before baking and filling them with povidla, resulting in a sort of a massive ‘prune Czech’ (instead of Danish). The radiating pockets of topping actually looks more like a wheel. Related to kolache are Czech buchty (buchta singular), a bun with the sweet mixture enclosed inside. The rich dough is also wrapped around a large sausage (klobasnek).
Besides plum (slivkóvý koláče or povidlové koláče), two other venerable central European baking favorites became traditional Old-World kolache toppings: Poppy seed (makový koláče) and cheese (tvaroh koláče). These items were easily produced by families with even only a little land and capable of extended storage to be on hand when needed for various treats. Regular jam cannot be used for kolache as it soaks into the dough and boils over during baking. In Europe, Czechs used a form of the Teutonic quark for the cheese topping and, in 19th century America, substituted drained clabber; more recently, cream cheese and/or farmer cheese emerged as the principal cheese. More modern toppings include apricot, blueberry, cherry, lemon, pineapple, and raisin. For a dazzling presentation, each indentation of a large cake round is filled with a different flavor and color. A relatively recent innovation is an optional streusel topping known as posipka.
Many Czech families had their own secret kolache recipe handed down from generation to generation, mothers and grandmothers assiduously instructing the young girls. The dough, abounding with butter, should be rather dense, not fluffy. Some prefer a plain flavor, while others add a hint of spice or lemon zest to the dough. Most traditional versions call for three risings, but some aficionados insist that five risings are necessary for proper texture and flavor. Modern cookie adaptations, particularly prominent among Poles, use sour cream or cream cheese pastry dough instead of the traditional yeast, but the latter remains the most common and authentic.
Perhaps the first mention of this treat outside central Europe was in Leaves From My Journal During Summer of 1851 by Robert Grosvenor (London, 1852): “Outside the sacred precincts [of ritual baked goods] there are such things as Kugellhopf, a species of Baba, and Bohmische kolatchen [the German plural spelling], a local luxury, made of heavier materials, sometimes a little cheese finding its way into it; excellent in their way, but not to be thought of by the docile water-drinker; the latter he must not approach till he has left off drinking six weeks.”
Czech immigrants began arriving in central Texas in the 1840s, with many more following in the ensuing four decades, founding in that state more than 250 small communities, constituting the largest rural Czech population in America. Significant numbers of Czechs also settled in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois, and other parts of the Midwest. Although most quickly adopted American fare, they tended to continue to enjoy certain traditional foods, in particular kolache. In Europe, home ovens were exceedingly rare, whereas in America they were commonplace, facilitating home baking. In Europe, these treats contained very expensive ingredients (sugar, eggs, butter, and white flour) and were initially reserved for very special occasions, specifically Epiphany and, along with masquerades and dances, on Mardi Gras (Shrove Tuesday) in the pre-Lenten festivities. For Christmas there might be depressions in a large round cake for candles. Traditionally, newly engaged women sent small kolache with three toppings to family and friends as an invitation to the wedding. In America, kolache became common not only for all special events but also as a beloved comfort food and vehicle for ethnic identification. Czechs in America enjoyed their coffee with kolache, becoming a way of entertaining neighbors and making more bearable the hardships and isolation of farm life. These treats became ubiquitous at church dinners and bazaars. Many Czechs in America grew their own poppies to ensure an adequate supply of seeds for the topping (Minnesota: A State Guide Federal Writers’ Project, 1938) and numerous families bottled their own povidla. Others had to make do with stewing prunes. A “kolache odor” was considered the characteristic aroma of Midwestern Czech homes.
An early written presence of this cake in America was in The Chicago Record Cook Book (Chicago, 1896), a collection of ten thousand recipes submitted by readers to a regular newspaper column, the instructions (along with “Brown Farina Soup,” “Chopped Veal Leg,” and “Noodle Pudding”) provided by Mrs. Mary A. Cizkovsky of Chicago: “Stuffed Biscuits (Bohemian kolace) — Into one pound of flour put a cent’s worth of yeast, prepared, one egg, one tablespoon butter or lard, one scant pint of lukewarm milk, one level teaspoonful salt. Mix thoroughly with wooden spoon, working the dough till smooth. Set in warm place to raise and cover it. When raised put on a floured kneading board. Roll out to about half an inch in thickness, cut in circular shape, place in greased dripping-pan without touching. Rub over with butter or lard (melted). Take out pits from prunes left over from luncheon. Chop the prunes and put a little of the Jam on the center of each biscuit. Let raise again and bake to a light brown. To prepare the yeast crumble it into a cup with one tablespoonful sugar and one quarter cup warm milk. Mix and use as soon as it rises.”
Soon thereafter, the cake appeared in the initial edition of The Settlement Cook Book (Milwaukee, 1901), as a trio of different small types of “Kolatchen” with a German-Jewish influence: Bohemian Kolatchen, Sour Cream Kolatchen, and Ice Kolatchen. The “Bohemian Kolatchen” resembled the modern American small type, but was filled with beaten egg white sprinkled with sugar rather than prune or poppy seed: “Make Kuchen Dough, No. 1, 2 or 3, pages 311 and 312. Add a little cinnamon and mace and 1 teaspoon anise, seed well pounded, or flavor to taste. Let rise till very light, then take out on mixing board, and roll out to about half inch. Cut in rounds, 3 inches in diameter, and lay on a well-buttered pan, pressing down the centre of each so as to raise a ridge around the edge. When well risen, brush the top over with stiffly beaten white of an egg and sprinkle with granulated sugar.” The “Sour Cream Kolatchen” were rather small yeast cookies, the dough dropped from a teaspoon and topped with a small piece of dried or candied fruit. The “Ice Kolatchen” utilized a rudimentary form of Danish pastry “cut into rounds with biscuit cutter 3 inches in diameter, place on floured board and let rise in a warm place until light several hours. Place a teaspoon of raspberry jam on lower half of each piece, then fold over the other half and press edges together.”
Lady Bird Johnson, in the July 7, 1967 entry in her White House Diary (published in 1970), described a trip to Praha, a community in Fayette County Texas founded by Czechs and named for Prague, reflecting the assimilated Czechs retaining their kolache tradition: “The tables were loaded with fried catfish and black-eyed peas, fried chicken and thick slabs of homemade bread, and for dessert a typical specialty of the area – ‘kolaches,’ a rich pastry that has a center of dried apricots or prunes.” Since 1984, Burleson County Texas to usher in the fall has sponsored an annual one-day “Kolache Festival,” celebrating Czech heritage and featuring baking competitions and a kolache-eating contest. The 71st Legislature of Texas proclaimed the Burleson County Seat of Caldwell as “Kolache Capital of Texas.” At the 2007 festival, around 25,000 guests consumed more than 60,000 kolache. In the following year, the festival went on despite the threat of Hurricane Ike. Similar large celebrations emerged in several other Texas communities, including Crosby, Fayetteville, Hallettsville, and West.
The southern Minnesota town of Montgomery, just south of New Prague, claiming the title of “Kolacky capital of the world,” holds its own annual Kolacky Days Festival. The Montgomery celebration, dating from just days before the stock market crash in 1929, eventually became a three-day series of events during the first weekend in August. Although many of the original ethnic overtones of the festival dissipated over the years, kolacky remain, including the home-baked kolacky contest featuring prizes for the Best Tasting (in traditional and non-traditional toppings), Most Perfectly Shaped, and Largest. Kolache are also featured at annual Czech Fests and Kolache Days in Wilson, Kansas; Wilber, Nebraska; Prague, Oklahoma (nicknamed Kolache-ville); Yukon, Oklahoma; and the Kolache Shoot-out in Elba, Nebraska. These events most commonly occur in August and September corresponding to the maturation of Italian plums.
Until well into the 20th century, kolache generally remained the province of Czech homes. Even Ray Kroc’s attempt in the 1950s to add “kolacky,” his mother’s specialty, to McDonald’s menu failed. A recipe was included in the Betty Crocker’s Picture Cook Book (1950) as well as the New Picture Cook Book (1961), the cake introduced to General Mills by a staff member from Minnesota. Webster’s Dictionary added kolacky and kolach in 1961, signifying its movement into the American mainstream. The treat, proving rich and flavorful but not cloying, became commonplace in many American bakeries and cookbooks.
Meanwhile, kolache in America transposed from being a homemade treat to increasingly a commercial product. Besides bakeries, a number of doughnut stores and other franchises in Texas sell them. There are even restaurants in Texas and Indiana specializing only in assorted sweet and savory kolache. A few of these establishments no longer make traditional plum kolache, but offer unorthodox versions, such as sausage-jalapeño-and-cheese (actually a klobasnek) and, in November, pumpkin-cheese. Still, some Czechs insist on preparing their own kolache at home (or church), like their mother and grandmothers before them.
Food Photography and Styling by Kelly Jaggers
Recommended Products:
We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
Kolache/Kolacky
Ingredients
Dough
- 1 package active dry yeast (¼-ounce/7 grams/2¼ teaspoons), 1¾ teaspoons instant yeast, or 1 cake fresh yeast (0.6-ounce/18 grams)
- 1 cup warm milk (105 to 115°F for dry yeast; 80 to 85°F for fresh yeast)
- 1/2 cup unsalted butter, softened, or ¼ cup butter and ¼ cup shortening (1 stick/4 ounces/120 grams)
- 2 large eggs (6 tablespoons/3.5 ounces/100 grams)
- 6 tablespoons granulated sugar (3 ounces/80 grams)
- 1 teaspoon table salt
- 1 teaspoon grated lemon zest and/or ½ teaspoon ground mace or nutmeg (optional)
- 4 cups unbleached all-purpose or bread flour (17 ounces/500 grams)
Egg Wash
- 1 large egg (beaten)
- 1 teaspoon cream, milk, or water
Cheese Topping
- 16 ounces farmer cheese or cream cheese, softened (455 grams OR 10 ounces (285 grams) farmer cheese and 6 ounces (170 grams) softened cream cheese)
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar or more to taste (3.5 ounces/100 grams)
- 2 large egg yolks
- 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour (optional)
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract (OR 1 teaspoon grated lemon zest, ½ teaspoon ground cinnamon, or ½ teaspoon grated nutmeg)
Poppy Seed Topping
- 2 cups poppy seeds
- 1 cup milk or water (8.5 ounces/240 grams)
- 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar (10.5 ounces/300 grams)
- 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice or 3 tablespoons unsalted butter
- Pinch salt
- 1 teaspoon grated lemon zest (optional)
Prune Topping
- 1 pound pitted prunes, or 8 ounces pitted prunes and 8 dried pitted cherries (455 grams/about 36 medium/3 cups)
- 2 cups water (17 ounces/485 grams)
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar (3.5 ounces/100 grams)
- 1 tbsp lemon juice or prune juice
- 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
- 1/8 tsp ground cloves (optional)
Apricot Topping
- 2 cups dried apricots (12 ounces/340 grams)
- 1 cup orange juice (or 1 cup water and 1 tablespoon lemon juice) (8.5 ounces/240 grams)
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar, light brown sugar, or honey (3.5 ounces/100 grams)
- 1-2 tablespoons lemon juice or dark rum
Blueberry Topping
- 1/3 cup granulated sugar (80 mL)
- 3 tablespoons cornstarch (45 mL)
- Pinch salt
- Pinch ground cinnamon (optional)
- 2 cups blueberries (about 10 ounces/285 grams)
- 2 tablespoons lemon juice (30 mL)
Cherry Filling
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar (3.5 ounces/100 grams/120 ml)
- 1/4 cup cornstarch (1.25 ounces/35 grams)
- 1 1/4 cups reserved cherry juice (300 mL)
- 28 ounces pitted sour cherries (800 grams/4 cups)
Posipka (optional)
- 1 cup granulated sugar (7 ounces/200 grams)
- 1/2 cup all-purpose flour (2.125 ounces/60 grams)
- 1-1 1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon (optional)
- 1/4 cup butter, melted (½ stick/2 ounces/60 grams)
NOTES
In a medium bowl, beat the cheese and sugar until smooth. Blend in the yolks, optional flour, and vanilla.
To Make Poppy Seed Topping
In a nut grinder, coffee grinder, food processor, or blender, grind the poppy seeds. Grinding produces a finer texture and better flavor. In a medium saucepan, combine the poppy seeds, milk, sugar, lemon juice, salt, and optional zest. Simmer over a medium-low heat, stirring frequently, until the mixture thickens, about 10 minutes. Let cool. The topping can be covered and stored in the refrigerator for up to 1 week. It tastes much better than the canned stuff. To Make Prune Topping
In a bowl or large bottle, pour the water over the prunes and let stand at room temperature for several hours or overnight. In a large saucepan, simmer the prunes and water until very tender, about 30 minutes. Drain, reserving ¼ cup of the cooking liquid. To the hot prunes, add the sugar, lemon juice, cinnamon, and optional cloves and mash until smooth. Stir in the reserved cooking liquid. Let cool. The topping can be covered and stored in the refrigerator for up to 5 days. To Make Apricot Topping
In a medium saucepan, simmer the apricots and orange juice over medium heat until tender, about 30 minutes. Drain. In a food processor, puree the apricots with the sugar and lemon juice until smooth. The topping can be covered and stored in the refrigerator for up to 3 days.
To Make Blueberry Topping
In a medium saucepan, combine the sugar, cornstarch, salt, and, if using, cinnamon. Add the blueberries and lemon juice. Cook over medium heat, stirring, until the sugar dissolves. Reduce the heat to low and simmer until thickened (about 10 minutes). Let cool. (Filling can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 3 days.) To Make Cherry Topping
In a medium saucepan, combine the sugar and cornstarch. Stir in the juice. Cook, stirring, over medium heat, until the mixture boils and thickens. Remove from the heat and stir in the cherries. Let cool. (Filling can be stored in the refrigerator for up to 3 days.)
To Make Posipka (optional)
In a medium bowl, combine the sugar, flour, and optional cinnamon. Using a fork or your fingers, stir in the butter to make fine crumbs.
Instructions
- In a small bowl or measuring cup, dissolve the yeast in ¼ cup milk. If using instant yeast, do not dissolve it yet-- reserve.
- In a large bowl, combine the yeast mixture with the remaining milk, butter, eggs, sugar, salt, and, if using, zest and/or mace. Blend in 1½ cups flour. If using instant yeast, add it now.
- Gradually add enough of the remaining flour to make a workable dough.
- On a lightly floured surface or in a mixer with a dough hook, knead the dough until smooth and springy, about 5 minutes.
- Place in an oiled bowl and turn to coat.
- Cover with a kitchen towel or loosely with plastic wrap and let rise in warm, draft-free place until nearly doubled in bulk, 2 to 3 hours, or in the refrigerator overnight.
- Punch down the dough, knead briefly, cover, and let rise in a warm, draft-free place until nearly doubled in bulk, about 1¼ hours.
- Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper or lightly grease the sheet. Punch down the dough, knead briefly, divide in half, form into balls, and let stand for 10 minutes.
- On a lightly floured surface, roll out the dough ½ inch thick. Cut into 2½-inch rounds. Reroll and cut out the scraps.
- Place on parchment paper-lined or greased baking sheets about 1 inch apart, cover with a towel or plastic wrap spritzed with cooking spray, and let rise at room temperature until nearly doubled in bulk, about 1 hour.
- Position a rack in the center of the oven. Preheat the oven to 375°F (350°F for a convection oven). Using your thumb or the back of a spoon, press 1 large or 2 smaller deep indentations into the center of each round, leaving a ½-inch wide-rim. Brush the edges with the egg wash.
- Spoon about 1 tablespoon topping into the indentation and, if using, sprinkle lightly with the posipka.
- Bake until golden brown or the center of the dough registers about 180°F on an instant-read thermometer, about 12 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack and let cool.Kolache are best eaten on the same day they are made, but can be covered with plastic wrap and stored at room temperature for up to 2 days on in freezer for up to 3 months.
VARIATIONS:
- For 12-inch round cakes: On a lightly floured surface, roll each half into a 12-inch round. Place on the prepared sheet, leaving several inches between each round. Cover with a towel or plastic wrap spritzed with cooking spray and let rise at room temperature until nearly tripled, about 1½ hours.Position a rack in the center of the oven. Preheat the oven to 375°F (350°F for a convection oven).
- With a large spoon or your thumb, press 6 evenly spaced deep large triangular indentations into the dough, leaving a ½-inch-wide outer rim and between the indentations. Brush the edges with the egg wash.
- Fill each section with about 1/3 cup of 3 or 6 different toppings. If using, sprinkle lightly with the posipka.Bake until golden brown or the center of the dough registers about 180°F on an instant-read thermometer, 15 to 25 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack and let cool.
Nutrition
tried this recipe?
Let us know in the comments!
THK wants to know… what’s your favorite kolache topping?
ondřej says
As a 100% Czech from Prague with mother-in-law from eastern Moravia who bakes these like all the time I approve the recipe and the results, at least from what I can judge from provided pictures. Good job!
Another recipes worth trying are already mentioned buchty (singular buchta) or, more remote, ovocné knedlíky (dumplings with plum povidla inside, cooked, served with quark and butter). You’ll need rough milled flour (rough wheat flour as they call it on wikipedia) for these.
Janet says
My mother, born in Omaha but raised partly in Czechoslovakia, used to make buchty and the plum dumplings you mention. I had to look up quark, but it sounds like what we used for buchty filling. Never had it with the plum dumplings. No one in the family makes either one any more — too much work!
Alison Edwards says
Just trying these now after a friend in Texas mentioned them on Facebook. Just wondering about marshmallow as a topping?
Rebekah says
Use the recipes for the fillings mentioned for authenticity. I lived in Prague for two years and these were one of my favorite treats. I’m making them right now and can’t wait to share with my kids.
Lydia Clonts says
How do I save these recipes!!
Rachel says
Mace is NOT optional in a good Kolache. Whoever said mace was optional doesn’t know what it is supposed to taste like. We grew up making these every year for Christmas, and no mace ruins the flavor of the dough.
Arnie says
I have not tried this yet, but it looks and sounds delicious! About freezing these is it better to freeze before or after you bake them? I own a small coffee shop and would like to have them to bake as neede since I am sure they are best when fresh. I have read you can also do meats, etc in these. Thank you!
Cindy says
My Czech grandmother would freeze kolaches after baking. They were yummy after being defrosted! She usually made cheese, apricot, and sometimes peach.
Paula says
This was a very interesting article! Thank you! My Great Grand parents came to Iowa from Bohemia in the 1890s and brought a Kolach recipe with them. I always think of my Grandma whenever I eat a kolach. Good memories!
The recipe has been passed down in our family and I love to make them. My favorites are prune and poppy seed. Most of my family prefer cherry. I am looking forward to trying this new recipe.
Mary says
My husband’s Aunt didn’t know how to make the real Pierogies, so she always made them the “pancake in the oven” way. It must have been the way her Mother, from Poland had also made them, OR, maybe they didn’t like the boiled ones?? I actually learned anything of my Polish cooking from her, as I had been raised with cooking by my Polish/German Dad, and he had been raised with his German Grandma, so most of my cooking/baking had been German. I do make some really great German Potato Salad that EVERYBODY likes, even people, who don’t normally like German Potato Salad. I also make some delicious Apple Kuchen!
lori o says
Not the Czech recipe we had. First you use lard and second mashed potatoes. Senior mothers made over 30 dozen every year for a sale to raise money for senior trip. Had to increase that as always sold out.
Mary says
I also used to make the cheese filling, like: Suzanne Koepke, from my homemade cottage cheese, mixed with an egg, a little sugar, and lemon, with a sprinkle of cinnamon,, for my cheese kolachkes. I also used this same cheese filling in the thin Polish pancakes, spread on half, fold in half and then fourths, and lay out on a cookie sheet, to bake at 350 degrees, until the egg and cheese was cooked through (30 minutes?) I liked this for a Sunday supper, plain, or with a spoonful of preserves on top. Fast, easy, and good! We had the thin Polish/French/Swedish pancakes a lot, and all the kids knew how to make them.
Suzanne Koepke says
Our family always had the poppy seed filling enclosed in the dough.
Fresh cottage cheese filling was also good. I remember a cheesecloth bag hanging to get as much moisture out of the unpasturized cottage cheese. Raisins were sometimes added to this filling. Later, vanilla pudding mix was added. We never used cream cheese.
We also did not use a biscuit cutter…Mom and would scoop out small amounts of dough and then roll in the palm of her hand to make a ball shape. These would be flattened when on the baking sheet and brushed with oil & butter and then filled. We always used the posipka or strusel topping. Sausage bread or klobasnic was also enjoyed. Any dough left after all fillings were used would be made into cinnamon rolls. Needless to say, I cannot be a fan of all the “kolaches” at doughnut shops today!
Maria Harvey says
Hi Suzanne Koepke, Could you share your kolaches recipe with us, it sounds great!!
Hana Pichova says
And do you know Moravian kolache- it is kolache with double filling – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iATSnnpYyk0
Hana Pichova says
Very interesting article about “kolache” , I live in Czech republic, we usually fill koláče with poppy seed, cheese, and plum, red currant, apple, pear, raspberry, blueberry or strawberry jam. Pineapple looks great,
“Koblasneki” – this word I don´t know. Dough without sugar and with salt may be or “zelňáky” or “škvarkové placky”
First of them is leavened dough with sauerkraut, http://www.msregion.cz/nej-recept/upload/zelnaky-pani-jirinky-82.jpg, http://foto.dama.cz/img/482/482258.jpg
The second one is the same dough with cinder (?My dictionary doesn´t know exactly?) https://www.receptynakazdyden.cz/recept/skvarkove-placky
David Odenwalder says
I took a tip from another reader, and found a slightly different recipe elsewhere online – this one calling for mashed potatoes and potato water in place of part of the flour and liquid. I let the dough rise three times before baking. The finished product was satisfactory, but not spectacular. I guess I just have to wait until my next trip to the Midwest.
Paulette Pilcik Britton says
I grew upon East Bernard TX. We’ve had a Klobase Kolache festival for years. I even grew up going to Czech mass. I love reading this thread. in CA now but just reading this makes me miss home. I love my Czech heritage.
Pat Fouquet says
I live in Prague, Oklahoma and we have had a Kolache Festival almost every year since 1951. The town was obviously founded by Czecks and the traditional kolache is the fruit filled one. The festival is the first Saturday in May each year. Come visit to see traditional folk dancing, dress and lots of kolaches.
David Odenwalder says
I’ve driven past Prague, OK several times – but never had an opportunity to stop. I don’t have a drop of Czech (or Slovak) blood, to my knowledge – but have enjoyed my experiences with Cz/Svk cultures, including a couple of nice trips to the other Prague (as in the capital city) and Banska Bystrica. If you ever get to San Diego CA in mid October, you might see my group performing Czech folk dances – we do so every year. My group has traveled as far as northern LA area to represent the Cz/Svk cultures.
David Odenwalder says
There’s a little bakery on the main street through the Czech Village in Cedar Rapids, IA. The village is almost a ghost town, except for the Czech/Slovak Museum, a handful of thrift shops, and a couple of non-Czech eateries. But the bakery is wonderful – and makes a wide assortment of Kolache. I tried cherry and blueberry on my last visit. They were absolutely exquisite. I don’t have much reason to return to the village, except for the bakery. But I will definitely return for more kolache the next time I’m in Cedar Rapids.
Lori mangiameli says
I am Czech and have my great grandmas recipe. Favorite flavor is poppy seed. I waitress in a Czech restaurant for 41 years now and get to smell these everyday.
Mary L. Grabski says
My Grandma (Bohemian) made Kolaches, but she made three cornered ones that get folded up like a diaper. I remember the Poppy Seed Filling the most, and I think she had a little poppy seed grinder/ coffee? grinder for making that. There are no proportions given in the recipe here. Is it just trial and error, to taste?
I also do some German Apple Kuchen Recipe from my German side, but my Grandmas both died before I knew enough to get their authentic recipes, so I just use a sweet dough, and figure out the rest from memory and sense.
Thanks for this column. It is well worth a donation to keep it online.
Tori Avey says
Hi Mary, so glad you enjoyed this article. The proportions/amounts of the recipe are listed in the ingredients at the top of the preparation technique. Hope that helps!
Martha says
Our favorite filling is pineapple. Cook one can of crushed pineapple with 2 heaping tablespoons cornstarch and 2 or more tablespoons sugar. Cook until thickened. My in-laws
are Chez from Caldwell, Kansas. My mother-in-law made wonderful kola he.
Kathy says
I forgot to ask how many does this yield?
Tori Avey says
About 24 small cakes or two 12-inch round cakes. Enjoy!