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HealthRecipesUkrainian

Pampushky (garlic rolls)

UkrainianUkraineside

Pampushky are the ultimate soul-warming companion to a steaming bowl of Ukrainian borscht, and making them from scratch is a revelation compared to the sad, processed shop-bought garlic bread you find in the freezer aisle. Those commercial versions usually cost a few dollars for a box of dry, cardboard-like rolls injected with cheap palm oil, excessive sodium, and artificial garlic flavoring that leaves a harsh, lingering aftertaste. When you make pampushky at home, you achieve a pillowy, cloud-like crumb and a fragrant, fresh garlic glaze that elevates the entire meal. Originating in Ukraine, these small, round yeast rolls were traditionally made with a simple dough enriched with just a touch of oil, then baked until golden and immediately drenched in a vibrant mixture of crushed garlic, oil, and fresh dill. The magic lies in the texture; they should be soft enough to tear apart with your fingers, not slice with a knife. The most common pitfall I see is overworking the dough or using water that is too hot, which kills the yeast and results in dense, heavy pucks rather than light, airy buns. Another frequent mistake is adding the garlic glaze before baking, which simply burns the garlic and turns it bitter. Instead, the garlic must be mellowed in oil and brushed on the moment the rolls emerge from the oven, allowing the residual heat to release their sweet, pungent oils without scorching them. It takes a little time to let the dough rise, but the joy of pulling apart a perfectly soft, garlic-kissed pampushky is worth every minute.

Nutrition

Per servingCaloriesProteinCarbsFatSat fatFibreSugarSodium
beginner615kcal14g98g18g2g4g11g950mg
intermediate530kcal14g75g18g2g3g4g800mg
expert610kcal13g72g29g3g3g3g750mg

Per serving · Ava-estimated — a guide, not a clinical figure.

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