Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) - Meatloaf and Melodrama (2024)

This Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) is a traditional Eastern European egg cheese ball served on Easter Sunday for breakfast or the main meal. My family has been making cirek, or hrudka every Easter for years!

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Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) - Meatloaf and Melodrama (1)

Slovak Easter cheese is a very simple recipe. The basic recipe for egg cheese is just a blend of eggs and milk, although you can make it sweet or savory by adding different ingredients.

Easter cheese goes by various names. My Polish Slovak family calls this egg cheese cirak, pronounced siddik. Our Ukrainian family calls this Ukrainian egg cheese hrudka, pronounced hrootka. The younger kids usally call it brains!

Depending on where your family comes from, you might call this Eastern European Easter cheese sirecz, cirek or cirok.

My mom and grandma would make this traditional Slovak Easter recipe on Holy Saturday and add it to the Easter basket, along with Paska bread, kolbassa (kielbasa), Easter ham, beet horseradish, butter lamb, decorated eggs (Pysanky) and other traditional Ukrainian Easter food.

After being blessed at church, the food was saved to enjoy for Easter breakfast or dinner.

These days, we like to serve cirak along with Nut roll, and more American favorites like Easter eggs, lemon blueberry bagel breakfast casserole, Strawberry Jello Salad, carrot cake donuts or cinnamon rolls or lamb cake ( Easter cake )!

Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) - Meatloaf and Melodrama (2)

Ingredients

You only need a few basic ingredients for this egg cheese recipe. You can find them in your grocery store if you don't have them at home:

  • Eggs
  • Milk -- either whole milk or 2 percent milk works best
  • Vanilla -- enhances the flavor
  • Salt and pepper -- just a pinch for flavor

You will also need a Dutch oven or heavy bottomed pot or double boiler. This prevents the mixture from scorching during the cooking process.

You will need a colander to drain the cheese and cheesecloth to form it into a ball.

How to Make Slovak Easter Cheese

First, whisk the eggs together in a large bowl. You can use a wire whisk or electric mixer for this part.

Make sure the eggs are well blended. This keeps the color nice and uniform.

Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) - Meatloaf and Melodrama (3)

Next, pour milk into the pot and heat the milk on the stove until just hot over low to medium heat. Then, pour the eggs into the milk, and stir in the vanilla, salt and pepper.

Reduce the heat to low. You will have to gently stir the mixture continuously.

Your arm will get a good workout! If possible, enlist the help of your kids, friends or other family members.

Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) - Meatloaf and Melodrama (4)

Cook Time

Keep stirring the egg mixture until it begins to thicken and curds start to form. Be sure to stir around the sides and the bottom of the pan.

This process usually takes about 25 minutes to 30 minutes cooking time.

Finally, the mixture will resemble cottage cheese as the curds separate from the whey.

Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) - Meatloaf and Melodrama (5)

Turn the heat off, and place a mixing bowl into your sink. Place a colander in the mixing bowl, and cover the colander with cheesecloth.

Carefully, spoon or pour the curds and whey on top of the cheese cloth. It will be hot, so wear oven mitts to protect your hands!

Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) - Meatloaf and Melodrama (6)

Now, bring the ends of the cheesecloth up and twist to form a tight ball. Squeeze as much excess liquid out as you can. Then, use clean twist ties, kitchen twine or clean elastic band to tie the cheesecloth.

You can hang the ball from the faucet over the sink. Or, you can attach the cheesecloth to a wooden spoon and hang it over a deep pot or bowl.

My family always hung the cheese ball from a kitchen cabinet, so that's what I do.

Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) - Meatloaf and Melodrama (7)

You only need to drain the cheese until it stops dripping, which is usually about 30 minutes to 1 hour.

Some people drain it overnight, but I like to get the cheese ball into the fridge as soon as possible.

You can discard the whey. Or, use the leftover whey to make paska or nut rolls like my baba did.

How to Store

Wrap the egg cheese tightly in plastic wrap, and place it in the refrigerator. After it's been cut, keep the cheese covered with plastic wrap.

Easter cheese keeps for 3 to 4 days refrigerated.

Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) - Meatloaf and Melodrama (8)

Variations

There are a few good ways to vary this Slovak egg cheese.

Vanilla extract isn't always added to this traditional recipe, but I think it rounds out the flavors of the cirak and keeps it from tasting just like plain eggs. But, you can leave out the vanilla if you want.

Instead of ground pepper, use 1 or 2 freshly cracked black peppercorns.

If you want a sweeter Easter cheese, add some sugar. Add between 1 tablespoon to a quarter cup of sugar, depending on exactly how sweet you want the cheese to be.

Top the cirak off with some fresh cloves ( for decoration ) or lemon zest.

Recipe

Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) - Meatloaf and Melodrama (9)

Slovak Easter Cheese (cirak)

Published by Dee

This Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) is a traditional Eastern European egg cheese ball served on Easter Sunday for breakfast or the main meal. My family has been making cirek, or Ukrainian hrudka, every Easter for years.

5 from 7 votes

Print Recipe

Prep Time 10 minutes mins

Cook Time 26 minutes mins

Resting time 12 hours hrs

Total Time 12 hours hrs 36 minutes mins

Course Breakfast, Side Dish

Cuisine European American, Slovak, Ukrainian

Servings 12

Calories 112 kcal

Ingredients

  • 12 large eggs
  • 1 quart milk whole or 2 percent
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • ½ teaspoon ground black pepper

Instructions

  • Crack eggs into a large mixing bowl, and beat with wire whisk until well blended

  • Pour milk into Dutch oven, and heat over medium heat until just hot

  • Reduce heat to low, and add eggs. Stir in vanilla, salt and pepper

  • Cook over low heat, stirring continuously until curds start to form and separate from the whey, about 20 to 30 minutes. Mixture will resemble cottage cheese with watery liquid

  • Turn heat off. Spoon or pour curds and whey into a colander lined with cheesecloth (place a mixing bowl in the sink, place colander in mixing bowl and cheesecloth over colander)

  • Bring ends of cheesecloth up, and squeeze as much liquid as you can out of cheeseball. Tie cheesecloth tightly with twist tie or elastic band.

  • Hang cheese over bowl. Allow cheese to drain until it stops dripping, about 30 minutes to 1 hour

  • Wrap tightly with plastic wrap or clean cloth to preserve the shape, and store in refrigerator overnight until ready to eat

Video

Notes

Use caution while draining since mixture is hot. Use hot mitts or oven mitts to protect hands.

See blog post for ways to drain Easter cheese. Nutrition info is approximate.

Store in airtight container or tightly wrapped in refrigerator.

Eat within 3 to 4 days.

Nutrition information is estimated. Please do your own calculation to fit special diets.

Nutrition

Calories: 112kcalCarbohydrates: 4gProtein: 9gFat: 6gSaturated Fat: 3gPolyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 2gTrans Fat: 1gCholesterol: 192mgSodium: 302mgPotassium: 181mgFiber: 1gSugar: 4gVitamin A: 351IUVitamin C: 1mgCalcium: 123mgIron: 1mg

Tried this recipe? Please comment and rate it! Show me your dish on Instagram!Mention @meatloafandmelodrama or tag #meatloafandmelodrama!

One good thing about Easter time in my house is that I get to share my Eastern European heritage with my kids, and this tasty cirak is a fun part of our Slovak Easter menu!

For more delicious Easter traditions and homemade recipes people of Eastern European descent might recognize, be sure to subscribe to the newsletter and follow me on social media!

If you grew up with cirak or hrudka and like this as much as my family does, please leave a comment or star rating!

Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) - Meatloaf and Melodrama (10)

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Slovak Easter Cheese Recipe (Cirak) - Meatloaf and Melodrama (2024)

FAQs

What is a cirak? ›

Cirak (Slovak Easter Cheese)

This recipe is for traditional Slovak Easter cheese that is served on Easter Sunday. It is traditionally served with baked ham and beet horseradish. It's also great in sandwiches. It is very mild in flavor and not like other cheeses.

What is cirek? ›

Hrudka (you may know it as cirek/cirok, sirets, sirok, sireczs depending on where you're from) is a simple custard cheese that's essential for many Eastern European Easter tables.

What do Slovaks eat for Easter? ›

Easter Sunday is an important day when families gather and spend time together. Mostly ham, sausage, cheese, bread, eggs and other traditional dishes are served.

How is Easter celebrated in Slovakia? ›

Instead of ringing the bells, young boys carry wooden noise makers around the village called "rapkáče" designed to banish evil spirits. Similarly, Christians fast on Good Friday and abstain from eating meat. But once the fast is over, get ready to indulge in the festive Easter menu!

What is Easter cheese made of? ›

Directions. Beat eggs in a large bowl with an electric mixer until well mixed. Transfer eggs to a double boiler; stir in milk, sugar, vanilla and nutmeg. Cook over medium heat for 30 minutes, constantly stirring with a metal slotted spoon to prevent scorching.

What is the Slovak word for egg? ›

egg [attr.] Nouns. gastr. orn. vajíčko {n}

What is Polish Easter breakfast called? ›

Święconka. It is a Polish name for a basket of food prepared on Easter Saturday and taken to church to be sprinkled with holly water and blessed. Święconka is always eaten for Easter Sunday festive breakfast.

What cheese contains eggs? ›

Grana Padano: the use of silage feed can favour the development of microorganisms that worsen the characteristics of the product and it is for this reason that Grana Padano contains lysozyme, which is an egg protein that inhibits the development of harmful microorganisms.

Can you get cheese Easter eggs? ›

Cheese lovers, say goodbye to chocolate because Butlers Farmhouse has you covered. Real cheese fiends who love something a little bit strong, but not overpoweringly so, should opt for the Blacksticks Blue cheese Easter egg letterbox. It's tasty, moreish and is great with the crackers and sweet fig relish.

What is the Easter whip in Slovakia? ›

The Easter Whip – Czech Republic and Slovakia

It's usually the boys who weave one of these whips and then go around on Easter Monday giving the girls a cheeky lash of the willow to keep them 'healthy'. The girls, of course, are then supposed to invite the boys in for a specially decorated Easter egg and some food.

What food is Slovakia known for? ›

Just talking about traditional Slovak food is enough to make a person hungry. There is bryndzove halushky which is potato dumplings with roasted bacon and sheep cheese. Potato lovers will adore zemiakové placky which are potato pancakes fried in oil with garlic. Lokse is also a potato pancake.

What is the Easter egg in Slovakia? ›

Most families color eggs in dyes or onion skins for the deep brown color and polish the eggs with butter and set them on the Easter table to reward the revelers, along with a bottle of plum brandy, desserts, lamb pound cake, and open-faced sandwiches.

What is the traditional meal at Easter? ›

Lamb is eaten in many countries, mirroring the Jewish Passover meal. Eating lamb at Easter has a religious meaning. The Paschal Lamb of the New Testament is in fact, for Christianity, the son of God Jesus Christ. The Paschal Lamb, in particular, represents the sacrifice of Jesus Christ for the sins of humanity.

What do Czechs eat on Easter? ›

The most traditional Easter food in the Czech Republic is lamb. Still, it's not yet Easter without Mazanec, the Easter bread, Beránek, the lamb cake, And Nádivka, the Easter stuffings.

What is a traditional Slovak Christmas meal? ›

The Christmas dinner

A tasty cabbage soup and fried carp with traditional potato salad are served as the main course. In the south of Slovakia, a fish soup (halászle) is served, in Liptov area the traditional Christmas bread and in Spiš area it is mushroom “mačanka” or pirohy.

What do Austrians eat on Easter? ›

Easter in Austria is a culinary celebration

While in Vorarlberg people prefer to eat smoked meat (smoked meat) with horseradish and sauerkraut for the “Easter snack”, in Tyrol egg salad and sweet Easter lamb are served. This is a sponge dough cake in lamb form.

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