Our Top 5 Easter Recipes: Buns, Cakes, and Savory Dishes

April 15, 2025

Easter recipes: time to bake, eat, and enjoy!

Easter is one of those holidays that combines all the best things in life: family, food, and festive traditions. With the arrival of spring and the weather turning a little bit warmer, it always feels like a great time to celebrate, especially if you’re lucky to get a bit of sunshine over the holiday weekend. In Scandinavia, like in many countries, Easter is a time of year for cooking, baking, and, most importantly, eating. So, in today’s post, we wanted to share our lineup of favorite Easter recipes – some sweet, some savory, and all very delicious. Here’s our countdown of the top 5 Easter essentials!

5. Easter cake: Påskekage

Let’s start with dessert, because why not? Påskekage, or our Easter cake, is a bright and cheerful centerpiece that captures the essence of spring. There’s truly no better time for a bright and lemony cake like this one. We love a simple powdered sugar icing and some lemon zest on ours for a clean look, but you can decorate with marzipan or chocolate eggs, or even edible flowers. It’s just as tasty as it is beautiful, with a light and moist sponge and a sharp lemon flavor. Plus, it’s the perfect way to put any decorative bundt cake pans you have to good use!

A piece of cake cut from a lemon bundt cake.
Påskekage (Easter Cake)
This amazing lemon bundt cake is the perfect centerpiece for your Easter or spring celebrations! This recipe was adapted from the King Arthur Baking Classic Vanilla Bundt Cake recipe.
Check out this recipe

4. Easter lunch: Tarteletter

A staple of Danish Easter and Christmas lunches, tarteletter are crispy, flaky pastry shells filled with creamy chicken and asparagus sauce. Served warm, they’re comforting but also very flavorful and filling. Plus, they can be easily prepared ahead of time, making them ideal for a holiday gathering like Easter. And since the pastry shells used for tarteletter can be hard to come by outside of Denmark, our recipe includes how you can make them yourself at home. One bite and you’ll understand why they’re a must at any big Danish lunch!

Mini tarts filled with creamy chicken and asparagus.
Tarteletter (Tartlets w/ Chicken and Asparagus)
These crispy and buttery tartlet shells are filled with a delicious and creamy chicken and asparagus sauce. They are amazing served for dinner, and any leftover sauce can be transformed into a delicious soup or pasta sauce!
Check out this recipe

3. Easter brunch: Hot cross buns

While hot cross buns aren’t originally Nordic, our recipe puts a Scandinavian spin on the classic British Easter bun. With flavors ranging from classic spiced raisin to blueberry and lemon to a cheesy savory version, the UK has truly mastered selling these buns at Eastertime. But add our Nordic one to the mix and it might just become your favorite of them all! Filled with candied orange peel and orange zest, a dash of cardamom, and plenty of white chocolate, they’re just a delight. And of course, they’re best enjoyed fresh from the oven with a generous smear of butter!

Hot cross buns in a pan.
Hot Cross Buns with Orange, Cardamom, and White Chocolate
These hot cross buns are soft, sweet, and so delicious, filled with rich white chocolate and the beautiful flavors of cardamom and orange.
Check out this recipe

2. Easter bread: Påskereder

Translated as “Easter nests,” påskereder are not only an adorable festive bun to make, but the taste is unmatched. These individual sweet buns are braided into small nests and topped with chocolate eggs, whether you’d prefer a single Cadbury creme egg or multiple small and colorful Cadbury mini eggs. We love the idea of laying out a few of these on a serving platter for a beautiful centerpiece at an Easter brunch, or having them for breakfast. They’re also delicious toasted or heated up in the microwave in the days following (if there are any leftover).

A braided bun with mini eggs resting in the center.
Påskereder (Braided Bun Easter Nests)
These Easter nests look adorable and are the perfect way to present Easter chocolates to friends or family! Plus, they are soft, fluffy, and so delicious topped with butter or whatever you like!
Check out this recipe

1. Easter lunch: Smørrebrød

Coming in at number one: Smørrebrød, the iconic open-faced sandwich that’s the quintessential Danish holiday food. Easter lunch is the perfect occasion to go all-out with your toppings – pickled herring, liver pate, boiled eggs, shrimp with mayo, roast beef, crispy onions, and so on. Serve them on hearty Danish rye bread and if you’d like to, style each piece like a miniature work of art. Wash them down with plenty of beer and snap (akvavit), and you’ve completed a classic Danish Easter lunch experience!

Danish open faced sandwiches on a platter.
Smørrebrød (Danish Open-faced Sandwiches)
The Danish open-faced sandwich consists of a base of rugbrød (rye bread), a main component (usually meat or fish), and garnishes to create the perfect balanced bite! Our recipe includes a list of ingredients to create 9 different versions of smørrebrød.
Check out this recipe

Happy Easter!

Hopefully, the Easter recipes shared in today’s post can give you some inspiration for your own celebrations, or at least give you some insight into what Scandinavians, and particularly Danes, eat at Eastertime. To read more about the topic, check out our blog post sharing Scandinavian Easter food traditions here. We’d love to hear from you in the comments – are there any Easter recipes you’re looking for? What are your favorite things to bake at this time of year? Let us know and maybe we can come up with a recipe or two for you! Thanks for reading 😊

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