Chak-Chak — Central Asian honey-soaked fried-dough mounds
Chak-chak is a Central Asian dessert — Tatar, Bashkir and Uzbek versions all exist — of small fried strips of egg-rich dough, coated in hot honey syrup and pressed into a pyramid or dome. The texture is crisp-sticky; the flavour is dominated by warm honey.
i. Origin & history
Chak-chak is the canonical celebration sweet across the Tatar and Bashkir lands of Russia, and in the cities of Central Asia. Wedding chak-chak can be over a metre tall.
ii. Ingredients
Makes 12 servings · scroll the side panel to adjust
- 400 g plain flour
- 4 eggs
- 2 tbsp sugar
- 2 tbsp milk
- Pinch salt
- 1 litre neutral oil for frying
- 400 g honey
- 100 g caster sugar
- 2 tbsp water
iii. Method
- Beat eggs with sugar, milk and salt. Add flour gradually; knead to a soft dough. Rest 30 min.
- Roll dough thin (3 mm). Cut into 1 × 4 cm strips.
- Heat oil to 170 °C. Fry strips in batches until pale gold. Drain on paper.
- Combine honey, sugar and water in a wide pan. Cook to 120 °C / 250 °F — soft-ball stage.
- Off heat, stir in the fried strips until each is coated. Press into a mound (or cone) on a serving plate with wet hands. Cool to set.
iv. Tips & common mistakes
- Use the freshest ingredients you can. The recipe relies on them.
- Read the method through first. Several steps must be ready in advance.
- Season patiently. Sweetness and salt are tuned at the end, not the start.
v. Variations
Tatar chak-chak is the canonical version. Uzbek chak-chak sometimes adds almonds or sesame. Modern chak-chak is sometimes flavoured with rose or saffron honey.
vi. Common questions
What is chak-chak?
Chak-Chak is central asian honey-soaked fried-dough mounds, from persian cuisine. The texture is crisp-sticky; the flavour is dominated by warm honey
Where is chak-chak from?
Chak-Chak is from the persian dessert tradition; the recipe and history are detailed above.
How long does chak-chak keep?
See the storage note in the Quick facts panel: 1 week airtight.