Holiday Planning & Ideas Easter Get Inspired by Martha's Russian-Themed Easter Menu (and Beautiful Tablescape!) By Martha Stewart Editors Martha Stewart Editors Facebook Instagram Twitter Website An article attributed to "Martha Stewart Editors" indicates when several writers and editors have contributed to an article over the years. These collaborations allow us to provide you with the most accurate, up-to-date, and comprehensive information available.The Martha Stewart team aims to teach and inspire readers daily with tested-until-perfected recipes, creative DIY projects, and elevated home and entertaining ideas. They are experts in their fields who research, create, and test the best ways to help readers design the life they want. The joy is in the doing. Editorial Guidelines Published on February 22, 2016 Share Tweet Pin Email Trending Videos Photo: LIZ BANFIELD Martha makes everything from Russian pierogi to the traditional Easter dessert known as pashka, plus gives us a peek at her festive decor. 01 of 14 LIZ BANFIELD In Russia, "the coming of spring was ever an occasion of great joy," we wrote then—a sentiment echoed beautifully in this updated celebration. Every spring, Martha's Easter lunch is sure to include family and friends, a buffet of vibrant seasonal dishes, a houseful of whimsical and elegant decorations, and hundreds of eggs hidden outdoors for children to find. Martha's velveteen rabbit, beside a wire-and-beaded basket of hyacinths and clematis, "makes his appearance every Easter," she says. 02 of 14 Martha's Easter Buffet LIZ BANFIELD Salmon Coulibiacs with Sour-Cream & Dill Sauce Roasted Kielbasa Asparagus with Mustardy Vinaigrette Fava Beans with Snap Peas & Mint Baby Carrots with Spring Onions Potato-and-Pea Pierogi Paskha Individual Lemon-Coconut Cakes The pastry-wrapped parcels of salmon are served on—appropriately enough—an elongated fish platter. 03 of 14 Timeless Traditions John Kernick Individual portions of salmon coulibiac—a take on a classic Russian dish of puff pastry enveloping poached salmon, mushrooms, and rice—are easier to serve than a single large coulibiac. View Recipe 04 of 14 Lunch Is Served John Kernick A Wedgwood plate holds the sides and several slices of crisp-skinned roasted kielbasa. Since New York City's Kurowycky's, which had been Martha's favorite purveyor of the Polish sausage, closed in 2007, Martha had been searching for another source for kielbasa that is "chunky, meaty, slightly garlicky, with natural casing and not too much fat." Finally, she has found not one but two: Sikorski Meat Market, in Brooklyn's Greenpoint neighborhood (sikorskimeats.com); and Chester's Smokehouse, in Albany, New York (chesterssmokehouse.com). View Recipe 05 of 14 Stellar Sides John Kernick A trio of side dishes: Fava beans mingle with snap peas and mint. Baby carrots are glazed in a white-wine-and-butter mixture. Potato pierogi get a lighter, brighter flavor with the addition of green peas in the filling; the dough recipe is Martha's mother's. Get the Baby Carrots with Spring Onions Recipe Get the Potato-and-Pea Pierogi Recipe View Recipe 06 of 14 Bunny Food John Kernick Thick asparagus spears arranged in an egg shape are topped with paper-thin cutout carrot bunnies. (You can find similar cutters at nycake.com.) View Recipe 07 of 14 Sweet Ending John Kernick For dessert, the traditional Russian paskha—a rich molded dish that's similar to a no-bake cheesecake—is embellished with dried-pineapple cutouts. (Martha sometimes uses jelly beans instead.) Little lemon-coconut cakes, made in muffin tins and topped with whipped cream, are served as a lighter alternative to the paskha. Get the Individual Lemon-Coconut Cakes Recipe View Recipe 08 of 14 Fanciful Finery LIZ BANFIELD With its crisp white linens, embossed china, and sparkling silver and glass, the table is meant to evoke the feeling of "visiting your Russian auntie in her dacha outside Saint Petersburg," says Martha. Goblets and vases are topped with eggs (the large ones are ostrich eggs). 09 of 14 LIZ BANFIELD Pots of baby's tears make sweet little decorations. 10 of 14 LIZ BANFIELD A young guest is pleased with his chocolate bunny. 11 of 14 LIZ BANFIELD A display of blooms includes poppies, ranunculus, viburnum, and clematis. 12 of 14 LIZ BANFIELD An antique glass bowl holds Russian and Czechoslovakian hand-painted Easter eggs. 13 of 14 LIZ BANFIELD Martha's collection of hundreds of blownout eggs is nestled in shredded paper in a "sewer-pipe art" vessel; these pottery pieces were made about a century ago by pipe-factory workers out of leftover clay. 14 of 14 LIZ BANFIELD Successful egg hunters. Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit