Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

On Maundy Thursday in the home of architect Tanya Simeonova

Author:
7
Photo: Private archive

Maundy Thursday is one of the two designated days in the Holy Week before ‎the Resurrection of Christ on which every Christian family can paint the festive ‎Easter eggs for the holiday. Traditionally, the first egg is always red, as a kind of ‎personification of the Resurrection, eternal life and the salvation of the soul ‎through Christ who defeats death and leaves the grave. According to another ‎interpretation, the red colour is a symbol of Christ's blood, shed for the ‎atonement of human sins. The egg itself signifies the new beginning and the ‎birth of life. The breaking of its shell is perceived as liberation from the ‎shackles of mortality.‎


Along with the traditional Orthodox dyed Easter eggs, some more skilled ‎housewives decorate the eggs with different techniques - for the festive ‎decoration of the home or as a gift to relatives and friends. This is also the case ‎with the architects Tania Simeonova and Hristo Lazarov, where egg painting is ‎considered a family tradition, but can be more properly called a craft:‎

"A long time ago, I started making bunny eggs for my children, as well as for ‎the children of relatives and friends. After that, they grew up and I continued to ‎make them for friends and people with whom we gather on Easter”, Tanya ‎Simeonova tells Radio Bulgaria. “So year after year, even if I didn't have much ‎time due to other commitments, I always managed to make at least 10-15 ‎different eggs. They are not painted, they are previously emptied of the yolks ‎and whites and are waiting for a convenient moment for me when I start ‎decorating them. I love earth colours, so I always use the darker colored eggs. I ‎always apply various red or blue elements on them, as I love these colors very ‎much."‎



For their decoration, Tanya uses ropes, beads, as well as various sticks or ‎skewers, with which she shapes them into a bouquet. ‎

In addition to the unique decoration, in the days around Easter, their home is ‎filled with a specific fragrance of sweets, which does not leave indifferent even ‎those who avoid eating sweets or pasta. Tanya got the recipe for them from her ‎mother-in-law and is adamant that one day she will pass it on to her daughter-‎in-law. Here are its secret ingredients, without which the taste would certainly ‎be different:‎

‎“The dough recipe is for five or six fairly small cake pans and includes 10 eggs, ‎‎4 tea cups of flour along with baking powder, 3 tea cups of sugar, 2 tea cups of ‎oil, and 1 cup of yogurt. 500 grams of walnuts, 250 grams of raisins, 250 ‎grams of dried fruits, 2 teaspoons of cinnamon, vanilla powder and rum ‎essence are added to the dough. Mix the batter with a spoon, not your hands, ‎then divide into 5 or 6 small cake pans. Bake for 30 minutes at 220 degrees." ‎

‎Although they love to travel and keep beautiful memories from various ‎European and world destinations, the Lazarov family always welcomes Easter ‎in Bulgaria. They attend the holy service in the patriarchal cathedral of St. ‎Alexander Nevsky or in the Saint Parascheva Church in one of the villages ‎near Sofia, where they live in an old house typical of the area, restored ‎according to their architectural design. 


It is one of many created by the family ‎during their more than 40 years of professional experience. Although they ‎create different buildings, the priority for the family of architects remains the ‎design of suburban houses which could turn into a dream home of every ‎Bulgarian.‎


Photos: Private archive


Translated and published by Rositsa Petkova


Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

The lack of political direction and priorities empowers the administration

“Civil servant is not a dirty word” – with these words, civil servants organized a protest in front of the Council of Ministers building at the beginning of April. The reason was the fact that salaries in public administration had dramatically fallen..

updated on 6/12/24 12:15 PM
Facebook /Faculty of Law of Sofia University

The language of European law is the basis of the oldest specialized master's program in Bulgaria

In the midst of this year's student candidate campaign, the question what the most desired major at Sofia University "St. Kliment Ohridski” would be, sounds like a rhetorical one. In the past four years, the undisputed number one..

published on 6/11/24 1:08 PM

Bulgaria has voted! Where are we heading to now?

Election fatigue, extremely low voter turnout (just over 30%), more young people at the polls and a fragile, barely perceptible hope for stability and political normality. This is how we can describe the past election Sunday for..

published on 6/10/24 4:11 PM