Category
page 2Sweet breads
Chelsea bun
English type of sweet bun
Cocktail bun
Sweet bun with coconut

roscón de reyes
Spanish and Southern France pastry, traditionally eaten to celebrate Epiphany, with an oval shape and decorated with figs, quinces, cherries, or dried and candied fruits

Zeeuwse bolus
sweet pastry

Fartura
thumb|Traditional farturas
thumb
A fartura is a fried dough made of flour, yeast, baking soda, salt, sugar, cinnamon, and water, that is fried in oil, in the form of a roll and traditionally sold at fairs in Portugal. It is preferable to consume them when they are hot so that the crunchy surface does not harden.

skolebrød
sweet roll
Suikerbrood
Suikerbrood (; ; ; ) is a yeast-based bread. It is a Frisian luxury version of white bread, with large lumps of sugar mixed in with the dough. It contains a significant amount of sugar, traditionally added as nib sugar, though sometimes sugar cubes are used. While eaten throughout the Netherlands and Belgium, it is especially associated with Friesland. Suikerbrood is usually flavored with cinnamon and sometimes with ginger. Traditionally, a suikerbrood is given as a present to the parents after a baby's birth.
Lotus seed bun
Chinese sweet bun
Bath bun
sweet bun with segar sprinkles
Mantecadas de Astorga
thumb|Commercial mantecadas, one showing the open cajilla
pizza di Pasqua
easter cake
soboro-ppang
Soboro-ppang (), or gombo-ppang (; standard language), often translated as '''soboro bread, soboro pastry, or soboro bun, and also known as Korean streusel bread', is a sweet bun with a streusel-like upper crust popular in Korea. The bun is made of flour, sugar, eggs, and dough and baked with a crisp, bumpy surface on top. The word "soboro" is a Japanese word which refers to the streusel topping of the bun, which is often made with peanut butter as a key ingredient. Soboro'' refers to fried and minced meat or fish in Japanese, which resembles the streusel on top of the bread.
Mosbolletjies
Mosbolletjies is a traditional Afrikaner or Cape Dutch sweet-bun or bread traditionally made in the wine producing areas of the Western Cape province of South Africa. The name is Afrikaans in origin and is a combination of mos (Afrikaans for partially fermented grape juice) and bolletjies (Afrikaans for "balls" or "buns"). Mosbolletjies can be dried to make rusks. The buns are typically served with tea or coffee.

currant bun
European sweet bun
Bremer Klaben
type of dried fruit filled bread from Bremen, Germany
Pan de Pascua
Chilean cake associated with Christmas
corone
Japanese horn-shaped sweet bread
Sally Lunn bun
sort of hot roll, first popular in Bath
Lazarakia
Lazarákia (, "Little Lazaruses") are small, sweet spice breads made in Greece and Cyprus by Orthodox Christians on Lazarus Saturday, the Saturday that begins Holy Week. They are eaten to celebrate the miracle of Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead. They are shaped like a man wrapped in a shroud, supposedly Saint Lazarus of Bethany, with cloves for eyes. They contain several sweet spices and are a fasting Lenten food, meaning that they do not contain any dairy products or eggs. For that reason, unlike the tsourekia, they are brushed with olive oil instead of egg or butter for a gloss finish.
Heißwecke
thumb|Heißwecke from Czechia ("mazanec")
cream roll
sweet bun with cream filling
pastel camiguinense
Philippine bread with a custard filling
maritozzo
200px|thumb|right|A maritozzo from Reggio Emilia
Maritozzo (plural: maritozzi) is a traditional Italian cream bun consisting of bread filled with a generous amount of whipped cream. Originally, "maritozzo" referred only to the bread part, and the version filled with whipped cream was called maritozzo con la panna, meaning "maritozzo with whipped cream". It is typical of Roman, Marche, and Abruzzo cuisine, while in Puglia and Sicily, the name maritozzo refers instead to a braided sweet bread.
Portuguese sweet bread
Lightly sweetened bread, often eaten on holidays
Amish Friendship Bread
type of bread or cake made from a sourdough starter
goro
Norwegian sweet bread
Pane coi santi
Traditional Italian fruit bread
kkulppang
Kkulppang (), also known as honey bread, is a South Korean dish. It is a sticky, sweet bread filled with sweetened red bean paste. Softer, fluffier ones that are made in Tongyeong, South Gyeongsang Province in South Korea, are called Tongyeong-kkulppang, being a local specialty. In an adjacent city called Jinju, crunchier Jinju-kkulppang is sold as a local specialty. Shortly after the Korean War, many bakeries in Tongyeong were sold. Fishermen and shipbuilding workers who worked on the beach simply ate a meal or snack because they could be kept for a long time despite the warm climate of Tongy
saffron bun
spiced yeast-leavened sweet bun with saffron and currants from Southern England
Persian
sweet roll
Cemita (bread of Puebla, México)
The cemita is a sandwich originally from Puebla, Mexico. Also known as cemita poblana, it derives from the city (and region) of Puebla. The word refers to the sandwich as well as to the roll it is typically served on, a bread roll covered with sesame seeds. Additionally, the ingredients usually are restricted to sliced avocado, meat, Oaxaca cheese, the herb pápalo and chipotle adobado, or jalapeño.
Peach bun
peach-shaped Cantonese buns
malt loaf
type of sweet leavened bread
Pizza dolce di Beridde
Italian yeasted cake
Hong Kong cream bun
Chinese bun
peanut butter bun
food, baked goods
Schnecken
REDIRECT Sweet roll#Germany
Sticky bun
Type of dessert or breakfast sweet roll
veneziana
Veneziana is a sweet from the Lombard cuisine covered with sugar grains or almond icing. It is served in two versions: the bigger one is consumed during Christmas, like panettone; the smaller one is eaten as breakfast, along with cappuccino, like croissants. Veneziana is butter and flour-based and uses sourdough as leavening; the smaller version is usually plain, sometimes filled with custard, while the bigger version contains candied orange.
bisciola
Bisciola () is an Italian sweet leavened bread originating in the Valtellina Valley of Lombardy, Italy. It is typically prepared for Christmas, during which time it is an essential component of Christmas festivities.
Piada dei morti
sweet bread from Rimini, Italy
Bulla cake
Jamaican bread
honey bun
fried yeast pastry
pan de coco
Philippine sweet bread
lardy cake
English form of sweet spiced bread
Kitchener bun
sweet pastry made and sold in South Australia since 1915
Guernsey Gâche
Regional bread of Guernsey
An-doughnut
An-doughnut (Japanese: あんドーナツ, Romaji: an-dōnatsu) is a Japanese doughnut filled with red bean paste. It is a confection created in Japan, along with anpan, Jam pan, cream pan, curry bread, and many others. It is unknown when an-doughnut was created in Japan. However, Mister Donut in Japan added an-doughnuts to its menu in December 1983.
Apple Bread
Taiwanese aromatic bread
Krantz cake
Ashkenazi Jewish cake