Rokhat Kosher Bakery

Bakery · Rego Park

Rokhat Kosher Bakery

Bakery · Rego Park

5

65-43 Austin St, Rego Park, NY 11374

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Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Ron Wechsler/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Ron Wechsler/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by John Tsung/Eater NY
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Zach Baum/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Eric Explores/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by EPIC EXPLORERS
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Zach Baum/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Zach Baum/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Sara Khan, Culinary Backstreets/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Sara Khan, Culinary Backstreets/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Eric Explores/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Ron Wechsler/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Eric Explores/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Zach Baum/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Zach Baum/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Zach Baum/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by Sara Khan, Culinary Backstreets/Used with permission
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null
Rokhat Kosher Bakery by null

Highlights

Rokhat in Queens whips up fresh, flaky Central Asian kosher breads and savory meat pies straight from a traditional tanoor oven.  

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65-43 Austin St, Rego Park, NY 11374 Get directions

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65-43 Austin St, Rego Park, NY 11374 Get directions

+1 718 897 4493
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$1–10

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Jul 31, 2025

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@eater

The Best Jewish Bakeries in NYC - Eater NY

"Tucked in a quiet street in Rego Park, Rokhat is a special bakery that serves the tight-knit Bukharian Jewish community from the Uzbek region. The shop features a variety of Central Asian breads, including lepeshka, a chewy, soft flatbread stamped in a variety of designs and baked in a tandoor oven; and crisp and flaky samsas, flavorful triangular pies filled with savory meat or pumpkin. Others worth trying are the massive, cracker-like dome bread that resembles a baked lavash, and patir, a coiled, layered onion bread that recalls a larger, heartier scallion pancake. Look for products freshest from the oven, as the breads harden over time, and pop into the connected restaurant if it is open. To experience food that speaks so much about this unique community— of which globally there are only a few hundred thousand living members — Rokhat Kosher Bakery is an essential visit." - John Tsung, Eater Staff

https://ny.eater.com/maps/best-babka-rugelach-jewish-bakeries-nyc
View Postcard for Rokhat Kosher Bakery
@atlasobscura

Our Favorite Places of 2019

"In this big, diverse, and sometimes contentious world, there is one thing most cultures can agree on: Meat-stuffed dough is delicious. In India, it’s samosa; in Poland, pierogi; and among the Jewish communities of Bukhara, Uzbekistan, it’s all about samsa. Made of flaky baked dough, filled with lamb and onions, these savory pastries bring a familiar warmth even to those who’ve never had Uzbek food. For those U.S. residents and New York City visitors who can’t venture all the way to Bukhara to sample this delicacy, there’s only one place to go: Rokhat Kosher Bakery in the Rego Park neighborhood of Queens. Located in New York’s biggest and most culturally diverse borough, this bakery is a little slice of Central Asia. It was founded by brothers Roshiel and Rafael Samekhov, who emigrated from Uzbekistan to the United States in 1992. The brothers are part of Uzbekistan’s ancient and oft-persecuted Bukharan Jewish community. At less than 500 residents, the community in Bukhara is dwindling. But Bukharan Jews have built a strong network in Queens, with nearly 50,000 Uzbek Jews calling New York City home. Rokhat Kosher Bakery helps keep the culture’s culinary traditions alive by offering samsas, disc-shaped loaves of lepeshka, and a gathering place for the community. They also offer manti, the Central Asian answer to the soup dumpling. Similar to Turkish manti and Afghan mantu, these soft dumplings—stuffed with meat, onions, and sometimes pumpkin—are a revelation, their slightly chewy exterior yielding a steamy, meaty interior. Bakers at Rokhat use a traditional Central Asian tanoor oven to cook their breads, including a walk-in tanoor the size of an industrial refrigerator. To make round, cracker-like toke, bakers flatten dough in great rolling presses, stamp out thin circles, and cook them on top of spherical molds the shape of upturned bowls. The samsa, meanwhile, are stuffed, then stuck to the sides of a small tanoor, where they cook in rows like eggs nestled in an incubator. Finally, they lovingly knead the dough for Uzbek non—fluffier than the similar South Asian naan—then break off great, puffy lumps, pushing them into thick disks with heavy handheld wooden presses, sprinkling their pale tops with sesame seeds, and stamping them with an ornate pattern. Before the bread cooks on the sides of a massive, moist walk-in tanoor, bakers press their fingers around the loaves’ sticky perimeters, creating elaborate braid-like impressions. Fresh from the oven, they are golden and slightly crisp on the outside, with a soft inner steam—as warm and welcoming as Rokhat Bakery itself." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/our-favorite-places-for-2019
View Postcard for Rokhat Kosher Bakery
@atlasobscura

A Global Tour of Bakeries With Fascinating Histories

"In this big, diverse, and sometimes contentious world, there is one thing most cultures can agree on: Meat-stuffed dough is delicious. In India, it’s samosa; in Poland, pierogi; and among the Jewish communities of Bukhara, Uzbekistan, it’s all about samsa. Made of flaky baked dough, filled with lamb and onions, these savory pastries bring a familiar warmth even to those who’ve never had Uzbek food. For those U.S. residents and New York City visitors who can’t venture all the way to Bukhara to sample this delicacy, there’s only one place to go: Rokhat Kosher Bakery in the Rego Park neighborhood of Queens. Located in New York’s biggest and most culturally diverse borough, this bakery is a little slice of Central Asia. It was founded by brothers Roshiel and Rafael Samekhov, who emigrated from Uzbekistan to the United States in 1992. The brothers are part of Uzbekistan’s ancient and oft-persecuted Bukharan Jewish community. At less than 500 residents, the community in Bukhara is dwindling. But Bukharan Jews have built a strong network in Queens, with nearly 50,000 Uzbek Jews calling New York City home. Rokhat Kosher Bakery helps keep the culture’s culinary traditions alive by offering samsas, disc-shaped loaves of lepeshka, and a gathering place for the community. They also offer manti, the Central Asian answer to the soup dumpling. Similar to Turkish manti and Afghan mantu, these soft dumplings—stuffed with meat, onions, and sometimes pumpkin—are a revelation, their slightly chewy exterior yielding a steamy, meaty interior. Bakers at Rokhat use a traditional Central Asian tanoor oven to cook their breads, including a walk-in tanoor the size of an industrial refrigerator. To make round, cracker-like toke, bakers flatten dough in great rolling presses, stamp out thin circles, and cook them on top of spherical molds the shape of upturned bowls. The samsa, meanwhile, are stuffed, then stuck to the sides of a small tanoor, where they cook in rows like eggs nestled in an incubator. Finally, they lovingly knead the dough for Uzbek non—fluffier than the similar South Asian naan—then break off great, puffy lumps, pushing them into thick disks with heavy handheld wooden presses, sprinkling their pale tops with sesame seeds, and stamping them with an ornate pattern. Before the bread cooks on the sides of a massive, moist walk-in tanoor, bakers press their fingers around the loaves’ sticky perimeters, creating elaborate braid-like impressions. Fresh from the oven, they are golden and slightly crisp on the outside, with a soft inner steam—as warm and welcoming as Rokhat Bakery itself." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/worlds-best-bakeries
View Postcard for Rokhat Kosher Bakery
@atlasobscura

7 Extraordinary Jewish Restaurants Around the World

"In this big, diverse, and sometimes contentious world, there is one thing most cultures can agree on: Meat-stuffed dough is delicious. In India, it’s samosa; in Poland, pierogi; and among the Jewish communities of Bukhara, Uzbekistan, it’s all about samsa. Made of flaky baked dough, filled with lamb and onions, these savory pastries bring a familiar warmth even to those who’ve never had Uzbek food. For those U.S. residents and New York City visitors who can’t venture all the way to Bukhara to sample this delicacy, there’s only one place to go: Rokhat Kosher Bakery in the Rego Park neighborhood of Queens. Located in New York’s biggest and most culturally diverse borough, this bakery is a little slice of Central Asia. It was founded by brothers Roshiel and Rafael Samekhov, who emigrated from Uzbekistan to the United States in 1992. The brothers are part of Uzbekistan’s ancient and oft-persecuted Bukharan Jewish community. At less than 500 residents, the community in Bukhara is dwindling. But Bukharan Jews have built a strong network in Queens, with nearly 50,000 Uzbek Jews calling New York City home. Rokhat Kosher Bakery helps keep the culture’s culinary traditions alive by offering samsas, disc-shaped loaves of lepeshka, and a gathering place for the community. They also offer manti, the Central Asian answer to the soup dumpling. Similar to Turkish manti and Afghan mantu, these soft dumplings—stuffed with meat, onions, and sometimes pumpkin—are a revelation, their slightly chewy exterior yielding a steamy, meaty interior. Bakers at Rokhat use a traditional Central Asian tanoor oven to cook their breads, including a walk-in tanoor the size of an industrial refrigerator. To make round, cracker-like toke, bakers flatten dough in great rolling presses, stamp out thin circles, and cook them on top of spherical molds the shape of upturned bowls. The samsa, meanwhile, are stuffed, then stuck to the sides of a small tanoor, where they cook in rows like eggs nestled in an incubator. Finally, they lovingly knead the dough for Uzbek non—fluffier than the similar South Asian naan—then break off great, puffy lumps, pushing them into thick disks with heavy handheld wooden presses, sprinkling their pale tops with sesame seeds, and stamping them with an ornate pattern. Before the bread cooks on the sides of a massive, moist walk-in tanoor, bakers press their fingers around the loaves’ sticky perimeters, creating elaborate braid-like impressions. Fresh from the oven, they are golden and slightly crisp on the outside, with a soft inner steam—as warm and welcoming as Rokhat Bakery itself." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/best-jewish-restaurants
View Postcard for Rokhat Kosher Bakery
@atlasobscura

"Serving Central Asian breads that range from cracker-crisp to warm and fluffy, this bakery brings Bukhara to Queens."

https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/rokhat-kosher-bakery
A Global Tour of Bakeries With Fascinating Histories
View Postcard for Rokhat Kosher Bakery

Tech 2nr

Google
Looks like a really organized bakery old school vibe. Had a giant hot round bread, delicious crusty and airy with a strong foundation. The meat pie is filling. Fantastic bakers you have here.

Mike Bach

Google
This is not a restaurant! It's a bake house that makes traditional Samsa, Bilyashi, pirashki, leposhki, and all sorts of middle estern breads. It's a great experience when you take your food right of the stove. When you bite samsy in a hot-worm version, you enjoy that crispy layer of crusty dow and juicy meat with an adding sauce that is out of this world, which tastes great.

muqtader beland

Google
I came here to buy some bakery goods. The Apricot Strudel is presented very beautifully and tastes good. Apple turnovers are a great treat. You can even buy the goods here to be used as a gift bcuz that’ll be nice too.

IOSIF ISKHAKOV

Google
I took one samsa to try, it was underbaked, I asked to give me a baked one, he gave me a stale warm one, no napkins, the sauce can't be called a sauce, I couldn't eat it, I didn't swear, my health is more important. I don't recommend it to anyone

Carlos Alvarez

Google
I was drawn in by the smell. The bread, pastries and meat pies are all really good. Staff is nice and are helpful enough to help me decide what to get. Will definitely be coming here regularly.

Alex Glatt

Google
small bakerie in a cull de sack street which is kosher and serves fresh rye bread shaped like a toll house cookie. The bread is moist and is rye bread but of a very light texture. The meat pies were very flavorful and crispy. The service was good. The rye breads they had were either small or very large. Since we are a small family we bought a small bread and three meat pies.

Floressel Bordonado

Google
Great prices Kosher pastry and Russian Bread and Samsa varies fillings great for everyone you don't have to be Russian or Kosher I love the spot you can't drive by without smelling the FANTASTIC MOUTHWATERING AROMA

Roya Loodaricheh

Google
Great whole wheat bread, samosa, pastries. We get bread from here weekly. Much better quality than store bought toasts.
google avatar

Suzanne H.

Yelp
What a great bakery. The meat pies were fantastic, and also the pumpkin hand pies. Very flavorful and filling. I was on a Queens tour (from Albany) and was able to get behind the scenes of the kitchen and how they make the breads. Very cool! It was wonderful to see the process and the oven used for baking the meat pies and bowl like different sized breads. It was off the beaten path, and it is so worth visiting.
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Naomi R.

Yelp
What beautiful breads, and pastries. The smell coming out of the shop is so wonderful. Important to support Bukharian businesses.
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F. L.

Yelp
This review is for the bakery only. The big round bread is just ok. Not really crusty enough, compared to what you can get elsewhere. And a lot of what they sell is from other bakeries. But the samsa are quite good, so maybe go just for those.
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Maram A.

Yelp
Fresh bread with Kosher meat. Fresh bread and rolls. How can you go wrong? Traditionally cooked Uzbekestani style, the bread is cooked in a round brick oven where the stuffed rolls stay on the wall. They also have a squash one and that was my favorite. The owners are very friendly. Mera's Tip: Try the squash roll.
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Scott T.

Yelp
Although not that old, the bread, the people, the prices even, harken back to another time. A real gem of a neighborhood bakery serving the Jewish diaspora that live in the area. I chose a large round loaf of bread expecting to pay upwards of $5-6 for it. "$1.50, please," said the man running the front counter. On the way out struck up a conversation with a local who asked if it was my first visit--probably pretty obvious. He suggested a meat filled, triangular pastry from next door (service by the same bakery and under the same name I believe). It was superb. Look, there's nothing fancy to sightsee here. If you want to see bread as it is in Eastern Europe, though I have little experience in the matter, this is most likely the place everyone is going to send you to. Though I was there only briefly this morning I enjoyed the sights, the smells, the conversation with a local. Well worth the effort to get here.
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John C.

Yelp
Such an incredible place of food and culture - worth a visit if you're out there. The bread is inexpensive, and when freshly made, perfect pairing. Also, the samsa (pies) are worth a try as well, the dough is flaky, the filling strong
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Matt M.

Yelp
Simple, delicious, and filling breads served up hot and fresh here, and for very little money compared to some of the kosher tourist traps that one finds throughout NYC. We don't exactly have a lot of Bukharan Jews in Oklahoma, so this place (along with a great many other Bukharan Jewish bakeries and restaurants in the city) seemed a bit exotic to me at first. Trust me -- this place is a little gem, and no trip to "the city" is now complete without my stopping in for fresh beechak, and also for the delectable lamb plov. The owners are friendly and helpful, but they're not there just to chit-chat. Oh -- and be sure to pick up your order before things start shutting down for Shabbos. (This is a heavily Orthodox part of Rego Park.)
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Joseph T.

Yelp
My dad was adamant about coming here after he saw the bakery on a TV show. It's a bit more than a bakery. It's also a Bukharan takeout and basic ingredients store. We picked up some meat samsi, lamb plov, manti (with a similar filling to the samsa), and tandoor bread. The meat and onion filling was great! For that reason, I'd recommend either the samsa or the manti. Personally, I prefer the crunchiness of the samsi to the softness of the manti. The bread is very dense. All in all, it's a pleasant little food spot tucked away into Rego Park. Honestly, it's a place we would have never found without TV or Internet. I'm glad we had the opportunity to check it out! It's a nice family business which helps preserve another culture here in NY.

Mari S.

Yelp
Love the round breads when they are fresh out of the oven, they will sometimes try to push the ones that have been hanging out so it's a hit or miss for super fresh depending on when they're baking.
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Brendan F.

Yelp
Really a nice old school family style place with DELICIOUS Old World style baked goods. Stop in for a samosa and leave with a smile on your face. RECOMMENDED 100%
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Louis R.

Yelp
Getting better . . . . . . . . . . Recently just visited! Its helpful if you go with someone that speaks Russian . . . . . Otherwise, you should be OK to get by. Don't eat to much of this stuff . . . trust me! I always overdue it! ;-)
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Frida F.

Yelp
This is the place to go for that crispy satisfying Samosa (meet pies). I come here on Friday's usually, not far from home, to get some bread and meat pies before Shabbat. They close early on Fridays and usually run out before two because there are so many Jewish people in the vicinity. I try to come here as often as possible. There's no place to sit down, but it's a convenient place to get these goodies and get out quickly. I'll be coming here again sometime soon. I just wish the owner put on a smile once in a while. He's very grouchy but the food beats that, plus they have a great hashgaha. VHQ to be exact.
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Jack D.

Yelp
A staple in Rego park amongst the Jewish community. Been here for years and has even expanded. They produce some of queens best bread or "leeposhkee" , along with meat pies (Samsa) and my personal favorite , Beechak ( filo dough w/squash). This place gets busy on a Friday b/c of Shabbat ,so try to get in here earlier. On the weekdays, not so busy. And is a good place to pick up some of the things mentioned. Samsa n Beechak pair well with dinner as an appetizer and is also good for when guests come over. The place is family owned store and the owner is always on sight . True OG in the neighborhood. Been making bread probably before you and I were even born. Grab some Beechak yelpers and tingle your taste buds.
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Larry C.

Yelp
Caught a rerun of Bizarre Foods on TV to find this hidden gem not far away. GPS needed to find it, don't blink; you'll miss it. This place including the bakery and meat pie baker next door are a nondescript hole in the Rego Park wall. The variety of breads, soft and firm are quite unique. We asked what each was and bought every one. Then a trip next door for the meat pies, again asking for a description. This time, buying 2 of each by type and shape. Stuffed with lamb or beef and onion, or butternut squash sweet with onion, each wrapped in a flakey dough. The 90 minute drive home was torture due to the amazing smells coming from our purchase. Needless to say, dinner was wonderful and well worth the trip.

Mememe Y.

Yelp
This bakery makes great tandoori bread, samsas (with meat or pumpkin) as well as any other seasonal baked items from the central asian region. Always fresh, reasonably priced, and can be ordered ahead. They even sell homemade frozen dough you can buy to make your own creations!

Jane P.

Yelp
This place is a gem. It's a little bit of a journey to get there if you're not already in Queens, but it's so worth the trip. The breads are all delicious and hold up quite well wen traveling. I live in CA, but whenever I'm in NYC, or have a friend traveling there, I make sure to get some breads from Rokhat.
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Victoria P.

Yelp
Not recommended at all. I saw great reviews but they are not consistent with what you get. On the left there is a restaurant, in the middle a to go place and on the right the bakery. The bakery didn't have many options and they sold me rugelach that was not fresh for at least a week. I also ordered rice pilaf that they charged $10 for a small portion. There is better and cheaper in rego park/forest hills.
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David M.

Yelp
Best place for fresh bread and crispy samsas. You will enjoy this place a lot. They have also been featured on a number of Resturant shows.
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Diana P.

Yelp
This place was featured on Bizarre Foods on the Travel Channel which is what brought me to check this place out. The place itself isn't anything fancy but boy do they know how to bake up some great eats! Check out the samsas and meat pies and the melt-in-your-mouth breads at this hidden gem! I'm ecstatic I live within walking distance away and look forward to returning soon!
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Thu H.

Yelp
I found this place through Jimmy's (?) Bizarre Foods video, and was able to hunt this bad boy down. Pros: - their piroshky was money! (we ordered like 8 of them) Cons: - bread was kind of hard and chewy Overall: 3.5 stars. We were a bit confused when we first walked it because the place was a lot smaller than it looked in the video. They had a few danishes/cookies on the shelves that didn't appeal to us too much so we didn't know if we were in the right spot. The guy then came out and showed us two bread roll that was just made and hot We asked if he had any piroshky and he said they did but a couple doors down. Not sure if he owned both or what but when we got to the other place - we saw the piroshky. They were laid out and covered with a light towel. It looked kinda sketched at first because the place looked so empty but we ordered 6 piroshkys - walked back to the other bakery and paid. We ended up eating a few in the car and Danny liked it so much, we went back in and ordered two more! Had some the next two days, and it was just as delicious when we first had it. Overall good piroshky but that was it!
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Yaffa G.

Yelp
If you are in the area deff stop by for some lepyoshki and samosa one to die for!! Enjoy guys
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Yassakar G.

Yelp
Fresh baked rolls pretty good. Kind hard to find
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Damon L.

Yelp
Good bread fragrant and tasty. The meat pies were a bit hard and chunky (I was expecting a minced meat) The spinach (turnover) pies were pretty good.
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Jay P.

Yelp
When I got there the samsas were cold and became bland maybe I'll have to give them another chance, but definitely stay away from the spinach there's no way that one could be good.