The Essential Baba Recipe: Soup That Fixes Everything

Tuesday, 20 January 2026.

Baba = Grandmother (Croatian, native to Dalmatia)

Faced with this weird January weather, I found myself stirring a pot of liquid gold: my Baba’s goveđa juha, literally translated to “beef soup” or more fashionably known these days as beef bone broth. I grew up on Baba’s juha, made sure my children did, and will be making sure my grandchildren do too. There is nothing like it for both simplicity, taste, and healing. In our house (probably in all of Croatia), it’s officially recognised as The Soup That Heals Everything.

You do need to allow around two to three hours simmering time, and even though here in the land of weekly deliveries and instant gratification where we’ve glorified the quick fix, there’s almost zero effort involved. Some things demand time. They demand simmering. They demand patience. And Baba’s beef bone broth? It demands all of that but gives back tenfold.

The thing about this soup is that it wasn’t ever measured. It was felt. You measure with the wisdom passed down through hands that have made it a thousand times before. There’s no perfect amount of noodles or precise number of celery stalks.

But for those of us who need a little more guidance than “a feeling,” here’s my attempt to translate Baba’s magic into something you can recreate in your own kitchen. Think of it as an act of slow, deliberate love.


Baba’s Goveđa Juha (The “Fix Everything” Beef Bone Broth)

(Side note: This is my best guess at Baba’s alchemy. As good as my own soup is I don’t know that it will ever live up to hers.)

What You’ll Need:

How We Make Magic:

  1. A Good Rinse: First, give your bones and meat a quick rinse under cold water. This isn’t strictly necessary for flavor, but Baba always did it so we’re not asking questions.
  2. The Gentle Start: Add everything (bones, meat, all the veg, flavour makers, and seasoning) to a very large pot. Cover everything generously with cold water. This is key for drawing out all the goodness.
  3. Simmer: Bring it to a very gentle simmer over medium heat. Don’t boil it aggressively! As it heats, you’ll see some foamy scum rise to the top. Skim this off with a spoon. This keeps your broth clear and clean, just like Baba liked it. (Full disclosure: I have many a time forgotten to scrape off the scum and don’t think anyone noticed).
  4. The Long Wait: Reduce the heat to low, cover the pot (leaving a tiny crack for steam), and let it simmer for at least 3 hours. The longer, the better. The house will start to smell like pure comfort.
  5. The Strain: Carefully remove the meat and bones from the pot. Strain the entire broth through a fine-mesh sieve into another large bowl or pot. Now in Baba’s house we liked to eat the boiled meat and veggies because to throw it out was sacrilegious, but you can also add some of the carrot (roughly mashed is fine) back to the strained broth along with some of the meat shredded into pieces.
  6. Taste and Adjust: Taste your broth. Now is the time to add more salt if needed, as well as the fresh parsley. It shouldn’t need more than a tweak.
  7. The Pasta: add some of the small soup pasta to the broth, you want the broth to be the star and not the pasta. Simmer until pasta is done.
  8. Serve with Love: Ladle the hot broth into bowls. Dobar tek.

Every time I make this, I close my eyes and I’m back there. In Baba’s kitchen, sitting at that indestructable Formica table. Surrounded by the warmth, the smells, and the undeniable feeling of being treasured, loved.

It’s more than just a recipe. It’s a connection to my roots, a reminder of what truly nourishes, and a delicious act of rebellion against the fast food of modern life.

What’s your “fix everything” dish? The one that brings you back home, no matter where you are?

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4 responses to “The Essential Baba Recipe: Soup That Fixes Everything”

  1. Karen Gallagher Avatar

    Thanks Ana I will definitely be making this. Sounds amazing 🤩

    1. Ana Avatar
      Ana

      Thank you Karen, and welcome! It’s so worth it, especially when the cooler weather rolls around.

  2. Dalmatian Insider Avatar

    Thanks for the recipe! It reminds me of the soup my Dalmatian mother-in-law would serve with lunch.

    1. Ana Avatar
      Ana

      You’re welcome, this is honestly that simple thing we’ve all grown up on, I hope you enjoy making it!

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