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Prga – Podravina Spicy Cheese (Traditional Recipe)

In the lowland fields of Podravina, where dairy herds still mark the rhythm of village life, prga (or prgica) sits on the table like a small, fiery monument to thrift and skill. It looks modest at first glance: small cone-shaped cheeses, stained warm orange from paprika, often lined up on a wooden board beside cured pork and coarse bread. Yet…

Soparnik (Poljički Chard Pie) – Traditional Recipe

Soparnik is one of those dishes that quietly tells the story of a place. In this case, that place is Poljica, a historic rural region in central Dalmatia, tucked between Split and Omiš. For centuries, families there have stretched a simple dough of flour, water, salt, and a little olive oil into a thin round, filled it with chard and…

Croatian Stuffed Peppers

Punjena Paprika sits on many Croatian tables as a steady, reassuring presence. It appears in late summer and early autumn when bell peppers are sweet and plentiful, but it also anchors winter menus from the freezer, packed away in family kitchens in large batches. The dish belongs to the shared Central and Southeast European tradition of stuffed vegetables, yet the…

Pogača Bread (Rustic Croatian Flatbread)

In much of Croatia and the wider Balkans, the word pogača almost stands in for bread itself. It refers to a round, flat loaf that traces its name to the Latin panis focacius – bread baked on the hearth. Early versions sat under a heavy metal or clay bell (peka in Croatian), buried in hot embers, which gave a gentle,…

Sarma, Croatia’s Winter Stuffed Cabbage Classic

Across Croatia, sarma belongs to the group of dishes that tend to appear when the weather turns cold, families gather, and large pots stay on the stove for hours. In the most classic version, it takes the form of sour cabbage leaves wrapped around a seasoned mixture of minced meat and rice, then simmered slowly over a bed of sauerkraut…

Mussels na Buzaru (Dalmatian Shellfish Stew)

Along the Dalmatian coast, where fishing boats still set out at first light and family kitchens lean on what the day’s catch brings in, buzara stands as one of the most characteristic ways to cook shellfish. In Croatian cooking, this approach typically means a quick pan of seafood simmered with olive oil, garlic, white wine, and fresh herbs, sometimes with…

Bakalar na Bijelo (Croatian Salted Cod Spread Recipe)

In many Croatian coastal homes, the fragrance of garlic, olive oil, and long-soaked salt cod signals the final hours before Christmas. Long before modern refrigeration, dried and salted cod travelled south from the North Atlantic and Norway, reaching the Adriatic through Venetian trade routes; its keeping quality turned it into a pantry staple across Catholic Europe. Along the Dalmatian coast and…

Croatian Tripice Stew (Fileki) with Bacon and Paprika

Tripice, often called fileki in Zagreb and parts of continental Croatia, stands among the most characteristic offal dishes in the country. In this stew, strips of beef tripe simmer slowly in a paprika-tinted tomato base, enriched with bacon or pancetta, root vegetables, and often potatoes. The result is a spoonable meal with real depth: velvety broth, soft tripe with a…

Čobanac (Croatian Shepherd’s Stew) – Spicy Meat Paprika Pot

Čobanac sits at the heart of eastern Croatia’s cooking, especially in Slavonia and Baranja, where fields, forests, and rivers shape what ends up in the pot. Traditionally, this stew simmered for hours in a large copper cauldron hung over an open fire, feeding shepherds and farm workers after a long day outdoors. The dish needed to be hearty, concentrated, and generous,…

Croatian Rićet (Bean & Barley Stew)

Rićet belongs to that family of thick, grain-and-bean stews that once powered farm work, mountain walks, and long winter evenings in Central Europe. In Croatia it appears most often in continental regions, especially the north, where barley and beans simmer slowly with smoked pork until the pot yields something closer to a village meal than a simple soup. Croatian cooks…