Tips on How to Pick Beets
Whether you pick
beets from your garden or at a Pick-Your-Own farm, here
are a few tips to keep in mind.
-
Harvest beets when they are 1-1/4 to 2 inches in diameter. Small beets have a sweeter taste.
-
The smaller younger leaves (beet tops) can also be eaten as greens. Some folks steam the leaves and putter butter on them. Others use the
smallest leaves in a fresh salad! The leaves should be 1.5 to 6 inches long.
- The beets should be
firm not soft or mushy
- And red (not yellowish - unless you're picking yellow beets!
- Try to avoid beets with bug damage to the beet itself, or animal
gnaw marks!
- Avoid placing the picked beets in the sunlight
any longer than necessary. It is better to put them in the shade of a tree
or shed than in the car trunk or on the car seat. Cool them as soon as
possible after picking. I prefer to bring a cooler with ice in it. Beets may be kept fresh in the refrigerator for 3 or 4 days
When you get home
- Cut the tops off, leaving about 2 inches of stem attached to the beet to keep the beet from "bleeding".
- Put them in the vegetable crisper in the fridge, in a loose plastic bag.
- They will be good for about a week like that.
Beet recipes and home canning
Now, get ready to can or freeze the extra beets - It is VERY easy!
Click on the links for easy instructions.
- How to can beets
- How to make pickled beets
- How to freeze beets
Beet nutritional facts
- There are 43 calories in 100 grams (3.5 ounces) of beets.
- Raw beetroots are 88% water, 10% carbohydrates, 2% protein, and less than 1% fat.
- Beet tops may be cooked and eaten, as they are an excellent source of vitamin A, iron, and betacarotene.
- Beets are a great source of fiber, folate, and potassium, which makes them especially good for pregnant women..
- Beets contain antioxidants, called betalains, carotenoids, and flavonoids, which prevent colon cancer and heart disease.
Weird beet facts
- The scientific name for beets is Beta vulgaris.
- Beets are naturally very high in sugar
- Sugar made from beets took a large chunk of the sugar market away from sugar cane, since beets can be grown almost anywhere.
- Beet seeds are actually dried beet fruits, like a raison and each containing a half dozen or more seeds! When you plant them, spread them
out!
- Ancient text from 800 B.C. mentioned beets growing in the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, one of the wonders of the ancient world.
- Beet juice has been used as red dye since the 16th century.
- Thomas Jefferson planted beets at Monticello.
- Medieval cooks stuffed beets into pies.
- In the TV show, The Office character, the character Dwight Schrute, owns a beet farm.
- Some cultures believe that if a man and woman eat from the same beet, they will fall in love.
- Beets are a traditional food at Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year.
- Beets are commonly red, but there are golden beets which are also are sweet, but do not stain surfaces like red beets do.
- Beets are in the same family as Swiss chard.
- The Victorians dyed their hair with beet juice in 19th century England.
- Beet juice stains so well, you can dye your Easter eggs pink using cooked beet juice/water and some vinegar
- Beets should be trimmed or peeled after cooking because the peel holds in the important nutrients.
- You don't need to buy "Superbeet" junk pills sold on TV. Just eat beets, instead!