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Canning Recipe for Pickled Beets

Hoca

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This easy canning recipe for pickled beets is one of my most favorite recipes for canning.

Sweet, savory, spicy, they’re an awesome side dish, topping for a salad, or served next to meats and cheeses on a charcuterie plate!

These pickled beets are sweet, sour, tangy, and full of deep deliciousness!


pickled beets recipe for home canning


Beets are one of my favorite things to grow because they are very hands-off.

Throw some seeds in loose soil and they’re drought tolerant, pest resistant, disease resistant.


One of the great things about beets is that the beet greens can be harvested and sautéed to replace spinach, or added to a salad, or a great fodder for animals.

Two harvests in one!

For more info on growing beets (seriously the easiest things ever!) check out my post: Everything You Need to Know to Grow Beets.

One of my favorite ways to cook the pickled beets, when introducing them to someone who is skeptical (ahem, Dylan!) is to drain the liquid (reserve for pickling eggs!) and roast them in the oven, covered in olive oil, until soft, or just a tad browned.

These pickled roasted beets are delicious!


I’ll then add them to a beet salad, with spinach, sliced almonds, red onion and goat cheese.

It’s delicious!

canning recipe for pickled beets

Nutritional Value of Beets​


In doing research for this post I was surprised to find that fresh beets were not as nutritionally packed as I assumed they were.

One cup of sliced pickled beets has 148 calories, .2g of total fat and 1.8g of protein.

However, it does contain 9% of the daily recommended amount of Vitamin C, 6% of riboflavin, 15% of our RDV of Folate, 10% of our RDV of potassium, 25% of our sodium, 13% of our cooper and 25% of our manganese.


Historical References to Pickled Beets Recipes​


Before I make any new recipe, I look in a handful of the historic cookbooks I have.

The Virginia Housewife is my go-to (as a Virginia housewife myself), however she didn’t really have much to say about cooking beets in general.


Are not so much used as they deserve to be; they are dressed in the same way as parsnips, only neither scraped nor cut till after they are boiled; they will take from an hour and a half to three hours in boiling, according to their size; to be sent to the table with salt fish, boiled beef, &c. When young, small and juicy, it is a very good variety, an excellent garnish, and easily converted into a very cheap and pleasant pickle.

Mary Randolph, The Virginia Housewife

However, The Frugal Housewife (1803) had a decent pickled beet recipe:

Put into a gallon of cold vinegar as many beets as the vinegar will hold, and put thereto a half an ounce of whole pepper, half an ounce of allspice, a little ginger, if you like it, and one head of garlic. Note: Boil the beets in clear water, with their dirt on as they are taken out of the earth, then take them out and peal them, and when the vinegar is cold put them in, and in two days they will be fit for use. The spice must be boiled in the vinegar.

Susannah Carter, The Frugal Housewife

Variations on This Recipe​


This easy recipe par-boils the beets to make it easier for the skins to slide off, but you can also roast them.

You can use apple cider vinegar, white vinegar, or rice wine vinegar.

Play around with the herbs and spices!

For a spicier variation omit the cinnamon and add some sriracha to the brine! Use a dill and garlic quick pickle brine.

Experiment and have fun!

Recipe and Canning Tips​


Make sure to scrub off all of the dirt from the beets. Being a root vegetable with folds and texture to the beet root skin, it’s easy for dirt to hide and adhere to it.

If you’d like to learn more about how to can the right way, check out my friend Melissa’s Home Canning with Confidence course!

Once you’ve opened your mason jar and eaten your beets, reserve the pickling liquid! It can be used again to make pickled eggs.

If you’re intimidated by the canning portion, skip it and keep them in the fridge! This pickled beets recipe will last in a sealed jar for up to 6 weeks.

If you are canning, ensure that all of the beets stay submerged under the brine. (The narrow mouthed canning jars help with this).

how to can pickled beets

How to Make This Canning Recipe for Pickled Beets​


Whether you grow your own beets or buy them from the store, the very first step is to remove the greens and thin taproot from either end of the beets.

Scrub them as best you can under cold water with a vegetable brush and simmer them in a pot of water for roughly 20-30 minutes (or until the skins easily peel off).

Strain and allow the cooked beets to cool to room temperature.

Once cool enough to touch, rub off the rough skin and slice your beets into rounds or quarters – whatever will fit nicely in your mason jars and size of the beets.

Any size will work well with your favorite pickled beets recipes.

If you’re self-conscious about your hands being stained red from the beet juice, you may want to wear gloves.

In a large saucepan, combine vinegar, water, sugar and salt to a boil and stir until everything dissolves.

Fill your sterilized mason jars with the raw onions, beets, 1 bay leaves, 1 inch of cinnamon stick, 2 whole cloves and 4 allspice berries.

Or, if you don’t want the herbs to be floating in your jars, you can use ground cloves instead (that will dissolve in the pickling brine) or put your cloves and allspice berries in a spice bag in the vinegar solution as it dissolves.

Ladle the brine over the beets while it’s still hot and fill to the top with your vinegar mixture, leaving 1/2 inch of headspace.

You can stop here for a quick pickled beets recipe and store them in the refrigerator for up to one month.

If you don’t have mason jars, you can also store them in any other airtight container.

Secure your lids and rings and process in a hot water bath for 30 minutes.

Remove and let cool on the counter overnight before testing your seal.

Then enjoy them!

For more canning recipes, check out:

mason jar of pickled beets on a counter top

Pickled Beets Recipe for Canning​

Yield: 4 pints
Print

Ingredients​

  • 4 lbs beets, washed and roughly chopped
  • 2 medium onions, thinly sliced
  • 2 1/2 cups white or apple cider vinegar
  • 1 1/4 cup water
  • 1 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1 tsp pickling & canning salt
  • 16 allspice berries
  • 8 whole cloves
  • 1 cinnamon stick

Instructions​

  1. Remove the greens and thin tap root from the beets.
  2. Wash them thoroughly and boil them in a pot full of water until the skins easily peel off (roughly 20-30 minutes).
  3. Strain and cool. Remove the rough skin and slice in rounds or quarters.
  4. In a separate pot, bring water, vinegar, sugar and salt to a boil until everything is dissolved.
  5. Fill your sterilized mason jars with the raw onions, beets, 2 whole cloves and 4 allspice berries.
  6. Ladle the hot brine over top, leaving 1/2 inch of headspace.
  7. Secure your lids and rings and process in a hot water bath canner for 30 minutes.
© Lauren Dibble
Cuisine: Canning / Category: Recipes
pickled-beets-for-canning-recipe.jpg


The post Canning Recipe for Pickled Beets appeared first on Hillsborough Homesteading.
 
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