Beetroot

Beta vulgaris

Beetroot are in the large Amaranthaceae family, formerly called Chenopodiaceae. They are part of the subfamily Betoideae, which includes chard and leaf beet.

Beet plants, in terms of productive capability, are classed in four groups: Leaf Beet, Garden Beet, Fodder Beet and Sugar Beet. In the roots of all these, the sweetness is a common thread, although less so for leaf beet and chard.

Sugar beets account for a third of the world’s sugar production. Fodder beets or mangel-wurzels are energy foods for animals and can also be converted into wine.

Beetroot (Garden Beet) are sweet at all stages and the most flavoursome root for us to eat, whether small or large.

Harvest period

  • Days from seed to first harvest: 70–90

11th July – these beetroot were transplanted only three weeks earlier, replacing some overwintered garlic
At the start of spring’s hungry gap there are still plenty of beetroot from my shed, 14 weeks since we harvested them
12th April – I roasted these lovely roots from my store: Charlotte potatoes (8 months old), beetroot (4 months old) and onions (7 months old)


  • Best climate is temperate conditions, neither freezing nor too hot and dry. In cold climates there is time for one beetroot harvest, from sowing under cover in late spring.

Why grow them

Beetroot has been rediscovered as a great vegetable. In the UK, at least, it was in the background, often eaten as a pickle with a strong vinegar flavour. Now we realise that it makes a wonderful dish when, for example, grated in salads with apples (my favourite), as well as roasted or sautéed among other vegetables at almost any time of year.

There are the famous Borscht soups, so appreciated in Ukrainian, Russian and Polish cuisine. When they are made using sweet, flavoursome, homegrown beetroot, simple food becomes truly exciting. I often think that elaborate recipes are not really needed when you have fully flavoured ingredients, whose only need is a slight embellishment, or mixing with another fully flavoured ingredient!

  • It is a myth that beetroot get woody when large. That may happen from using chemical fertiliser, but I have never experienced it with growing them in no dig, healthy soil.

Suitable for containers/shade?

Beetroot is ideal for growing in pots and grow bags. Especially when you pop in multisown clumps, as I suggest below.

They can grow in shade too.

Conditions for success
Varieties
Sow & propogate
Transplant/interplant
Water
Harvest times and methods
Potential problems
Finally
Step 15
Step 15
Close

Follow with:

Spring plantings of beetroot can be followed with transplants of leeks, autumn or spring cabbage, kale, autumn salads including chicory for radicchio, or you could make a sowing of carrots for an autumn harvest.

Completed
Completed
Lesson Completed
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Take Quiz
Previous Lesson
Next Lesson
Go back