Borscht — Beet & Cabbage Soup
Deep ruby, sweet-sour and savory, with tender beef, beets, cabbage, and potato. Finished with a swirl of sour cream and a shower of dill. The hearty bowl that defines Ukrainian and Eastern European home cooking.
Simmer beef until tender to make a rich broth. Sauté grated beet, carrot, and onion with tomato and a splash of vinegar (the vinegar keeps the color). Add potato and cabbage to the broth, then the beet sauté. Simmer until everything is tender, balance sweet-sour-salt, rest, and serve with sour cream and dill.
- A splash of vinegar or lemon with the beets locks in the ruby color — without acid, borscht turns muddy brown.
- Borscht must rest. It's markedly better after a few hours, and best the next day.
- Balance at the end: it should taste sweet, sour, and savory all at once. Adjust with sugar, vinegar, and salt.
Equipment
- Large stockpot
- Box grater or food processor
- Frying pan (for the beet sauté / zazharka)
सामग्री
Broth
- 500 g beef brisket or short rib, bone-in if possible
- 2.5 L water
- 1 onion, halved
- 1 bay leaf
- 5 g black peppercorns
Soup
- 2 medium beets, peeled and grated
- 1 carrot, grated
- 1 onion, finely diced
- 30 g tomato paste
- 15 ml vinegar or lemon juice
- 3 potatoes, cubed
- ¼ head white cabbage, shredded
- 2 garlic cloves, minced
- 10 g sugar, to balance
- Salt and pepper, to taste
To serve
- Sour cream (smetana)
- Fresh dill, chopped
- Dark rye bread
विधि
- स्टेप01
Put the beef in a stockpot with the water, halved onion, bay, and peppercorns. Bring to a boil, skim the foam, then simmer gently 60–75 minutes until the meat is tender. Lift out the beef, strain the broth, and return the broth to the pot. Shred or cube the meat.
- स्टेप02
In a frying pan, sauté the diced onion and grated carrot in oil until soft. Add the grated beet, tomato paste, and vinegar. Cook 10 minutes — the vinegar keeps the beets vivid red.
- स्टेप03
Bring the broth to a simmer. Add the cubed potato and cook 10 minutes, then the shredded cabbage and cook 5 minutes more.
- स्टेप04
Stir the beet sauté and the shredded beef into the pot. Simmer 10–15 minutes for the flavors to meld and the beets to fully tender.
- स्टेप05
Stir in the minced garlic and sugar. Now taste and balance: it should be sweet, sour, and savory at once. Adjust with more vinegar, sugar, or salt. Off the heat.
- स्टेप06
Let the borscht rest at least 20 minutes (ideally a few hours). Serve hot with a generous spoon of sour cream stirred in and a shower of dill, with dark rye bread alongside.
Make ahead
Make it a day ahead — this is the traditional way. The flavors round out and deepen overnight. Reheat gently and finish with fresh sour cream and dill.
Storage
Borscht keeps 4–5 days refrigerated and improves daily. It freezes well 3 months (add fresh sour cream and dill after reheating).
Variations
Vegetarian / Lenten
Skip the beef and use vegetable stock or mushroom broth. Add a tin of white beans for heartiness. Garnish with sour cream (or skip for vegan).
With pampushky
Serve with Ukrainian garlic bread rolls (pampushky) — the classic accompaniment.
Cold borscht (kholodnyk)
A summer version: cold, kefir-based, with raw cucumber and herbs. A different dish entirely but the same family.
Serve with
Nutrition per serving
Nutrition values are estimates based on the metric measurements. Adjust as needed.
अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले
Is borscht Russian or Ukrainian?
Borscht originated in Ukraine and is the centerpiece of Ukrainian cuisine — UNESCO recognized Ukrainian borscht culture as intangible heritage in 2022. It's also beloved across Russia, Poland, and the wider region. This is a Ukrainian-style beef borscht.
How do I keep the color bright red?
Acid is the secret. Adding vinegar or lemon juice when you cook the beets (and not overcooking them) preserves the vivid ruby color. Without acid, beets fade to a dull brown when simmered.
Can I use pre-cooked beets?
Yes — grate cooked/vacuum-packed beets and add them with the tomato paste, cooking just to warm through. Fresh raw beets give a deeper flavor but cooked beets are a fine shortcut.
Why does it need to rest?
Like many soups and stews, borscht's flavors marry and deepen as it sits. A few hours' rest — or overnight — turns a good pot into a great one. It's traditionally made a day ahead.
What's the sweet-sour balance about?
Great borscht hits sweet (beets, a little sugar), sour (vinegar/lemon, sometimes tomato), and savory (beef, salt) simultaneously. Taste at the end and nudge each until it sings — that balance is the soul of the dish.
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