Pickled Beets
Tender rounds of earthy beet soaked in a sweet-tart cider vinegar brine spiked with mustard seed, clove, and black pepper — the ruby-red jar that belongs on every American relish tray. Boiling the beets whole in their skins keeps them juicy and makes peeling a ten-second job, and pouring the brine over while it is still hot lets the seasoning start soaking in as everything cools. After a day in the refrigerator the slices are firm-tender, glossy, and deeply flavored from edge to center.
Simmer 900 g (2 lb) whole, unpeeled beets in water for 30 to 40 minutes until a knife slides in easily, cool briefly, rub off the skins, and slice into 6 mm (1/4-inch) rounds. Pack the slices into two clean pint jars with a few rings of red onion. Bring 240 ml (1 cup) apple cider vinegar, 240 ml (1 cup) water, 100 g (1/2 cup) sugar, 1 1/2 teaspoons salt, and the whole spices to a boil, stir until dissolved, and pour the hot brine over the beets to cover. Cool to room temperature, seal, and refrigerate at least 4 hours — ideally 24 — before eating. They keep about a month in the brine.
- Boil the beets whole with skins on and 2.5 cm (1 inch) of stem attached — they bleed less, stay juicy, and the skins rub right off under a paper towel.
- Pour the brine over the beets while it is still hot so the slices begin absorbing seasoning immediately as they cool.
- Wait a full 24 hours before judging the flavor; the sweet-tart brine needs a day to penetrate to the center of each slice.
Equipment
- Large pot with lid
- Medium saucepan
- Two 500 ml (pint-size) glass jars with tight-fitting lids
- Chef's knife and cutting board
- Tongs or slotted spoon
- Disposable gloves (optional, to keep hands stain-free)
Składniki
Beets
- 900 g medium beets, about 6, similar in size so they cook evenly; greens trimmed to 2.5 cm (1 inch)
- small red onion, thinly sliced into rings; optional but classic
Pickling brine
- 240 ml apple cider vinegar, 5% acidity
- 240 ml water
- 100 g granulated sugar
- 9 g fine sea salt
- 2 g whole black peppercorns
- 3 g yellow mustard seeds
- whole cloves
- bay leaf
Przygotowanie
- KROK01
Cut the greens off the beets, leaving about 2.5 cm (1 inch) of stem and the root tail intact — trimming into the flesh makes them bleed color and flavor into the cooking water. Scrub well under running water. Do not peel.
- KROK02
Put the beets in a large pot, cover with cold water by 5 cm (2 inches), and bring to a boil. Reduce to a steady simmer, cover, and cook 30 to 40 minutes, until a paring knife slides into the largest beet with almost no resistance. Small beets may finish early; pull them out as they are done.
- KROK03
Drain and rinse the beets under cold water until cool enough to handle. Wearing gloves if you like, rub each beet with a paper towel — the skins slip right off. Trim the stem and tail ends, then slice into 6 mm (1/4-inch) rounds, or cut larger beets into half-moons or wedges.
- KROK04
Divide the red onion rings between two clean pint jars, then pack in the beet slices, leaving about 1 cm (1/2 inch) of headspace at the top. Snug is good; crushed is not.
- KROK05
In a medium saucepan, combine the vinegar, water, sugar, salt, peppercorns, mustard seeds, cloves, and bay leaf. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat, stirring until the sugar and salt fully dissolve, then simmer 2 minutes to bloom the spices.
- KROK06
Pour the hot brine over the beets, dividing the spices between the jars and covering the slices completely. Run a butter knife around the inside of each jar and tap it on the counter to release air bubbles. Let the open jars cool on the counter to room temperature, about 30 minutes.
- KROK07
Screw on the lids and refrigerate. The beets are pleasantly pickled after 4 to 6 hours, but the flavor is dramatically better after 24 to 48 hours, once the brine has worked its way to the center of each slice.
Make ahead
This recipe is made for working ahead: the flavor peaks 24 to 48 hours after pickling and holds beautifully for weeks, so make a batch up to a month before you need it. You can also boil and peel the beets up to 3 days ahead and refrigerate them, then slice, pack, and brine when convenient.
Storage
Keep refrigerated, with the beets submerged in brine, for up to 1 month. Use a clean fork each time you fish out slices. This is a refrigerator pickle — it is not shelf-stable and should not be stored at room temperature unless you process the jars in a boiling water bath following a tested canning procedure.
Variations
Warm-spiced holiday beets
Add a cinnamon stick, one star anise pod, and a wide strip of orange zest to the brine. The result tastes like the spiced beets on a Midwestern Thanksgiving relish tray — excellent alongside ham or turkey.
No-added-sugar version
Replace the granulated sugar with 60 ml (1/4 cup) pure maple syrup for a lightly sweet, vegan-friendly jar, or omit the sweetener entirely and add an extra pinch of salt for a bracing, savory pickle. The beets' natural sugars keep them from tasting harsh.
Pennsylvania Dutch pickled eggs
Once the beets are eaten, slip 4 to 6 peeled hard-boiled eggs into the leftover brine and refrigerate 1 to 2 days. You get the classic magenta-ringed pickled eggs — note this variation adds egg and is no longer vegan.
Serve with
Nutrition per serving
Nutrition values are estimates based on the metric measurements. Adjust as needed.
Najczęstsze pytania
Can I use this pickled beets recipe for shelf-stable canning?
As written, this is a refrigerator pickle and must stay chilled. To make shelf-stable jars, keep the vinegar at 5% acidity and at least a 1:1 ratio with water, ladle the hot brine over hot beets in sterilized canning jars with new lids, and process pint jars in a boiling water bath for 30 minutes, following current USDA/NCHFP guidance for your altitude. Never reduce the vinegar in a canned version.
Can I roast the beets instead of boiling them?
Yes. Wrap scrubbed beets individually in foil and roast at 200°C (400°F) for 45 to 60 minutes until knife-tender, then peel and slice as directed. Roasting concentrates the beets' sweetness and gives the finished pickle a slightly deeper, earthier flavor; boiling is faster to clean up and keeps the color brightest.
How long do pickled beets need to sit before eating, and how long do they last?
They are enjoyable after 4 to 6 hours in the refrigerator, genuinely good at 24 hours, and at their best from day 2 through week 2. Kept submerged in brine in a sealed jar in the refrigerator, they hold their texture and flavor for about a month.
What vinegar works best in a pickled beets recipe?
Apple cider vinegar is the classic American choice because its mild fruitiness flatters the beets' sweetness. Distilled white vinegar gives a sharper, cleaner tang and the most vivid color, and red wine vinegar adds a subtle winey depth. Any of the three works — just make sure the label says 5% acidity so the pickle is properly tart and safe.
Can I use canned or pre-cooked beets to save time?
Yes. Drain two 425 g (15 oz) cans of whole or sliced beets, or use vacuum-packed cooked beets, pack them into jars, and pour the hot brine over. Skip the boiling step entirely; total active time drops to about 15 minutes. The texture will be slightly softer than home-cooked, but the flavor is still excellent after a day in the brine.
Cooked this? Rate it.
Real ratings from real cooks. We only show a score once enough of you have weighed in — no fabricated stars.