My allotment is finally producing such quantities of veg that I can start preserving, pickling, making chutneys and jams, and filling the freezer. I am also drying peas and beans for winter soups and stews.
Boil up some scrubbed beetroot. While it is cooking, put your clean preserving jars on a tray in the oven and heat them up to 100 degrees C and keep them hot.
Prepare pickling brine in the ratio 1 cup malt vinegar, 1 cup sugar, and 2 cups water. Combine, and bring this to a boil, stirring to dissolve the sugar. Reduce heat to a slow simmer. (That is a 500ml jar in the picture. This quantity of brine fills approx 5-6 of these jars when they are packed with sliced beetroot.)
Separate the seals and put them in a bowl so that you can cover them with boiling water just before you start the actual bottling process.
Make sure the screw bands (that hold the dome seals on until the jars cool and are sealed) are clean and wiped with a skim of vaseline on the inside.
Once the beetroot is tender put on a pair of heavy washing up gloves, lift each beet out of the hot water with a slotted spoon, squeeze them gently to wipe the skin off, slice them up and pack the slices into a jar. I do this one jar at a time to keep everything as hot as possible to ensure they seal.
Pour hot brine over the beetroot to completely (completely) fill the jar, put a seal on top and make sure it is properly bedded with nothing between the jar the the rubber edge of the seal, and then tighten down the screw band. Set it on a board to cool and get on with the next jar.
Any that don't seal will keep in the fridge for a couple of weeks (as will the contents of any jar you open to use later).
If you don't have preserving jars, you might be able to use any decent sized jar which had a lid with one of those pop up centres to show they are sealed. If you do, make sure the inside of the lid is coated so that it is resistant to the effects of vinegar.
Sorry but beetroot is messy and there is no possible way I can photograph the steps in this process without a second pair of hands - messy but worth it. My favorite pickled vegetable.
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