Beets are notable for their sweetness—they have the highest sugar content
of any vegetable, but they are very low in calories. Their sweet flavor comes
through whether the beets are fresh or canned . Unlike many other processed
vegetables, canned beets are perfectly acceptable in both taste and texture; if
not pickled, their sweet flavor is largely unaffected by the canning process.
Fresh beets, however, have twice the folate (folic acid) and potassium, and have
a distinctive flavor and a crisp texture not found in canned beets. Fresh beets
also supply a nutritional bonus—their green tops are an excellent source of
beta-carotene, calcium, and iron.
The beets we eat as a vegetable (also called red beets, root beets, and table
beets) are a root vegetable with two parts, the root and the edible green
leaves. They belong to the botanical species Beta vulgaris, which also includes
sugar beets (which are processed for sugar), mangel-wurzels (very large bulbs
used as animal fodder), foliage beets, and Swiss chard (the latter two grown for
their greens, not their roots). All these vegetables are descended from a wild
slender-rooted plant that grew abundantly in southern Europe. In ancient
civilizations, only the green leaves of the beet plant were eaten; the
roots--which did not look like modern beets--were used medicinally to treat
headaches and toothaches. Beets with good-sized, rounded roots, like those we
eat today, were probably developed in the sixteenth century, though it took
another 200 years before they gained any popularity as a food.
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