Yes—beetroot skin can go in the blender if you wash and trim it well; the main trade-offs are more earthy flavor and a slightly grittier texture.
Beetroot has a knack for turning anything into a jewel-toned drink. The only snag is prep time. Peeling beets can feel messy, and it’s easy to wonder if you can skip it and blend the whole thing, skin and all.
You can, and plenty of people do. The win is less waste and fewer steps. The catch is that the skin is where most of the dirt hangs out, and it can bring a muddy taste if you rush the wash.
This piece walks you through when blending with the skin makes sense, how to clean beets so you’re not drinking grit, and how to get a smooth texture even if your blender isn’t fancy.
Blending Beetroot With The Skin In Smoothies
Beet skin is thin and edible. It’s not a thick rind like a squash. In a smoothie, that means the skin usually blends down, yet it can still change three things you’ll notice right away: texture, taste, and how long prep takes.
Texture: From Silky To Slightly Gritty
If the beets are young and you scrub them well, the skin often disappears into the drink. With older beets, the outer layer can be a bit tougher, and you may feel fine specks on your tongue.
That grit is rarely “skin” alone. It’s often tiny soil particles trapped in root creases. Good washing fixes most of it. A strong blender and enough liquid finish the job.
Taste: Earthy Notes Get Louder
Most of beet’s earthy flavor sits close to the surface. Keeping the skin can make that flavor more noticeable, especially in raw blends. If you like beets, it’s a plus. If you’re beet-curious, pairing matters.
Sweet fruit, citrus, ginger, and yogurt can calm the earthiness. Roasting the beets first also mellows the flavor, even if you keep the skin.
Time: Less Peeling, More Scrubbing
Skipping the peeler saves a step, yet you’ll spend that time on scrubbing. Think of it as swapping “peel work” for “clean work.” The cleaner the skin, the cleaner the flavor.
Can I Blend Beetroot With The Skin?
Most of the time, yes. The question becomes: what’s your goal? If you want a glass-smooth juice texture, peeled beets are easier. If you want a fast, nutrient-dense smoothie and you don’t mind a bit of rustic texture, skin-on works well.
Two situations push the answer toward peeling: beets with deep cracks that hold stubborn dirt, and beets that feel leathery on the outside. In those cases, the skin can stay gritty even after scrubbing.
When Skin-On Blending Is A Good Fit
- You’re using young, firm beets. The outer layer is thinner and blends more easily.
- You can scrub them hard. A brush and running water do the heavy lifting.
- You’re blending with enough liquid. More liquid lets the blades pull the skin down into the vortex.
- You’re pairing flavors on purpose. Fruit, citrus, and spices keep the drink balanced.
When Peeling Saves Hassle
- The beet is large and wrinkled. More creases means more trapped soil.
- The skin looks scarred or corky. That outer layer can read as bitter and chewy.
- You’re serving picky drinkers. Smooth texture keeps the peace at the table.
How To Clean Beets So You Don’t Drink Dirt
Clean beets are the whole game when you keep the skin. Start with cold running water and a clean brush. Skip soaps and produce washes. The FDA’s “7 Tips for Cleaning Fruits, Vegetables” page lays out the same basic approach: rinse under running water and scrub firm produce.
Step-By-Step Washing Routine
- Trim first. Cut off greens and the long root tail, leaving a short stub so the beet stays intact.
- Rinse before you scrub. A quick rinse knocks off loose grit so your brush works on the stubborn stuff.
- Scrub all sides. Pay extra attention to the top “crown” area where stems were attached.
- Check the creases. Run a fingernail along any grooves. If soil shows up, scrub again.
- Rinse again. Let water carry off anything you loosened with the brush.
- Dry. A clean towel helps remove fine particles that cling to damp skin.
Quick Safety Notes For Raw Blends
Wash your hands, cutting board, and knife before and after handling beets, just as you would with any raw produce. Store them away from raw meat juices in the fridge. These habits cut down the odds of kitchen cross-contamination.
Choosing Beets That Blend Smoothly
Skin-on blending gets easier when you start with the right beet. Look for firm roots with smooth skin and minimal wrinkles. Small to medium beets tend to be sweeter and less fibrous than extra-large ones.
If you see dried mud packed into cracks, plan to peel or pick a different beet. Dirt wedged deep in the skin is the main reason skin-on smoothies end up tasting like a garden bed.
Skin-On Prep Options And What Each One Changes
You have three main routes: raw, roasted, or steamed. All three can be blended with the skin, yet they behave differently in the pitcher.
Raw Beets
Raw beets give the brightest color and a crisp taste. They also put the most stress on your blender. Dice them small, add plenty of liquid, and blend longer.
Roasted Beets
Roasting turns the beet tender and sweeter. The skin often loosens, yet you can keep it if it’s clean. Roasted skin blends down more easily than raw skin.
Steamed Or Boiled Beets
Moist heat softens the skin and the flesh. It’s a solid pick when you want smoother texture without losing time to peeling. Cool the beets before blending so you don’t warm the drink.
| Situation | Best prep | What to expect |
|---|---|---|
| Small fresh beets, strong blender | Raw, diced small | Bright flavor, may need longer blend time |
| Older beets with thicker skin | Roast or steam first | Softer skin, smoother mouthfeel |
| Beets with deep grooves | Peel after washing | Less grit risk, faster blending |
| Meal prep for the week | Roast a batch, chill | Fast smoothies, mellow flavor |
| Budget blender struggles | Steam, then cube | Easier on blades, thicker drink |
| Serving kids or texture-sensitive guests | Peel, then cook or blend | Smoother sip, less earthy edge |
| High-fiber smoothie goal | Skin-on, well scrubbed | More whole-vegetable feel, strain only if needed |
| Blender bottle shake, no blender | Use cooked beets only | Chunks stay if raw; cooked blends with shaking |
Blending Technique For A Smooth Drink
Even clean skin can feel rough if the blend is too thick or the pieces are too big. A few small technique tweaks usually fix it.
Cut Size Matters More Than You Think
For raw beets, aim for cubes around the size of a fingernail. Smaller pieces spin into the blades faster and break down before the drink heats up.
Build The Blender In The Right Order
Start with liquid, then soft items, then hard items. Liquid first helps the blades grab and circulate the beet pieces. Frozen fruit can sit near the top so it doesn’t jam the bottom.
Blend In Two Rounds
Give it a first blend to break down the beet, then pause, scrape the sides, and blend again. This second round is where skin particles usually disappear.
Strain Only When You Need To
If you’re chasing a juice-like texture, a fine mesh strainer or nut milk bag can take out any last specks. If you want the full smoothie, skip straining and let the fiber stay in the glass.
Flavor Pairings That Keep Beet Skin From Taking Over
Skin-on beets can taste a touch more earthy. The easiest fix is pairing beets with flavors that play well with that earthiness instead of fighting it.
Sweet And Bright Combos
- Orange + carrot + ginger for a fresh, zingy profile
- Berry mix + banana for a dessert-leaning smoothie
- Pineapple + lime for a sharper tropical sip
Creamy Combos
- Greek yogurt + frozen cherries for thickness and a tart edge
- Oats + milk for a breakfast-style blend
- Silken tofu for protein with a neutral taste
Spice And Salt Tricks
A small pinch of salt can make beet sweetness pop. Cinnamon, fresh ginger, or a squeeze of lemon can also lift the flavor so the drink tastes cleaner.
Nutrition Notes: Skin On Vs Peeled
Most of a beet’s carbs, vitamins, and minerals live in the flesh. The skin is thin, yet eating the whole beet still means you’re skipping less and keeping more of what you bought. If you already eat beets often, the bigger nutrition change usually comes from how you prepare them: raw vs cooked, and what else you blend with them.
If you like numbers, the USDA’s FoodData Central food search is the cleanest place to check nutrient values for raw and cooked beets. Use it to compare raw beets to boiled or roasted beets, then plan your portions.
One caution worth stating plainly: beets are known for oxalates. People prone to calcium-oxalate kidney stones often get advice to limit high-oxalate foods, and beets are on that list. If that’s you, talk with a clinician who knows your history before turning beets into a daily habit.
| Problem | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Gritty feel | Soil in creases or thick skin pieces | Scrub longer, peel grooved beets, blend longer with more liquid |
| Muddy taste | Dirty skin or beet stored with lots of soil | Wash, dry, then trim surface spots; swap to cooked beets for a cleaner taste |
| Blender stalls | Too little liquid or pieces too large | Add liquid first, cut smaller, pulse before a full blend |
| Foamy top | High-speed blending with lots of air | Blend shorter, let it sit 2 minutes, stir |
| Too earthy | Skin-on raw beets amplify earthy notes | Add citrus, ginger, berries, or yogurt; roast beets next time |
| Too thick | Cooked beets plus frozen fruit | Add water or milk in small splashes until it moves freely |
| Pink stains everywhere | Beet juice sets fast on porous surfaces | Rinse tools right away; wipe boards with warm soapy water |
Storage And Prep Shortcuts That Still Taste Clean
If you want beet smoothies more often, batch prep helps. Roast or steam a few beets, cool them, then store them in a sealed container. You’ll have ready-to-blend cubes that are soft, sweet, and easy on your blender.
Keep raw beets dry in the fridge. Moisture plus dirt can turn the skin slimy. If your beets came with greens, cut the greens off soon after buying so the roots stay firm.
Final Check Before You Hit Blend
Ask three quick questions. Does the beet feel firm? Does the skin look clean after scrubbing? Do you have enough liquid to keep the blend moving? If the answer is yes across the board, skin-on blending is a smart, low-waste move.
If the beet is old, deeply grooved, or hard to clean, peel it and move on. You’ll still get the color, the sweetness, and the beet kick without the grit.
References & Sources
- U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA).“7 Tips for Cleaning Fruits, Vegetables.”Shows safe produce-washing steps like rinsing under running water and scrubbing firm items.
- U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA).“FoodData Central Food Search.”Lets readers check nutrient values for raw and cooked beets using USDA’s database.