Touchstone Gold Beet
Touchstone Gold Beet is the preferred variety of golden beet. Orange to gold skin with bright yellow flesh on the inside. Great flavor and retains color when cooked. 55 days to maturity. Beta vulgaris.
Treatment: Untreated
Description
Touchstone Gold Beet is the best performing golden beet variety we've trialed. It has great germination for a golden beet. This variety produces 3-4" orange to golden beet roots that are consistently round when spaced properly. The flesh of the beet is a bright yellow that is eye-catching and appealing on a plate. Unlike red beets, the stems on Touchstone Gold are green in addition to the leaves which are edible. Touchstone Gold Beet is great prepared raw and doesn't bleed like red beets. It is also great for roasting.
Beets may be direct seeded or grown as transplants. Beet Seeds are multigerm, which means that each seed will germinate 2-3 plants. As a result, plants will require thinning once they emerge from the soil. Failure to thin will result in overcrowding and lack of consistently sized roots. Plants should be thinned to one every 3-4" along the row. Beets may be planted on a bed with multiple rows close together. Harvest beets when roots have reached 3-4" in size. For storage, remove the greens and keep the roots in the refrigerator.
Growing beets from transplants is also an effective method, because thinning can be done in the trays as opposed to the ground. Place one seed per cell in our seed starting trays and thin to one plant per cell. Transplant when a solid root system has developed, when the plants can be easily pulled from the cells. Transplant into the ground at 4" spacing along the row. Beets work great grown in double rows to maximize garden space. For double row planting, plant two rows 4" apart with 3' between double rows.
Touchstone Gold Beet Planting Information
Planting Method: transplant and direct seed
When to Plant: early spring and fall
Planting Depth: 1/2"
Seed Spacing: 4-6"
Row Spacing: 3'
Days to Maturity: 55
Disease Resistance: Cercospora