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Finally, a borscht recipe with meat! I’m a borsch lover. To prove it, here’s my first borscht, my second borscht (an easier/quicker version of the first one), my superfood borscht and now this beef borscht for those of you who love a good piece of tender meat in your spoon :).
Borscht is originally Ukrainian but it is made by most Slavic people and is a very common food in Russia. If you didn’t make it to the Olympics in Sochi this year, you’ll still get a taste of Russia when you try this borscht. It will also help you to loosen up those tense shoulders as you watch the Olympics (it makes me so anxious to watch! You?). By the way, Borscht, Borsch, Borshch… potatoes, patawtos). 😉
Ingredients for Borscht with Beef:
(This list looks lengthy but the ingredients are simple)
1 lb Beef: sirloin, stew meat, or whatever kind of beef you like, really (bone-in or boneless *see note)
14 cups cold water
1 Tbsp salt + more to taste
2 large or 3 medium beets, washed, peeled and grated
4 Tbsp olive oil
1 Tbsp vinegar
1 Tbsp sugar
2 Tbsp tomato sauce, or paste (or 3 Tbsp ketchup)
1 Tbsp butter
1 medium onion, finely diced
2 carrots, grated
2 large or 3 medium potatoes, peeled and sliced into bite-sized pieces
1/2 head of small cabbage, sliced
2 tomatoes, peeled and diced (**see note)
2 bay leaves
1/4 tsp freshly ground pepper
1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley + more for garnish
2 cloves garlic, pressed
Garnish: Sour cream and fresh sprigs of parsley or dill.

How To Make Borscht with Meat:
1. Wash meat in cold water, cut into 1″ pieces and and place in a large soup pot with 14 cups cold water and 1 Tbsp salt. Bring it to a boil and remove the foam as soon as it boils (if you wait, it will be hard to get rid of the foam as it integrates into the broth and you’d have to strain it).
Lower the heat, partially cover and cook at a low boil 45 minutes – 1 hr, periodically skimming off any foam that rises to the top. Sorry, I forgot to take a picture of the foam. Maybe we’re better off??

2. Grate beets on the large grater holes (the food processor works amazingly well). Place them in a large heavy-bottom skillet with 4 Tbsp olive oil and 1 Tbsp vinegar and saute for 5 minutes, then reduce heat to med/low and add 1 Tbsp sugar and 2 Tbsp tomato sauce Mix thoroughly and saute until starting to soften, stirring occasionally (about 10 min). Remove from pan and set aside.

3. In the same skillet (no need to wash it), Saute onion in 1 Tbsp butter for 2 min. Add grated carrot and sautee another 5 min or until softened, adding more oil if it seems too dry.

4. Once the meat has been cooking at least 45 min, place sliced potatoes into the soup pot and cook 10 min, then add cabbage, sauteed beets, onion & carrot, and chopped tomatoes. Cook another 10 minutes or until potatoes can be easily pierced with a fork.

5. Add 2 bay leaves, 1/4 tsp pepper, and more salt to taste (I added another 1/2 tsp salt).

6. Chop parsley and pressed garlic then stir them into the soup pot, immediately cover and remove from heat. Let the pot rest covered for 20 minutes for the flavors to meld.

Serve hot with fresh sprigs of parsley or dill and a dollop of sour cream if desired. Sometimes I do, sometimes I don’t. 🙂

NOTES:
*P.S. Pork can be used also. And if your meat has a bone in it, place it in the water whole. After it boils for 45 min to 1 hour, remove it from soup, cut away and discard the bone and cut meat into 1″ pieces).
**To peel whole tomatoes, blanch them in boiling hot water for 30-45 seconds, then transfer to cold water and the skin should peel right off.
Borscht Recipe with Meat

Ingredients
- 1 lb Beef: sirloin, stew meat, or whatever kind of beef you like, really (bone-in or boneless *see note)
- 14 cups cold water
- 1 Tbsp salt + more to taste
- 2 large or 3 medium beets, washed, peeled and grated
- 4 Tbsp olive oil
- 1 Tbsp vinegar
- 1 Tbsp sugar
- 2 Tbsp tomato sauce, or paste (or 3 Tbsp ketchup)
- 1 Tbsp unsalted butter
- 1 medium onion, finely diced
- 2 carrots, grated
- 2 large or 3 medium potatoes, peeled and sliced into bite-sized pieces
- 1/2 head of small cabbage, sliced
- 2 tomatoes, peeled and diced (**see note)
- 2 bay leaves
- 1/4 tsp freshly ground pepper
- 1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley + more for garnish
- 2 cloves garlic, pressed
- Garnish: Sour cream and fresh sprigs of parsley or dill.
Instructions
- Wash meat in cold water, cut into 1" pieces and place in a large soup pot with 14 cups cold water and 1 Tbsp salt. Bring it to a boil and remove the foam as soon as it boils (if you wait, it will be hard to get rid of foam as it integrates into the broth and you'd have to strain it later). Reduce heat, partially cover and simmer 45 minutes - 1 hr, periodically skimming off any foam that rises to the top.
- Grate beets on the large grater holes (a food processor works amazingly well). Place them in a large heavy-bottom skillet with 4 Tbsp olive oil and 1 Tbsp vinegar and saute for 5 minutes, then reduce heat to med/low and add 1 Tbsp sugar and 2 Tbsp tomato sauce Mix thoroughly and saute until starting to soften, stirring occasionally (about 10 min). Remove from pan and set aside.
- In the same skillet (no need to wash it), Saute onion in 1 Tbsp butter for 2 min. Add grated carrot and sautee another 5 min or until softened, adding more oil if it seems too dry.
- Once the meat has been cooking at least 45 min, place sliced potatoes into
- the soup pot and cook 10 min, then add cabbage, sauteed beets, onion & carrot, and chopped tomatoes. Cook another 10 minutes or until potatoes can be easily pierced with a fork.
- Add 2 bay leaves, 1/4 tsp pepper, and more salt to taste (I added another 1/2 tsp salt).
- Chop parsley and pressed garlic then stir them into the soup pot, immediately cover and remove from heat. Let the pot rest covered for 20 minutes for the flavors to meld.
Notes
**To peel whole tomatoes, blanch them in boiling hot water for 30-45 seconds, then transfer to cold water and the skin should peel right off.




Sorry – forgot to add one thing. Our cat loved the beef foam I skimmed off the top of the pot. (She’d have eaten it all if we’d let her!)
Amazingly happy with how this turned out. I was pretty faithful with your recipe, with my own alterations being apple cider vinegar and brown sugar. Complicated recipe, but definitely well worth it. Ate it hot for dinner, then had a bowl cold before bed. Excellent both times. Thanks again!
So great to hear that, Joshua. I’m so glad that you loved this recipe, thank you for giving it a wonderful feedback!
Chop an onion with no tears. Hold the onion under cool running water as you peel. Then cut onion almost all the way through, both ways for a checkerboard pattern that falls apart into a dice. (keep that cool water running while you do all this. A variation: peel, slice and dice the onion holding it under cool water in a large bowl. The water gets rid of those noxious fumes.
Love it! Thanks for your tip.
I love this recipe. I make it almost every week. Kids and husband love it! They always get excited when I make it! Also, I’ve tried a lot of your recipes. You’re definitely my go to when I look for something to make.
Thank you!
Awww that’s the best! Thank you so much for sharing that with me! I’m all smiles!
Hello Natasha,
I am a complete amateur in the kitchen but love this recipe so much; definitely reminds me of my mother’s and grandmother’s cooking.
Can you clarify one thing for me —
After I add the potatoes do I turn the heat up from a simmer? I’ve been finding that if I leave the heat low, the potatoes don’t cook but when I turned it up the meat overcooked. Also am I cooking the potatoes and veggies uncovered or covered?
Thanks so much!
Alex
Hi Alex, we make sure itas lightly simmering when we add the potatoes. I’m so glad you enjoyed this recipe!
At what point do you add the meat into the soup? Do you discard or use the meat broth? These 2 things are not in the steps.
Hi Linda, the meat is the first item in the soup. We never took it out. That’s what cooks and makes the broth. I hope that helps.
Hi Natasha, Love your recipes and your videos. Love making borsht, but don’t know why my borsht looses it’s beautiful red colour. Any ideas why?
Hi Arlene, thank you for that awesome feedback! It could be either the preparation method or the type of beets – some beets give off a pink color while others give a deep ruby red.
Delicious! Perfect recipe! My family is from Moldova. All of the recipes are “a little bit of this, a few fingers of that…” Thanks for being so clear here!
You’re welcome! I’m so glad this recipe is helpful!
I can’t find your borscht recipe #1. It’s my favorite and you removed it from your site… :-((((
Hi Liliya, we have the original link posted in the comments or archived here. We updated the original borscht here to what we feel is even better than the original.
I used this and you classic borsht recipe as my base. The major change I made is that I made a bone broth with neck and marrow bones (pork) and used the meat from that. I love the richness of homemade bone both, though it is a pain to cook for 10-12 hours. Also, I added beans with the meat– like your classic recipe. But I used fresh cranberry beans for the beans, not canned. Even my husband, who is not a soup fan, loved it. Thank you. This is a keeper.
Sounds like you found a new favorite, Layla! Thank you for that awesome review.
While not quite the same as what I had living in Russia, damn Nastya, this was a delicious recipe and gave me all the feels!!!
I’m so glad you enjoyed that!
Perfect
Thank you! I’m so glad you enjoyed that!
I don’t like beets. We had all the items to make the borscht. I have never tasted this soup nor made it before. Stellar soup the broth was so tasty. Thank you for the veggie and bean version. I suffer from gout so red meat is out. I was really impressed.
What is summer borscht? How is it different from the recipe I made today?
Hi Dina, I’m so glad you enjoyed that. Summer Borscht is served cold.
I am absolutely in love with this soup! It was the first borscht recipe I tried and I will stick with it. Just made it and my Mom’s waiting on me to bring her a bowl. DELICIOUS!!!
That’s just awesome!! Thank you for sharing your wonderful review, Krystal!
My mother-in-law is from Ukraine. This is almost identical to her borsch (There’s no” T”. That was an American addition to the name.). Hers does not call for meat, vinegar, bay leaf or parsley. She also does not use fresh tomatoes, but does use a 1/2 red bell pepper instead, which adds sweetness. Just like the recipe above, she adds about a 4 oz. can of tomato sauce and the carrots, cabbage, and potatoes.
Thank you so much for sharing that with me.
A question…Would it spoil the soup if I used a ham hock AND stew meat? That’s what I have on hand but don’t want to mess up the taste.
HI Iris, my Mother often changes up the meat and that sounds like it would work well.
Hi, thanks for your reply…you mean she adds different types of meat in same batch? Like beef and pork together?
Usually not in the same batch.
Thank you!
Hi, love this recipe! I just got back from a 3 month visit in Yuzhne, 30 minutes from Kharkiv. I think I tried over 20 different versions and this is the best hands down, don’t tell mother in law, lol. Anyway, question is can you freeze the leftovers? Making a big pot a don’t want to loose it. Thank you, Alicia
That’s so awesome Alicia! Thank you for that amazing feedback and yes, I think this would freeze well.
My mom and grandma always made the soup for us, I really missed the soup since we moved state side and couldn’t master my moms because she could never really tell me the exact amounts and I kept messing something up! Then I found your your recipe and made it today and got it right and I am crying because I love it so much, a taste of home was so much needed, thank you for this delicious recipe! I would give 10 stars if I could
Wow! Thank you so much for the TEN STARS!!! You just made my day! I’m so happy you enjoyed this recipe Vika!
Hello, Natasha! Thank you for posting this lovely recipe! We had a lovely neighbor who was Moldovan and would bring us big pots of Borscht every couple of months or so!
If you don’t mind I’m going to link to your recipe in my upcoming post on my blog 🙂 the post is about gardening and I find that many Americans don’t like beets, but I think they would like them more if they made your borscht! 😉 Thanks again for a great recipe!
Hi Hannah, that would be wonderful if you linked back and thank you so much! 🙂
I’ve made Borscht before, but never with this recipe. In the past I had the beets and carrots in chunks, not grated, and only the onions was sauteed. I really like the way flavor of this Borscht and will use this recipe again! It was also very clear and easy to follow. I am definitely going to look at more of your recipes!
I’m so happy you enjoyed this recipe, Scott! Thank you for sharing that awesome feedback with me!