Yes it is.
It is related to beetroot.
Yes.
Mixed: Dairy cattle, sheep, grain, sugar-beet, vegetables etc.
F. P. Polupanov has written: 'Mechanization of the cultivation and harvesting of sugar beet' -- subject(s): Harvesting, Beet sugar, Beets, Sugar beet industry, Sugar beet, Beet sugar industry
Edward V. Jesse has written: 'An analysis of cooperative over-order pricing of fluid milk' -- subject(s): Cooperative marketing, Milk, Milk trade, Prices 'Beet sugar supply response in the United States' -- subject(s): Beet sugar, Beet sugar industry, Beets, Sugar, Sugar beet, Sugar beet industry 'Effectiveness of federal marketing orders for fruits and vegetables' -- subject(s): Government purchasing 'Decentralized tomato processing' -- subject(s): Agricultural processing plants, Design and construction, Preservation, Tomatoes
wheat, maize, barley, potatoes, oats, sugar beet, sun flower, vegetables, fruits, etc.
beet-as in sugar beet
Archibald Bridges has written: 'British sugar beet' 'Sugar beet in France, Belgium, Holland and Germany' -- subject(s): Beets and beet sugar
Sugar beets can be turned into dried beet pulp
Any that contain a "sugar", and the younger and fresher the better. Much of our ordinary sugar comes from sugar beet. Young beetroot will taste sweet. So will young carrots and young peas.
Beet sugar is a type of sugar that is extracted from sugar beets. It is different from other types of sugar, such as cane sugar, because it is derived from a different plant source. Beet sugar is chemically identical to cane sugar and is commonly used in food production and cooking.
No they are two separate vegetables.
Sugarcane or sugar beet.