Meet your new favourite sweet potato recipe! Set in a mesmerising ringed pattern, this Sweet Potato Bake is simple to make, eye-catching and tastes even better than it looks. Here’s an excellent, special occasion-worthy side dish that’s still easy enough for dinner tonight!
A sweet potato side dish to impress!
I actually don’t have that many sweet potato side dishes in my repertoire. I think it’s because when I think of potato side dishes, I tend to think crispy (like Duck Fat Potatoes) or creamy and cheesy (like Potato Dauphinoise). So sweet potatoes are never my natural choice. For one, cream + cheese + sweet potato sounds like an odd combination to me (perhaps someone can prove me wrong here). Secondly, sweet potato just doesn’t properly bake up to be crispy like regular potatoes do.
So I decided it was time to expand my sweet potato collection. This spiral Sweet Potato Bake is what I’ve come up, to put an eye-catching spin on an otherwise straightforward bake!
What you need to make this Sweet Potato Bake
Here’s what you need to make this dish:
Sweet potatoes – To make this dish look neat, look for long, evenly-shaped ones so the slices will be as similar size as possible. But really, if the sweet potato you find aren’t exactly shaped like the above, don’t let that stop you from making this!
Rosemary – I often pair rosemary with sweet potato. The strong, woody flavour and aroma goes so well, and as a hardy herb it can also stand up to the 50 minutes it takes to bake. Dried herbs would also work here: rosemary, thyme, oregano or a herb mix all come to mind;
Garlic – For flavour. Not many savoury dishes happen around here without garlic!
Butter and oil – Butter for flavour, oil to promote some nice crispy edges.
Did you know? Butter is ~20% water and dairy solids. This is enough to stops things from baking up to be crispy. Oil on the other hand is 100% fat and makes things truly crispy. We love butter for flavour, though. So to get the best of both worlds, I use a combination of both!
Salt and pepper
How to make a spiral Sweet Potato Bake
Slice sweet potato – Leave the skin on and slice the potatoes 3-4mm thick. You can make short work of this if you have a mandoline that can slice them to this thickness. We don’t want them too thin or they’ll flop over when you try to arrange them;
Toss – In a large bowl, toss the sweet potato slices with butter, oil, salt, pepper, garlic and rosemary. It’s best to use your hands. Separate the slices as you do this because they tend to stick together. We want each slice nicely coated!
Arrange in skillet – Arrange the sweet potato slices in an ovenproof skillet (mine is 26cm / 11″) in circles. (Yep, you got me, it’s not a true spiral! But rings actually make more sense here to fill the skillet properly.) To do this, gather a stack at a time (photo 3) and place them in the skillet on its side (photo 4). Continue placing end to end until you’re three quarters of the way around the skillet. Then push them over so they overlap each other. As they spread out, they should fill the perimeter of the skillet.
Other shapes: It doesn’t have to be round and it doesn’t have to be a skillet. I used my cast iron skillet because it looks great against the orange potato plus it retains heat so well. You can use a baking dish – round, oval or a 25cm/10″ square one. For square or rectangle dishes, I suggest arranging them in lines rather than spiral;
Arranging in skillet (continued) – As described in step 3 above;
Fill centre – Now do a small overlapping circle in the centre of the skillet, to fill the space as best you can;
Bake covered – Cover with foil and bake for 30 minutes at 180°C/350°F (all oven types). In this step, the potatoes should cook most of the way through but not completely;
Bake uncovered – Remove from the oven then crank up the oven to 220°C/430°F (200°C fan) to brown the top of the potatoes. Remove the foil, drizzle with olive oil (just to give the potatoes a little helping hand for the browning), and pop it back into the oven for 20 minutes or until the tops are a nicely coloured and a bit crispy.
Crispy facts: Sweet potato just doesn’t go truly crispy, unlike regular potato. It’s just a plain fact of life, sadly. We will get some nice edges, but actually they’re more chewy caramelised edges rather than crispy. Still, the caramelised bits are delicious and everyone’s favourite part!
Finally, garnish if desired with a little sprinkle of fresh, finely chopped rosemary, maybe also a little whole sprig or two, and a pinch of sea salt flakes.
Now serve your dazzling sweet potato side dish with anything and everything! The only catch is that those edges do soften over time so it’s not the best to keep. As sweet potato already struggles to get real crispiness, it’s at its peak fresh out of the oven. As it cools, the crispy edges soften and they can’t be resurrected.
After leaving it in the fridge overnight, you’ll find it’s completely soft. But that’s not to say it’s not tasty! It still is, with the lovely rosemary-garlic-butter flavour. I’ve been known to give it a freshening by pan-frying slabs of it until golden and crispy. SO GOOD! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Sweet Potato Bake
Ingredients
- 1.25 kg / 2.5 lb 4 -5 sweet potatoes (each 6cm / 2.5" wide, 20cm / 8" long, as evenly shaped as possible); finely sliced, skin on; (Note 1)
- 30g / 2 tbsp unsalted butter , melted
- 2 garlic cloves , finely minced
- 2 tbsp olive oil , plus a little extra for brushing the skillet
- 3/4 tsp kosher / cooking salt
- 1/4 tsp black pepper
- 1 tbsp rosemary leaves, finely chopped , plus more for garnish / serving
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 180°C/350°F. Brush skillet base and sides with a little olive oil.
- Slice potatoes: Slice potatoes 3-4mm thick. A mandoline will make short work of this.
- Toss: Place in large bowl, pour in all butter plus 1 tbsp olive oil, rosemary, salt and pepper. Toss well with hands, separating the slices so they are all coated with oil.
- Layer in skillet: Layer potato in skillet in a circular pattern, overlapping the slices. (See post for details)
- Bake covered 30 minutes: Cover with foil, bake for 30 minutes until potato is quite soft (almost fully cooked).
- Brush with oil: Remove from oven, turn up to 220°C/430°F (200°C fan). Remove foil, brush potato with remaining 1 tbsp oil.
- Bake uncovered 20 minutes: Bake 20 minutes until tops are golden and slightly crisp, and potato is cooked through (check with a knife or skewer).
- Serve: Scatter with more rosemary leaves, a whole sprig of rosemary and pinch of sea salt flakes if desired. Serve immediately! Sweet potato loses crispiness as it cools.
Recipe Notes:
Nutrition Information:
More sweet potato love
Life of Dozer
Photo from the Golden Retriever boarder while I’m in Tasmania – this is what surrounds her every morning when she’s munching on dry toast. (That’s Dozer’s big face at the front there, shoving his way to the front of the pack!).
Kathleen O'Hara says
Took this to a potluck and everyone raved. Great flavor, great presentation! Opened the window to get parking directions and the guy commented on how great my car smelled!
Anjanette says
Needs more time than stated. Delicious though.
sjanie ippel says
one of my favourite recipes
Kathy says
Could this be done with regular (russet) potatoes?
Brenda says
Delicious and appealing! I added a very finely chopped chipotle to it and served it with my holiday meal of smoked turkey and roasted greens with braised shallots. A real keeper! Thank you!
Brenda says
I added a very finely chopped chipotle pepper to the mix. It was a hit! Served it with smoked turkey and roasted green beans with braised shallots. Perfect addition to the holiday meal! It’s beautiful to the eyes, too! Thanks!
Chaylee says
Another winner, Nagi. Made exactly as specified and turned out perfectly. Who knew sweet potato and rosemary were such a great match?! Thanks for sharing.
Ilene says
This is so good that it’s now my go-to recipe for making sweet potatoes.
Thea says
Oh my gosh this was delicious! I made this a couple days ago as a trial for Thanksgiving and it was a winner. For Thanksgiving I may add a little thyme and sage too. I bought a few purple sweet potatoes to mix in as well. Do you think that would work?
Mickey says
I want to make for Thanksgiving this year. Do you think that I can prepare this the day before and then put in the oven to bake on Thanksgiving?
Corrie Janocka says
Did you try this? How did it turn out?
Sherry Pinzone says
I made these sweet potatoes for a clambake and they were delicious! I did peel the sweet potatoes and crinkle cut them for aesthetics. They were a hit!
Anna says
I didn’t have enough sweet potato so I alternated with normal potato slices (conveniently had some potatoes relatively round and the same size!). Looked spectacular and tasted great.
Zenia says
Hi Nagi..
Amazing recipe as always 😊
However there’s no mention of garlic in steps. At what point is it added?
Nagi says
Sorry Zenia that’s my typo! Add it ti the oil when you toss the potatoes! N x
Sharon says
Delicious and impressive!
Made this recipe for the first time last night and it was a hit!
I will be adding this dish to all my special dinners in the future.
Thank you!!
Kira says
Thanks for showing me how to make a dish I’d never have thought I could make! Such a good way to serve sweet potatoes. Everyone loved it and it looked really impressive and professional yet nicely rustic at the same time. Another delicious recipe of yours that was deceptively easy to put together. I must make your browned butter sweet potato casserole ASAP. Looks amazing!
Sharon Kumar says
Can I use my air fryer for this? My oven isn’t great so trying to convert things to put into the air fryer is helpful at this stage. I adore your recipes. They’re my go to no fail each time. Thanks.
Nagi says
Sorry Sharon I have not done air fryer testing on this so can’t tell you! N x
Lydia says
If I don’t have a cast iron skillet what can I use instead?
Nagi says
Just use a ceramic casserole then Lydia! N x
Daniel says
Love your recipes…
Have cooked a lot of them for my family and have enjoyed every dish…. Thank you
Lisa says
Hi Nagi,
Love all of your recipes. Having a Boxing Day lunch and your site is my go to for guests. We have a dairy, allergies coming and someone on dialysis. This would be a perfect side dish other than butter. Is there something I can use in place of the butter to give it good flavour or should I just use extra oil?
Thx heaps
Lisa says
Sorry. Just realised not good for dialysis person, but still would like to know butter alternative please.
Thank you
Nagi says
Hi Lisa – butter adds some of the flavour here but you could use all oil. N x
Amy says
Made this today for thanksgiving. Everyone loved it, great flavor and nice crispy edges. Only thing I did different was added shredded Parmesan at the end, but I put cheese on everything, lol.
John says
The most delicious use of sweet potatoes ever. Thanks.
Nagi says
You are welcome John!! N x