Mashed sweet potatoes with chipotle chiles
Growing up, not a holiday dinner or church potluck supper was complete without a casserole dish filled with baked sweet potatoes topped with marshmallows. If you’ve never seen this dish, let me tell you—it looks bizarre.
Perhaps it’s the lurid color or perhaps it’s because the pairing with a dessert item with a savory item (sweet descriptor notwithstanding), though I feel the main reason why I’m not a fan is that I don’t typically like marshmallows. (Though I will eat homemade marshmallows. I am full of contradictions.)
To wit: when we’d go to Luby’s, while my family dug into slices of chess pie for dessert, I’d be eating cornbread) and seeing this large baking dish filled with a brown and orange oozing substance covered with white dots never seemed appealing.
It looked like really bad 1970’s interior design. It wasn’t dessert, either–it was considered a savory side. So I grew up thinking that sweet potatoes had to be served with marshmallows, and I never tried them.
But now that I’ve acquired a more adventurous palate, I’ve learned that sans marshmallows, sweet potatoes are extremely healthy, as they are packed with vitamin A, vitamin C, fiber, iron, and calcium. They’re also quite versatile and delicious, and can appear in a host of different recipes, both savory and sweet. For instance, they are good in everything from salad to cheesecake.

A lot of places market them as yams, but the two are not the same. While sweet potatoes are a native American vegetable, yams hail from Africa and Asia. Even more interesting is that while the sweet potato is a distant relative of regular potatoes, its relation to yams is even more removed. So why do people confuse the two? I reckon because they’re both orange on the inside.
On a recent trip to the market, I saw a ton of sweet potatoes and I was thrilled to see some of the varieties on hand—there was one bigger than my head! And there are so many ways you can cook them.
For example, you can fry them like French fries, you can bake them in a pie, you can make sweet potato soup, you can stuff them in dumplings or pasta, you can make sweet potato hash, you can bake sweet potato bread—basically, anything you can do with a potato you can do with a sweet potato.
One of my favorite things to do with them is make a sweet-potato mash flavored with chipotle peppers. It’s been a holiday hit with my family for years, so much, in fact, they stopped making the horrible sweet potatoes with marshmallows.

Now that’s progress! But even better is how healthy this dish is: because sweet potatoes are so naturally moist, you don’t need to pour in milk to make the dish creamy—it’s just the sweet potatoes and the peppers. Though if I’m feeling fancy, I’ll also add a few pats of butter for some extra richness and flavor.
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Mashed sweet potatoes with chipotle chiles
Ingredients
- 4 sweet potatoes
- 1 or 2 chipotle chile peppers in adobo sauce
- 4 tablespoons unsalted butter
- 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 375°F and line a baking sheet with foil.
- Prick the sweet potatoes all over with a fork, place on the sheet and bake for 1 hour and 15 minutes. Remove from the oven and let them cool for 15 minutes.
- Once the sweet potatoes have cooled, slice in half, and scoop out the orange flesh into a bowl. Mash with a potato masher or a fork.
- Finely chop the chipotle chiles, and stir into the mashed sweet potatoes along the butter and salt. When well combined, taste and add more salt if desired. Serve warm.
Notes
This post was originally published in 2006 and was updated in 2022.








I may be southern, but yams freak me out… though I’ve had them on the family table many, many times… just exactly like you.
I always put some on plate and rarely eat it. The nice thing about growing older is that I don’t have to shine my plate, unless I want to.
They are nice to grow though. Good vine. Purple. I might grow some this winter.
thanksgiving just isn’t thanksgiving in our family unless there’s a dish of sweet potatoes with sticky, bubbly marshmallows browned on the top. it’s always a kid’s job to put the marshmallows on top – this year, it’ll be my nephew dylan again who gets the honor of topping the potatoes. i don’t love them as much as i did when i was a kid, and i usually scrape most of the marshmallows off now, but i have to have at least one bite, as it always ushers me off, right to my childhood.
we also have at least 2 pumpkin pies (at LEAST) and 2 sweet potato pies – which may look the same, or similar enough to be confused for each other, but are two very different pies with different flavors, and completely different textures. don’t make me choose…
Now the real way to do the marshamllow thing is to get the little multicolored ones — pink, blue, etc. They look so gourmet against the orange sweet potatoes, don’t you know?
My mom always candied sweets with brown sugar, cinnamon and butter and it wouldn’t be the holidays with out them.
I am also very partial to a sweet potato fry, hot and crispy and drizzled with shagbark hickory syrup. Yummm.
mmmmm – Sweet potato french fries!
Mm… growing up, my family didn’t really do the sweet potato thing. I think we had mostly Asian sides to our giant turkey- I was maybe 12 or 13 before my mom figured out to buy stuffing in a box to make. Don’t ask. But I’ve tried sweet potatoes with the marshmallows over it in various incarnations, hating them, until now, when I go to my boyfriend’s aunt’s for Christmas… and he insisted the first year that I try the sweet potatoes. Hers are really good, with a bit of marshmallow (I let him take most of it since he likes it more than I do) on top, but other people’s are gross. Hers aren’t stringy… and not too sweet, just right. But I do like sweet potato fries… and oh! Do you watch the Food Network? Alton Brown JUST did a show on (or it was a repeat) sweet potatoes, explained the difference between sweet potatoes and yams, and he made waffles with sweet potatoes. Then he made mashed sweet potatoes and added chiles, just like you did, though I’m not sure what kind. 🙂 I can’t wait for Thanksgiving now =D