Loaded Sweet Potatoes With Marshmallows
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These loaded sweet potatoes are the perfect treat and Southern side dish to serve this holiday season, thanks to the caramelized brown sugar, butter, and toasted gooey marshmallow topping.
If you’re a fan of my sweet potato casserole recipe with marshmallows, you’re going to love these loaded sweet potatoes! There’s basically a mini casserole (how good does that sound?). These loaded sweet potatoes are easy to make and stuffed with so much sweet goodness, I know you’ll be making them not just around Thanksgiving (they’re just that good). The tender twice-baked sweet potatoes are loaded with cinnamon, melted butter, brown sugar, and toasty marshmallows.
I mean, what’s not to love about a piece of food that counts as a vegetable but tastes like a treat? Even without the sweetness of the added toppings, I love me some sweet potato recipes! If you do as well, check out my vegan sweet potato cake with maple cashew icing, easy candied sweet potatoes, sweet potato bread with cinnamon swirl, and sweet potato pie (Southern Plate-style).
Plus, if you keep reading, I’m going to show you the easy foolproof way to bake a sweet potato so it’s perfectly done. This means it’s soft, tender, and fluffy as well.
Recipe Ingredients
- Sweet potatoes
- Butter (I used unsalted butter)
- Brown sugar (either dark or light brown sugar, whatever you have on hand)
- Cinnamon
- Marshmallows
Place sweet potatoes on a foil-lined baking sheet.
You can skip the aluminum foil if you want but it will mean some cleanup later as sweet potatoes often weep a sticky liquid onto your baking dish while cooking.
Now for the baking part. Bake at 400 for 30 minutes, then reduce oven to 350 and bake for an additional 60 minutes.
These are how they will look when done.
Slice each baked potato open at the top. I just use a butter knife or whatever I grab first.
They are soft at this point so a butter knife will do.
Use a dish towel so you don’t burn yourself or cover your hand with an oven mitt and grab hold of the sweet potato and push both of the ends together towards the center, which causes it to open up like in the picture above.
Add butter, brown sugar, and cinnamon to each baked sweet potato, according to taste. I do about a tablespoon of butter, a tablespoon of brown sugar, and 1/4 tsp cinnamon in each one.
Now, they are ready to serve UNLESS you want to top each with toasted marshmallow goodness! You know you wanna… (or at least I want you to).
Top with mini marshmallows.
Return to oven until marshmallows are toasted.
Voila! Our perfect loaded sweet potatoes!
These make a great simple Thanksgiving side dish but I like them any time I can get them!
Storage
I don’t recommend freezing leftovers. However, you can store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 3 days. Reheat in the air fryer or in the oven to toast the marshmallows again.
Recipe Notes
- It’s a totally personal preference when it comes to baking your sweet potatoes. I don’t do anything to mine, but if you like, feel free to poke holes in your sweet potatoes, drizzle them with olive oil, or wrap them in foil prior to baking.
- If you want to brown your marshmallows faster, turn the broiler on low and keep a close eye on it. If you’ve never cooked anything under your broiler you need to know that it can go from just fine to burned beyond recognition in a matter of minutes. So stay right there and keep an eyeball on it. My mother usually cracks her oven door open a little and watches.
- For additional spice, add a 1/4 teaspoon of nutmeg to each loaded sweet potato.
- You can also add a sprinkle of chopped pecans before you add the mini marshmallows.
- Another option is to drizzle the sweet potatoes with before
Recipe FAQs
Can I make the loaded sweet potatoes in advance?
Yes, you can store your stuffed sweet potatoes covered in the fridge overnight. Return them to room temperature before topping them with marshmallows and baking as per the recipe instructions.
Does the cooking time change if I bake more sweet potatoes?
No, the cooking time shouldn’t change no matter the number of sweet potatoes.
Should I use yams or sweet potatoes?
I prefer the rounder ones that fill up my palm like the picture above. Sometimes, though, all you can find are the skinny ones and if that is what you have, they’ll do just fine.
Some people (and stores) refer to these as yams, which is an entirely different vegetable altogether. You’d be hard-pressed to find a true yam in the United States. Yams are from Africa and can grow up to three feet in length. They aren’t even related to the sweet potato but when Africans arrived (against their will) in the American South and saw the sweet potato could be cooked in the same manner as they cooked yams, that is what they began calling it, which makes perfect sense, and this caught on.
Why do I call it a sweet potato? Well, for two reasons. 1. That’s what it is. 2. That is what my mother called it. Having said that, though, if you grew up calling them yams, keep on doing your thing!
Here are some more Thanksgiving favorites:
Pumpkin Praline Cake With Cream Cheese Icing
Ingredients
- sweet potatoes
For each potato:
- 1 tablespoon butter
- 1 tablespoon brown sugar
- 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1/2 cup miniature marshmallows
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 400.
- Wash sweet potatoes. Place on a foil-lined baking sheet. Bake at 400 for 30 minutes. Reduce heat to 350 and bake an additional 60 minutes.sweet potatoes
- Cut a slit down the center of each potato. Using an oven mitt, press in on both ends of the potato at the same time, pushing towards the center to puff up the potato. Fill each one with butter, brown sugar, and cinnamon. Top with a handful of marshmallows.1 tablespoon butter, 1 tablespoon brown sugar, 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon, 1/2 cup miniature marshmallows
- Return potatoes to oven until marshmallows are browned and puffed up, about five minutes. Serve warm and enjoy!
Nutrition
I’m not sure I could take over the sweet potato making while my MIL is still around, but I will have to keep this treasure around for my family, thanks so much. I was thinking the same as those emails you got, why didn’t I think of just baking them instead of all the trouble to mash them up after skinnin’ them as my MIL does every year. You are such a gem Christy, thanks!
Thank YOU Alicia!!
Thank you, Christy for sharing this recipe. Saw the sweet potato yesterday on the plate with the slow cooker turkey breast & thought it would be a perfect side dish for the meal. Also, just got my copy of your book “Come Home to Supper”…can’t wait to start trying out those recipes too. At 60 & after working so many years, I am learning to cook and I call my husband (and sometimes my son) my guinea pig. So far I am getting rave reviews! Love you!
Thank you so much Vonda, I am so glad to hear that you are enjoying the recipes!!!
I love them with just butter, salt and pepper. They’re so good for you, but I wonder if the nutrients can fight through the amount of butter I put on them!
I like to think they can!!
Absolutely love baked sweet potatoes and now I will have your song in my head while they are baking!
How cute……….loved that the hubby sang along too.
🙂 We LOVE to sing!!
I love sweet potatoes,here is what I do different than you, since I am not fond of marshmallows on mine I take crushed pineapple (well drained) and put about 2 T. on top the sweet potato once it is nearly done and finish baking it.
Oh, great idea Beulah!!
My wonderful “Granny” was named Beulah. My best memory of her was cooking white sweet potatoes in her wood burning cook stove. She would keep the sweet potatoes in the warmer the stove had on top. I remember going to the wood stove, pulling out one of her white sweet potatoes from the warmer and peeling off the skin. Then put a big pat of her homemade sweet butter on top. Taste like candy. I sure miss my Granny.
Loved your comment that took me back to my childhood with the wood burning cook stove that my grandmother used both coal and wood (we came from SW Virginia). I can remember the smell of those WHITE sweet potatoes baking in the oven and you would slice them open and plop a huge tablespoon of homemade butter on top. These were soooo good!! My Grandmother grew her own white sweet potatoes…we never knew what a “yam” sweet potatoe was. Just this week, I was so thrilled to find organic white sweet potatoes at Publix. Can’t wait to bake them tomorrow!!
I love, love, love baked sweet taters! Eat one almost every day for lunch. Just cut ends off, place in my toaster oven and bake for about an hour while I get ready for work. Love your recipes and posts just as much as I love my sweet taters!
What a great lunch!!
Christy, your singing is great but what really impressed me was the fact that you knew all the words! I couldn’t do it – ever.
~giggles~ We love music and it is really easy for me to remember the words.