Twice Baked Sweet Potatoes with Quinoa and Kale Recipe (2024)

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This Twice Baked Sweet Potatoes with Quinoa and Kalerecipeisa great fallside dish, but you might even want to enjoy it as a vegetarian main dish! It’s stuffed full of flavor withquinoa, kale, candied walnuts, and blue cheese.

This post brought to you by P.F. Chang’s. All opinions are 100% mine.

Autumn is my favorite foodie season. I’m a fan of nearly all the foods the season has to offer and with that, I have started to enjoy cooking seasonally too. I didn’t always pay attention to such things, but now that I do, I find that it helps me to enjoy the season even more.

To celebrate fall, P.F. Chang’s challenged me to create adish using at least 3 of the seasonal ingredients from theirFall Seasonal Menu.

Challenge accepted! The seasonal dish I’ve created for the contentareTwice Baked Sweet Potatoes with Quinoa and Kale, which I’m going to share with you today. It uses 3 of the P.F. Chang’s seasonal ingredients: Red Quinoa, Kale, and Candied Walnuts.

It starts with two sweet potatoes that you wash well and bake in the oven until tender.The potatoes are cut in half length-wise and the pulp is scooped out and placed in a bowl. The skins are set aside for later.

Twice Baked Sweet Potatoes with Quinoa and Kale Recipe (2)

While the sweet potatoes are cooking, you will cook your quinoa. You will also saute your kale, until it is wilted and just beginning to brown or dry out on the edges.

Twice Baked Sweet Potatoes with Quinoa and Kale Recipe (3)

The sweet potato pulp is mashed up and mixed with a bit of butter, 1/2 cup cooked red quinoa, the kale, 1/4 cup chopped candied walnuts, and some blue cheese crumbles. Finally, it’s seasoned to taste with salt.

Twice Baked Sweet Potatoes with Quinoa and Kale Recipe (4)

All of this is placed back into the sweet potato skins, and they are topped with a bit more walnuts and blue cheese crumbles. Then they are baked in the oven until hot and lightly browned.

Twice Baked Sweet Potatoes with Quinoa and Kale Recipe (5)

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Twice Baked Sweet Potatoes with Quinoa and Kale Recipe (6)

Twice Baked Sweet Potatoes with Quinoa and Kale

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  • Author: Brandie Valenuela
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Description

This Twice Baked Sweet Potatoes with Quinoa and Kalerecipeisa great fallside dish, but you might even want to enjoy it as a vegetarian main dish! It’s stuffed full of flavor withquinoa, kale, candied walnuts, and blue cheese.

Ingredients

Scale

  • 2 large sweet potatoes
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 2 cups chopped kale (stems removed, well packed)
  • 1 tablespoon butter
  • 1/2 cup cooked red quinoa
  • 1/4 cup roughly chopped candied walnuts (plus more for garnish)
  • 23 ounces blue cheese crumbles (divided)
  • Salt (to taste)

Instructions

  1. Wash sweet potatoes well, pierce skin several times with the tines of a fork or the tip of a knife (keep cuts very small). Baked on a foil-lined baking sheet in a 400 degree F oven for about 45 minutes or until tender.
  2. While sweet potatoes are cooking, heat olive oil in skillet and cook kale until wilted and edges are just beginning to brown or dry out. Remove from heat.
  3. When sweet potatoes are tender, remove from the oven and allow to cool slightly. Cut sweet potatoes in half lengthwise. Scoop out sweet potato flesh from skins and place in a bowl – set skins aside, you will be refilling them later.
  4. Mash the sweet potato that is in the bowl with a fork or potato masher. Add butter, stirring until melted and combined. Gently stir in the kale and quinoa. When ingredients are combine, stir in the walnuts and about 2 ounces of blue cheese crumbles. Season to taste with salt.
  5. Refill potato skins with mixture. Garnish with a sprinkle of candied walnuts and blue cheese crumbles. Return to oven and bake until sweet potatoes are hot and top is beginning to brown.

Notes

–To make 1/2 cup cooked quinoa, cook 1/4 cup uncooked quinoa according to package instructions.

  • Category: Side Dish
  • Method: Baking
  • Cuisine: American

Recipe Card powered byTwice Baked Sweet Potatoes with Quinoa and Kale Recipe (7)

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Comments

  1. Ashley VanDercar says

    WOW! I was looking for something healthy with kale and quinoa and sweet potato – and stumbled upon this. It was out of this world. I made a few changes:

    I used coconut oil instead of olive oil.
    I did not use walnuts or blue cheese.
    I used almond milk instead of butter, and put the potato in a blender then mixed by hand with one cup of quinoa and the two cups of chopped kale. Then, I put 1 tbsp of grated parmesean on each filled potato and baked it at 450 for 12 minutes.

    AMAZING!

    Reply

  2. Quinn Caudill says

    Sounds yummy but I am not sure about the kale. Personal preference. Thanks for sharing with us at #Throwback Thursday. Hope to see you again this week.

    Reply

  3. Margy says

    I tried growing quinoa last year, but the critters ate most of the plants before I could get them harvested. But kale is always in my garden. Sounds like an interesting recipe I could try. This week I diced a sweet potato and sauteed it butter. Once it was soft I added chopped kale for a simple side dish with our roast beef. – Margy

    Reply

  4. Debbie says

    This looks so yummy! Thanks for sharing the recipe.

    Reply

Twice Baked Sweet Potatoes with Quinoa and Kale Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why do you soak sweet potatoes before baking? ›

The cold water bath helps rinse the starch off the sweet potatoes so they're a bit more crispy. That said, if you do not have the time, you can still get crispy baked sweet potato fries by using high heat and a little drizzle of olive oil.

What is the best way to cook sweet potatoes to retain nutrients? ›

Boiling sweet potatoes retains more beta-carotene and makes the nutrient more absorbable than other cooking methods such as baking or frying. Up to 92% of the nutrient can be retained by limiting the cook time, such as boiling in a pot with a tightly covered lid for 20 minutes.

Why are my roasted sweet potatoes not crispy? ›

I've found that sweet potatoes really need space for a truly roasted, crisped-edge result. Aim for about one inch of space between pieces. This leads to good, dry, hot airflow that will let the potato pieces' moisture evaporate while letting them dry and crisp up more.

Is it healthier to bake or microwave a sweet potato? ›

It's really the best way. Microwaving sweet potatoes cuts down cook time by 45 to 55 minutes, and, according to a 2018 study, helps maintain the potato's nutritional value. All cooking methods cause foods to lose some of their nutrients, but the quicker your potato cooks, the more nutrients it will retain.

Should sweet potatoes be peeled before baking? ›

Whether or not you peel the potato is completely personal preference; we leave ours on as I enjoy the texture. If you are serving children or sensitive eaters, consider peeling the sweet potatoes before roasting. Cut Uniform-ish Pieces.

Should you rinse sweet potatoes before cooking? ›

Skipping the Scrub-and-Wash Step

Sweet potatoes grow in the ground, and skipping the cleaning step means dirt or grit can end up in your sweet potato casserole. Before cooking or cutting sweet potatoes, wash the skins and give them a scrub with a clean vegetable brush.

What is the healthiest way to cook sweet potatoes? ›

At the same time, the glycemic index of boiled sweet potatoes was found to be about half that of baking or roasting, so boiled sweet potatoes give us less of a blood sugar spike. Make sure to keep the skin on, though.

What's the best temperature for baking sweet potatoes? ›

Preheat the oven to 425°F and place a piece of foil on a baking sheet. Use a fork to poke holes into the sweet potatoes, set them on the baking sheet, and roast for 40 to 50 minutes, or until puffed up and soft inside when pierced with a fork.

Why are my sweet potatoes still hard after baking? ›

If it still feels firm, I'd put it back in the oven for another 15 minutes. Expert tip! Drop your baked sweet potato from about 10 inches above onto a cutting board or the baking pan.

Why do sweet potatoes go black when roasting? ›

One of the phenols, called chlorogenic acid, is the culprit that makes sweet potatoes, and sometimes, regular potatoes darken when they're cooked. The chlorogenic acid combines with iron ions in the potato and oxygen absorbed from the atmosphere and cooking water, creating the dark pigment.

Does cooking sweet potatoes longer make them sweeter? ›

The longer and slower you cook a sweet potato, the more maltose is formed and the sweeter it will taste.

Can dogs have sweet potatoes? ›

Whether they're mashed, baked, or boiled, sweet potatoes are fine for dogs to eat as long as they're cooked, peeled, and plain. Again, avoid any seasonings or extra ingredients that may be included in “human food” recipes, such as butter, sugar, or salt.

What tastes better boiled or baked sweet potatoes? ›

Baking whole sweet potatoes in the oven or cutting them into cubes and roasting them caramelizes the potatoes' starchy flesh, making it sweeter and giving it a silky smooth texture. Even if you are making mashed sweet potatoes, they will taste better with oven-cooked potatoes.

Why add eggs to sweet potato casserole? ›

A really good sweet potato casserole filling should be light and moist, not dense. If it's dense, then you may not have added an often overlooked ingredient—an egg. An egg adds lift, structure and volume and makes the filling more custard-like.

Should I soak sweet potatoes in water before roasting? ›

No, there is no need to soak sweet potatoes before roasting. What temperature should I bake my sweet potatoes? Bake sweet potatoes at a high temperature. We find that anything between 400°F and 450°F works well.

Should you soak potatoes in salt or sugar water? ›

Why use salt water for soaking potatoes? There's moisture naturally found in potatoes, and moisture is drawn to higher concentrations of salt. (This is a process called osmosis.) So, if you put the potatoes in a salt water bath, that will help draw out some of their moisture, resulting in crispier fries.

How long to soak sweet potatoes to remove starch? ›

Transfer to a bowl filled with ice and water and let it soak for 30 minutes. The cold water helps with removing excess starch and crisping up the potatoes later.

Why do chefs soak potatoes? ›

The reason is to prevent the potatoes exposure to air, which causes dehydration, oxidation, and discoloration. Immersing cut potatoes will also help rinse off excess starch.

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