Skip to main content

Baked Sweet Potato with Olives, Feta, and Chile

Two sweet potatoes one slit open and filled with the titular ingredients.
Photo by Floortje Van Essen-Ingen Housz

Baking intensifies the sweetness of sweet potatoes and gives the bright orange flesh a kind of fluffiness—light and soft at the same time. Sweet potato is terrific combined with salty olives, creamy feta, and hot chile pepper. Once they're baked, you can easily keep them in the fridge for days, or you can use them to make a quick, flavorful soup.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    1 serving, with leftovers

Ingredients

2 very large or 4–5 small sweet potatoes
Olive oil, for greasing and drizzling
Coarse sea salt
50 g creamy feta (about 1/3 cup crumbles)
A small handful of salty black olives, pitted and coarsely chopped
1 red chile pepper (with or without seeds), sliced into rings
A small handful of fresh cilantro leaves, coarsely chopped

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Preheat the oven to 400°F. Scrub, rinse and dry the sweet potatoes. Pour a little olive oil on to your palms and rub this over the unpeeled sweet potatoes.

    Step 2

    Next, rub in some coarse salt. Pierce the sweet potatoes a few times on all sides using a small sharp knife, then wrap them in tin foil and bake for an hour (or a little longer, if necessary) until done. Use half of them immediately and leave the rest to cool.

    Step 3

    Place the sweet potato(es) on a plate and open the foil. Cut in half lengthways, then press on the outside of the halves so that the fluffy flesh bulges out slightly. Crumble the feta over the sweet potato(es), top with the olives, chile pepper and cilantro, and drizzle generously with olive oil.

Cover of the cookbook featuring four images: a ramen, a pasta, fish over rice, and dessert in coffee cup.
From Solo Food: 72 Recipes for You Alone © 2019 by Janneke Vreugdenhil. Reprinted with permission by HQ, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. Buy the full book from HarperCollins or from Amazon.
Read More
Creamy and bright with just a subtle bit of heat, this five-ingredient, make-ahead dip is ready for company—just add crudités.
Berbere is a spicy chile blend that has floral and sweet notes from coriander and cardamom, and when it’s paired with a honey glaze, it sets these wings apart from anything else you’ve ever had.
All the cozy vibes of the classic gooey-cheesy dish, made into a 20-minute meal.
A good garlic mashed potato recipe can upstage even the flashiest of mains. Adding just a few cloves of garlic turns what could be a simple side dish into something with undeniable charm.
This sauce is slightly magical. The texture cloaks pasta much like a traditional meat sauce does, and the flavors are deep and rich, but it’s actually vegan!
Among the top tier of sauces is Indonesian satay sauce, because it is the embodiment of joy and life. In fact, this sauce is also trustworthy and highly respectful of whatever it comes into contact with—perhaps it is, in fact, the perfect friend?
This is what I call a fridge-eater recipe. The key here is getting a nice sear on the sausage and cooking the tomato down until it coats the sausage and vegetables well.
Caramelized onions, melty Gruyère, and a deeply savory broth deliver the kind of comfort that doesn’t need improving.