Sweet Potato Casserole with Marshmallows
Sweet Potato Casserole with Marshmallows
Everyone has a favorite dish on Thanksgiving, and as a child, mine was always sweet potatoes. Every year, I looked forward to my grandmother’s version: roasted until caramelized and dripping with butter and brown sugar.
SWEET POTATO CASSEROLE FOR THANKSGIVING DINNER
My immediate family does not share my passion for the sweet spud, so it was only a matter of time (with me consuming the whole casserole by myself for a few years) before I gave up and deleted them from the Thanksgiving menu.
But help was on the way. A very darling girl joined our family this past summer and brought her enthusiasm for sweet potatoes with her. I’m no fool! A wife holds stronger sway over her husband than a mother over her married son.
So sweet potatoes are back on the menu, whether my son is gung-ho or not!
My newly minted daughter-in-law and I have been cooking Thanksgiving together for a few years even before they were married. Aspiring to be a good future mother-in-law, I relinquished my beloved version for hers, which, as it turns out, includes marshmallows.
When I pondered how to streamline an already established dish, I made only a few small tweaks.
SWEET POTATOES VS. YAMS
A sweet potato is not a yam. Despite what supermarkets’ confusing labels might say, a yam is a tuber with white, pale yellow, or even purple flesh with a rough skin originating in Africa, and is often also grown in Asia and the Caribbean. It is actually not very sweet.
Sweet potatoes, on the other hand, have orange or yellow flesh, with smooth and easy-to-peel skin. Just to make you crazy, some of the best “Thanksgiving” sweet potatoes are called garnet yams or a jewel yams.
When shopping for sweet potatoes, look for tubers that have reddish-brown smooth skins and deep orange flesh, no matter what the label says. These are what you want for this sweet potato casserole.
HOW TO COOK SWEET POTATOES FOR CASSEROLE
Roast—don’t boil—the sweet potatoes.
If you roast the sweet potatoes instead of boiling them, you say goodbye to tedious peeling! The potatoes become soft in the oven, and after a few minutes of cooling, the skins slip off like magic.
Line the baking sheet with parchment to ensures that cleanup will be at a minimum.

KEEP THE CASSEROLE SIMPLE
Butter and a little fruit juice, such as apple cider or orange juice, add plenty of flavor and sweetness to the potatoes, which are sweet enough as is, in my humble opinion.
After all, nothing is sweeter than a marshmallow, so you will get your sugar fix in the end.
THE BEST WAY TO MASH SWEET POTATOES
If you have a stand mixer, use it. The paddle attachment is your friend here.
Warm potatoes, butter, orange juice, and orange zest can be dumped into the bowl and mashed in under a minute. Scrape them into a buttered baking dish and you’re ready to roll.
You can also mash them the old-fashioned way with a potato masher.
A TRICK FOR THE BEST MARSHMALLOW TOPPING
All marshmallows are coated with cornstarch to keep them from sticking together in the bag, but this can prevent them from melting and turning gooey on top of a casserole.
The solution is to use large marshmallows, snipped in half with a pair of scissors.
The cut side melts easily, helping to cover the surface of the casserole. Mini marshmallows are also fine to use, but because they’re coated with more cornstarch and too small to snip, they don’t spread out as much when baked.
HOW TO MAKE SWEET POTATO CASSEROLE IN ADVANCE
You can make and refrigerate sweet potato casserole two to three days in advance.
All that needs doing is to reheat the potatoes. Once hot, pull them out of the oven, decorate with the marshmallows and bake for another 5 to 6 minutes to melt.
MORE BEST THANKSGIVING SIDE DISHES!
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