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- Makes 4 stuffed sweet potatoes
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Vegan sloppy Joes meet baked potatoes in these delicious barbecue-loaded sweet potatoes. Meaty-textured jackfruit and nutrient-dense lentils are simmered in a smoky-sweet sauce and mixed into the potato flesh to mimic all the best flavors of barbecue without any of the animal products. Quick-pickled onions add tang and fresh cucumber brings a tasty crunch to every bite of this satisfying dish. Serve on its own or with a side of your favorite whole grains.
Tip: Sweet potatoes can be very large; try to pick smaller, rounded potatoes for this robust main course.
By Shelli McConnell,
Ingredients
- 4 small sweet potatoes
- ¼ cup apple cider vinegar
- 1 tablespoon + 2 teaspoons pure cane sugar
- 1 medium red onion, halved and thinly sliced
- 1 15-oz. can no-salt-added tomato sauce
- 1½ teaspoons chili powder
- 1 teaspoons dried oregano
- 2 cloves garlic, minced
- ½ teaspoon smoked paprika
- ½ teaspoon ground ginger
- 1 14-oz. can green jackfruit, drained and chopped
- 1 cup refrigerated steamed lentils
- Sliced English cucumber (optional)
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 425°F. Scrub sweet potatoes thoroughly; pat dry. Prick sweet potatoes all over with a fork. Place in a 3-quart rectangular baking dish. Bake 40 to 60 minutes or until tender. Let stand until cool enough to handle.
- Meanwhile, for quick-pickled onion, in a small saucepan bring vinegar, 2 teaspoons of the sugar, and 1½ teaspoon water to boiling. Stir in onion. Remove from heat; let stand for at least 20 minutes, stirring occasionally. Drain before using.
- In a medium saucepan stir together the next six ingredients (through ginger) and the remaining 1 tablespoon sugar. Stir in jackfruit and lentils. Bring to boiling; reduce heat. Cover and simmer 5 minutes to heat through, stirring occasionally.
- Cut a slit in tops of the potatoes. Fluff potato pulp with a fork. Top with jackfruit mixture, pickled onion, and cucumber (if using).
Comments (5)
(5 from 4 votes)A memo from my eyeballs: For ingredients: Using Noticeably SMALLER black font on medium green: Not a good choice for readability. And worse when critical amounts (say spices) get that fancy one-character printer's font thing for "1/2" or "2/3rds". The Amounts and Names of ingredients are what's important - and not some fancy trendy "style sheet". Thanks!
Totally agree with Alan. I have mismeasured a few times because I couldn’t read the numbers.
Could you give us more info on the amount of sweet potatoes to use? A weight would be very helpful. Thanks!
Also like to get an idea about the sweet potatoes weight AND 1 14 -oz in Gram
I live in Australia - we use grams - we used to use oz - but to convert oz to grams is as easy as going to Google and writing “oz to grams” or eg. gallons to litres, or USD to AUD, etc etc. So many areas Google can help.