Skip to content
ScaleRecipe

Turkish · Vegetarian

Sweet potato salad

Cook mode
Watch video
Sweet potato salad

About this recipe

Turkish cuisine bridges Mediterranean and Middle Eastern traditions — generous use of yogurt, walnuts, eggplant, lamb, and pomegranate molasses — across mezes, kebabs, and the elaborate sweet pastries of Ottoman tradition. The kitchen rewards both restraint and patience.

As a vegetarian dish, Sweet potato salad is meatless but not minimal — built around vegetables, pulses, dairy, and grains that anchor every cooking tradition's day-to-day repertoire.

The scaler above resizes every ingredient to the number of servings you actually want; Cook Mode walks you through the recipe one step at a time with hands-free timers.

Curated by the ScaleRecipe editorial teamReviewed

Recipe data is sourced from TheMealDB's open community database; ScaleRecipe handles the curation, the scaling math, the editorial commentary, and the conversion utilities woven into each page.

Translate this recipe

Reading in English

Listen to this recipe

No matching voice on this device

Method

  1. step 1
  2. Heat oven to 200C/180C fan/gas 6. Toss the sweet potato chunks with the olive oil and some seasoning, and spread on a baking parchment-lined baking sheet. Roast for 30 - 35 mins until tender and golden. Cool at room temperature.
  3. step 2
  4. When just about cool whisk together all the dressing ingredients with a little more seasoning and gently toss through the potato chunks – use your hands to avoid breaking them up.

Cooking notes

Most vegetable dishes scale linearly, but be mindful of pan crowding — vegetables that should brown will steam instead if packed too tightly.

For volume-to-weight conversions of any ingredient — flour, sugar, butter, salts — use the ingredient converter. To translate the recipe's oven temperature between °C, °F and gas mark, see the temperature converter.

When you scale this recipe up or down, remember that cooking time does not scale linearly. A doubled cake takes longer, but not twice as long; a doubled soup takes roughly twice as long. The cooking-time guide gives sensible starting estimates by dish geometry.

Scaling notes

Scaling Sweet potato salad

Sweet potato salad is written for around four servings as it stands on this page — scaling it up for a party or down for a meal-for-one is the small math problem most home cooks face every week. Here's how this particular dish responds to scaling, what changes linearly, and what doesn't.

Vegetarian recipes like Sweet potato salad are among the easiest to scale because most ingredients respond linearly to multiplication. The main constraints are pan capacity (crowding causes steaming, not the browning the recipe assumes) and seasoning intensity (use 1.5× the salt and spices when doubling, taste, adjust upward).

Skip the math entirely — ScaleRecipe's scaler rewrites every ingredient line above with proper culinary fractions and smart unit promotion the moment you change the serving count. Open the scaler →

Beyond the recipe

Substitutions & make-ahead — Sweet potato salad

Two things home cooks ask about most when they're outside the recipe's exact assumptions: what swaps work for which ingredients, and how the dish behaves when you make it ahead. Both depend on what Sweet potato salad is doing structurally — here's the practical version.

Substitution ideas

Honey

Maple syrup substitutes 1:1 — slightly less sweet, similar viscosity, works in marinades and dressings. Agave nectar at 1:1 is sweeter and more neutral. For granulated sugar, use 1 cup sugar + 2 tbsp water per cup of honey (warm to dissolve before adding to the recipe).

For weight-based swaps and arbitrary quantities, the ingredient density converter and the cup-to-grams chart cover most pantry staples.

Make-ahead and storage

Vegetarian dishes like Sweet potato salad sit comfortably in the make-ahead window — they store and reheat better than meat-centric dishes. Refrigerate 3-4 days; freeze most pulse, grain, or cooked-vegetable preparations for up to 2 months. The exceptions are dishes with raw or barely-cooked elements (salads, fresh herbs, anything crispy) — those components should be added at serving time, not stored with the rest.

Recipe video

Sweet potato salad

Ready to cook?

Scale it to your table, then get into the kitchen.

Send this recipe to the main scaler for further editing, or jump straight into Cook Mode for a hands-free walk-through with timers running.