To start with, let’s agree to avoid the whole Yams versus Sweet potato debate and stipulate that you can use both for this recipe. So, a souffle is a baked, egg-based dish that requires a small amount of precision and lots of luck, which can be substituted with a high-end French wine….I’m just saying. The main difference between an sweet potato souffle versus casserole is that the souffle has a lighter texture and is more fluffy, which may be just what your dinner needs to counter all the other more dense offerings.
Ingredients
- For Souffle
- 4 Sweet potatoes
- 4 Egg Whites
- 2 TBL Brown sugar
- 1 tsp Cinnamon
- 1 tsp Vanilla extract
- 1 tsp Kosher salt
- Topping
- 0.25 cup Pecans – finely chopped
- 0.25 cup Brown sugar
- 2 TBL flour
- 2 TBL Butter – melted
- 0.25 tsp Kosher salt
Process
- Mise en Place – Measure and prepare your ingredients prior to starting.
- Prepare Sweet Potatoes
- Preheat oven to 400F.
- Using a fork, poke holes around each sweet potato and place on lined baking sheet.
- Bake for 50 mins, remove from oven and allow to completely cool.
- Peel skin off the potatoes and either proceed with oven on or store in airtight container until ready to use.
- Prepare Souffle
- Combine potatoes, sugar, cinnamon, vanilla, and salt in a food processor, and process until smooth.
- Add egg whites and process until well mixed.
- Place souffle in a buttered ramekin with high walls.
- Prepare Topping
- Mix all the topping ingredients together in a bowl.
- Place on top of souffle. . .should be more complicated to be interesting, but it’s not.
- Bake Souffle
- Preheat oven to 400 F.
- Bake souffle for 40 mins (45 mins of using cold batter), or until firmly set and puffy.
- Let souffle rest a few minutes before serving.