Ingredients (base + options)
Base (1–2 servings)
- 1 medium sweet potato (250–300 g), scrubbed
- ¾–1 cup plain curd/yogurt (regular or Greek; lactose-free if needed)
- ¼ tsp roasted cumin powder (optional)
- Pinch black pepper (optional)
- Salt to taste (or skip for BP/CKD)
Optional toppings/add-ons
- 1 tsp ghee/olive oil for richness (optional)
- Finely chopped mint/cilantro
- 1 tbsp roasted peanuts or pumpkin seeds (crushed)
- ½ tsp lemon juice (skip if reflux)
- Side: cucumber slices or simple raita
Budget tip: steam 2–3 sweet potatoes at once; use over 2–3 days.
Step-by-step
Cook the sweet potato (10–15 min)
- Microwave: Pierce 5–6 times; microwave 5–8 min, flipping once, until very tender.
- Steam/Boil: 12–18 min until a fork slides in easily.
- Cool slightly; peel and mash with a fork. Add a tiny pinch of salt/pepper and cumin if using.
Plate & serve (2–3 min)
- Spoon warm mashed sweet potato on one side, curd on the other.
- Drizzle 1 tsp ghee/olive oil if desired; sprinkle herbs/seeds.
- Serve as a light meal or hearty snack.
Chew-soft: mash to a smooth, lump-free texture; thin curd with a spoon of water if too thick.
Flavor & topping ideas
Savory Cumin–Herb
- Roasted cumin + chopped cilantro/mint
- Optional: squeeze of lemon (if tolerated)
Peanut–Crunch
- Crushed roasted peanuts or pumpkin seeds
- Add ½ tsp olive oil for gloss
Sweet–Spice
- Pinch cinnamon + ½ tsp honey on the mash
- Skip honey for diabetes; use vanilla pinch instead
Swaps by condition
Diabetes (Type 2)
- Portion sweet potato to ½–¾ cup mash.
- Use Greek yogurt (½–¾ cup) for extra protein.
- Avoid honey/jaggery; add nuts/seeds for satiety.
Heart & BP
- No added salt. Flavor with cumin, pepper, herbs.
- Choose olive oil; keep ghee small (1 tsp max).
- Pair with a raw veg side for fiber.
CKD (Kidney)
- Sweet potato is higher in potassium—mind portion (½ cup mash) if restricted.
- Leach method: cube, boil, and discard water before mashing.
- Use regular yogurt (smaller portion) if protein-restricted; keep sodium low.
Reflux (GERD)
- Skip lemon, raw onion/chili. Use mild herbs and cumin.
- Small, earlier meals; sit upright 30–45 minutes after.
Nutrition snapshot (per serving, approx.)
| Nutrient | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 260–340 kcal | Sweet potato size & yogurt type |
| Protein | 10–18 g | Higher with Greek yogurt |
| Carbohydrate | 40–55 g | From sweet potato; portion matters |
| Fat | 4–10 g | Depends on yogurt fat % and oil/ghee |
| Fiber | 5–7 g | Keep some skin for more fiber |
| Sodium | <150 mg | Without added salt |
| Potassium | 600–900 mg | Reduce with leaching + smaller portion |
Estimates only; ingredients/brands vary. Follow your clinician/dietitian plan.
Make-ahead & storage
Prep once
- Steam/boil 2–3 sweet potatoes; refrigerate up to 3 days.
- Mash just before eating; add a splash of hot water to rewarm.
Leftovers
- Keep mashed sweet potato and yogurt separate in the fridge.
- Reheat mash covered (microwave 40–60 sec). Stir and check temperature before serving.
Texture & safety
- Use a fork or potato masher for a smooth, lump-free mash.
- For extra calories (if unintentional weight loss): add 1 tsp ghee/olive oil or use fuller-fat yogurt.
- On fluid limits (heart/kidney): note yogurt counts toward daily fluid in some plans.
Quick answers (FAQ)
Can I keep the sweet potato skin?
Yes, if tender and well washed—it adds fiber. Peel for a smoother mash.
Greek or regular curd?
Greek adds more protein and thickness; regular is lighter and easier to mix.
Best time to eat?
Great for lunch or early dinner. If reflux, avoid eating within 3 hours of bedtime.
Plant-based option?
Use unsweetened, fortified plant yogurt; add 1 tbsp peanut butter for protein.
Related recipes & tools
- Veggie Egg Scramble
- Cucumber Yogurt Raita
- Lemon-Mint Water
- Senior-Friendly Recipes & Drinks
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