Crispy Baked Sweet Potato Fries are a perennial favourite here on Foodie with Family for a great reason. So many of you have made crispy, crunchy, delicious sweet potatoes at home with the recipe.
A quick word of advice: grab a cheap oven thermometer to see if your oven’s temperature is correctly calibrated. You can compensate by however many degrees it is off when you bake your fries!
Check out all of our fabulous Sweet Potato Recipes here!
I am passionate about sweet potato fries. Possibly, I qualify as being clinically obsessed with them. I can’t think of a single food I crave more consistently than the salty sweet perfection that is sweet potato fries.
If I go out to dinner and sweet potato fries are on the menu, I order them. It doesn’t matter if it goes with the entrée I’ve chosen, they’re mine.
While normally I will eat a sweet potato any which way, when I’m eating sweet potato fries, I’m picky about them.
They have to suit MY idea of what a perfect sweet potato fry is: ALL-CAPS LEVEL CRISPY with no added sweetener because WHY in heaven’s name would you add SUGAR or somesuch to a SWEET POTATO?
Seriously, people. I can sniff out sugar added to a sweet potato fry and it makes me cranky.
To me, the beauty of the sweet potato fry comes not in amplifying the already sweet tuber, but in playing off of it with salty and spicy. And friends, don’t even get me started on the disappointment that is a soggy sweet potato fry.
Ugh. It’s like deflating a balloon of happiness with a wet noodle… Torturous.
That usually ends up being the problem with homemade sweet potato fries. Sweet potatoes are a little trickier to get super crispy than the good old regular potato.
While I’m not one to shy away from deep-frying, I wanted to make crispy baked sweet potato fries. It was time for research.
Because there were so many brands of tasty bakeable sweet potato fries in the freezer section, it had to be possible to make them from scratch. I examined the backs of the bags of the brands I liked, used my previous experience as a professional slinger-of-pub-grub.
We made more than fifteen batches of sweet potato fries of varying degrees of success. But we finally dialed in on a recipe that I’m confident will turn out crispy sweet potato fries every time.
I’m about to dazzle you with a breathtaking display of absolutely insane nit-picking detail on how to guarantee yourself crispy baked sweet potato fries. *Cue the theme music from ‘The Anal-Retentive Chef”.
How to Make Perfect Crispy Oven Baked Sweet Potato Fries
Take your time cutting your sweet potatoes to size. By size, I mean 1/4-inch by 1/4-inch by whatever length matchstick pieces.
Yes, you do need to be particular about cutting them to size. It’s better to err a little on the skinnier side than the fatter side if your knife work isn’t your strong point.
The best way to accomplish this is to cut a little piece off of one side of the peeled sweet potato so it can sit more securely on the cutting board. Cut lengthwise into 1/4-inch thick ‘cards’.
Then take each card and cut again into 1/4-inch thick matchsticks. I find it easier to do this -and far less frightening- by knife rather than by mandoline.
SOAK YOUR SWEET POTATOES. I’m not joking.
We soaked the regular potato fries in cold water in every restaurant where I worked. I applied the same technique to sweet potato fries and it worked beautifully.
It draws the excess starch out of the sweet potatoes (or regular potatoes) which helps them cook through better to be crispy on the outside, tender on the inside without burning. Don’t skip this step or you’ll be disappointed.
How to Cook Sweet Potato Fries
Line your sheet pans with heavy-duty foil (dull side up!) AND spritz them with non-stick cooking spray. I experimented with regular foil, heavy-duty foil, parchment paper, straight up nekkid pans, stoneware sheet pans, and silpat lined pans.
Garden variety heavy-duty foil yielded my best results Don’t skip THIS step or you’ll be attempting to chisel sweet potato fries off of foil. If THAT doesn’t deter you from skipping this step, I don’t know what will.
After draining, rinsing, and patting dry your soaked sweet potatoes, add two handfuls of them to a very large plastic bag along with 2 teaspoons of starch (*See Cook’s Notes). Shake vigorously.
You should keep as much air in the bag as you can so the fries move around like popcorn in an air popper. The idea is to get a whisper thin coating of the starch on the potatoes; not to COVER them in starch. In fact, when you dump them out into a bowl, you should have to look pretty closely to even see the starch on them.
Too much starch makes the fries taste like starch rather than sweet potatoes. Ick.
DO NOT ADD SALT BEFORE COOKING. In this particular case, adding salt before cooking yields limp, sad fries. You can get them plenty salty after baking them.
Let’s talk oil, shall we? Yes, I know we already spritzed the pans with non-stick cooking spray, but that’s an insurance policy… that’s not a crisping agent.
Don’t even think about olive oil here. While it’s super tasty, the temperature and duration of the cooking process will make olive oil billow smoke out of your oven before the sweet potatoes are even close to being done.
My favourite oil for the job is grapeseed, but if you cannot find it, canola or peanut should stand in well. The idea is to choose an oil that has a high smoke point and is neutral in flavour.
Baked Sweet Potato Fries
Even if you fail to heed my super detailed advice anywhere else, DO NOT CROWD THE PAN. If I could type it a million times and not be obnoxious, I would.
Science dictates that if you crowd a pan, your fries will automatically be soggy. How so?
When you’re ‘crisping’ these, you’re releasing the moisture from them. You release the moisture by applying heat and allowing air to circulate in your oven.
If you apply the heat but don’t allow the air to circulate around them, the moisture will have no where to go and will sit there steaming around those fries. You want steamed sweet potato fries?
Neither do I. Keep them spaced out, not touching as much as possible, and absolutely, positively only in a single layer.
By the same token, don’t crowd the oven. You don’t want too much moisture releasing from too many sweet potatoes at the same time or you’re essentially giving the pretty little things a nice sauna bath.
Halfway through the baking time, you’ll remove the pans from the oven to flip the fries. This is best accomplished by using a thin metal spatula or fish turner.
It will have enough backbone to get under the fries and enough flexibility not to mangle them. When you flip them, be sure they land in a single layer not touching.
You can adjust them with tongs if needed. Oh, and when you return the pans to the oven, rotate ’em from top to bottom AND front to back.
The pan that started in the top part of the oven should end the cooking process in the bottom of the oven facing the opposite direction from which it started. This helps compensate for any hotspots your oven may have.
Ready for something counter-intuitive? When your fries are done, prop the oven door open about halfway and let them cool on the pan for at least 10 minutes.
Believe or not, unlike regular potato fries, these bad boys crisp up even more as they cool slightly.
Troubleshooting
Even with all this advice, you may find the first batch doesn’t work out exactly the way you planned.
If your crispy baked sweet potato fries are darkening too quickly, but still not cooked through to your liking, you may have an oven that runs hot. Conversely, if you feel like you’re baking your fries FOREVER and they’re not crisping, your oven may run a little cool.
Get a $5 oven thermometer from Walmart and pop it in there to see how accurate your oven’s calibration is then compensate for it. It’s a cheap fix!
If your fries are soggy and you’ve followed all of my advice, you may have a smaller oven than the one I tested my fries in and may have to bake them one tray at a time.
Sadly, there are some bum sweet potatoes out there. It may be that you got one that was past its prime.
Cook’s Notes:
I didn’t mean to be vague when I said to toss the fries with starch, but I had a little explaining to do. In a perfect world, the best, crispiest baked sweet potato fries are made with a blend of three powdered starches: cornstarch, brown rice starch, and tapioca starch in a ratio of 2:1:1.
It’s a lot easier to find the more unusual tapioca and rice starches now that gluten-free baking is more prolific. If you can’t source them, have an allergy to one of them, or just don’t feel as compelled to get down and dirty with making the most perfect baked sweet potato fries ever, you can use all of one of kind of starch.
Cornstarch is the easiest to find, but health-food stores, well stocked grocers, and Amazon are great places to buy both tapioca starch and brown rice starch. If you are fortunate enough to be in possession of all three starches, whisk them together in a bowl or jar before adding to the fries.
I like my guaranteed crispy baked sweet potato fries with a hint of spice. To get this, I add about 1/4 teaspoon (or more, depending on how sassy I’m feeling) of ground chipotle powder when tossing the fries with oil before cooking.
This is, however, strictly optional. I’m convinced, though, that this is part of the reason that the three of my children who are vegetable-phobic love the fries.
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Use this to make Crispy Baked Sweet Potato Fries
- Chef’s Knife or Mandoline
- bucket for soaking cut fries
- Brown Rice Starch/Flour
- Tapioca Starch/Flour
- Sunflower Oil
- Heavy Duty Foil
- Half Sheet Pan
- Flexible Spatula
Crispy Baked Sweet Potato Fries
Preheat oven to 425°F.
Line two half-sheet pans with heavy-duty foil and spritz lightly with non-stick cooking spray. Set aside.
Add half of the sweet potato matchsticks to a very large plastic bag. Sprinkle 2 teaspoons of the starch over the potatoes, cinch the top (trapping as much air in the bag as you can when you cinch it) and shake vigorously to coat the fries.
Empty the bag into a mixing bowl and use your hands to toss with 1 tablespoon of the oil and the chipotle powder (if using). Arrange the fries on the prepared pan in a single layer, not touching. Repeat with the remaining fries, starch, and oil.
It is important to remember not to crowd the pans. If needed, you can always use another pan and bake another batch.
Arrange the pans in the oven so that one is in the top third of the oven and the other is in the bottom third of the oven. Set the timer for 15 minutes.
After 15 minutes, use a stiff metal spatula or fish turner to get under the fries and flip them over. Remember to keep them in a single layer after flipping.
Return the pans to the oven, rotating the pans from top to bottom and front to back. In other words, the one that started in the top third of the oven should end in the bottom third of the oven facing the other direction.
Bake for another 10-15 minutes, or until they have browned and are cooked clean though.
Shut the oven off, prop the door open halfway, and let cool and crisp up further for 10 minutes before serving. Toss with salt to taste.
Guaranteed Crispy BAKED Sweet Potato Fries
Rate RecipeIngredients
- 2 large sweet potatoes about 3/4 pound, give or take
- 4 teaspoons starch corn starch, tapioca starch/flour, brown rice starch/flour, or a mixture of any or all of them
- 2 tablespoons grapeseed, sunflower, peanut, or canola oil
- 1/4-1/2 teaspoon chipotle powder
- non-stick cooking spray
- salt to taste
Instructions
- Peel the sweet potatoes and cut them into 1/4-inch by 1/4-inch matchsticks. Put them in a bowl and cover with cold, fresh water. Let them soak for 1 hour or up to overnight. Pour the water and sweet potato matchsticks into a colander, rinse with fresh water, then pat dry with paper towels. They should not be visibly wet, but they don’t have to be bone dry.
- Preheat oven to 425°F.
- Line two half-sheet pans with heavy-duty foil and spritz lightly with non-stick cooking spray. Set aside.
- Add half of the sweet potato matchsticks to a very large plastic bag. Sprinkle 2 teaspoons of the starch over the potatoes, cinch the top (trapping as much air in the bag as you can when you cinch it) and shake vigorously to coat the fries. Empty the bag into a mixing bowl and use your hands to toss with 1 tablespoon of the oil and the chipotle powder (if using). Arrange the fries on the prepared pan in a single layer, not touching. Repeat with the remaining fries, starch, and oil.
It is important to remember not to crowd the pans. If needed, you can always use another pan and bake another batch.
- Arrange the pans in the oven so that one is in the top third of the oven and the other is in the bottom third of the oven. Set the timer for 15 minutes. After 15 minutes, use a stiff metal spatula or fish turner to get under the fries and flip them over. Remember to keep them in a single layer after flipping. Return the pans to the oven, rotating the pans from top to bottom and front to back. In other words, the one that started in the top third of the oven should end in the bottom third of the oven facing the other direction. Bake for another 10-15 minutes, or until they have browned and are cooked clean though.
- Shut the oven off, prop the door open halfway, and let cool and crisp up further for 10 minutes before serving. Toss with salt to taste.
Nutrition
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
did you make this recipe?
Make sure to tag @foodiewithfam on Instagram and #hashtag it #foodiewithfamily so I can check it out!
Do you love these Guaranteed Crispy Baked Sweet Potato Fries? Try these other sweet potato recipes!
- Slow Cooker Peach Salsa Pork Roast with Sweet Potatoes
- Sweet Potato Casserole
- Melting Sweet Potatoes
- Sweet Potato Croutons
- 1-Pot Roasted Turkey Breast Dinner with Sweet Potatoes
This post was originally published April 17, 2014, republished with improvements in April 2017, and again in January 2021.
Reader's Thoughts...
Tracy Jacks says
Hi Rebecca!
I’m going to try making these for the first time…..
Just a couple of questions:
Can we use sunflower oil?
Have you tried soaking them overnight then leaving them to dry out in the fridge whilst at work , cooking them the following evening?
Thanx for the recipe Xx
Rebecca says
I can’t imagine sunflower oil being bad here, but that being said, I haven’t tried it. Please let me know how it works out for you if you try it! Ditto on the leaving them out to dry in the fridge question!
Samantha says
Have you ever frozen these and at what step if you have. I’m thinking after soaking and tossing in the starch? Then flash freezing them on a cookie sheet prior to bagging them… I’d love to know as I belong to a freezer swap group and these would pair with my dish perfectly! Thanks
Rebecca says
Hi Samantha- I have not tried freezing these. Usually, you have to at least partially cook a vegetable with such strong cell walls before freezing it or it turns to mush. I’d recommend a small batch trial to see how it goes. I’d love to hear whether it works out for you!
Marzie McCoy says
This could be THE sweet potato fry recipe I’ve long been looking for. Tonight, at the last minute, I was asked to host a spur-of-the-moment – and thus I’m shooting for casual but tastefully gourmet – dinner, in 24 hours, for 14 people, and I’m thinking a delicious sweet potato ‘summer’ side like this would be perfect. Can you tell me how many servings your recipe yields? Thank you in advance for really-super-speedy response!
Rebecca says
Hooray for last minute parties! They’re the most fun because you don’t have time to fret the details. As to your questions, I don’t actually determine serving sizes on this blog, Marzie, for a couple of reasons. First, because everyone has a different idea of a serving size, and second, because I think serving sizes are usually wildly unrealistic. Generally, each person in my family can eat a potato’s worth (or slightly more) so that’s my loose guideline. It really all depends on how much you’re serving with it and how hungry the people are you are serving!
Alex says
Hi! Interesting note about the oils. Would sesame oil work?
Rebecca says
I’m inclined to think the smoke point in sesame oil might be too low…
Alex says
Thanks! I am going to give peanut oil a try in that case. I’m making sweet potato “croutons” today so want to be sure they’re especially crispy.
Gaëlle says
sesame oil is one of the oils that can stand the highest temperatures, so don’t hesitate to use it!
Arianna says
I hd been discouraged from making sweet potatoe fries due to failing to achieve the crispy status.
I followed the instructions except for SIZE!
I’ve been craving matchstick style, so I used the julliene setting on my mandoline.
*ding! Baking time is up! I was a little disappointed that they were still floppy…..
BUT! I continued to “turn off oven and leave door ajar” and BAM!! CRISPY CITY!!
Thank you for sharing your sweet potatoe expertise =)
Rebecca says
It feels counterintuitive to let ’em sit there to crisp up, doesn’t it?
margaret says
Just made these tonight. I did not have heavy duty foil so I used parchment. And used cayenne. They were yummy!
Renee @ Awesome on $20 says
Thanks for doing all that hard work for us. I can’t wait to use up some of my sriracha mayo on these.
Daina says
By the way, I made these using regular foil because I didn’t have any heavy duty foil on hand, and no sticking. 🙂 I just sprayed it well with cooking spray beforehand. (and I used it shiny side up!)
Kathryn says
Helpful to know – thanks for sharing!
Lily (A Rhubarb Rhapsody) says
These look awesome! I’ve never successfully made crispy sweet potato fries (they always go soggy really quickly) but I’ve been using flour to make crispy roast potatoes for ages, I never even thought to try that method with sweet potatoes. Yum! Clever thinking!
Joelen says
I need to try this out – mine tend to come out soggy!
Angie | Big Bear's Wife says
I think we might make these tonight to so with our subs!
Christiane ~ Taking On Magazines says
Wow. I love how complete and explanatory your directions were. I ALWAYS want to know the ‘why’ of doing something, so thank you for providing that. The sweet potato fries look like they’re definitely worth all the work!
Nutmeg Nanny says
I want to eat these fries with a giant bowl of garlic mayo….nom nom.
Karen Petersen says
so many specific and great tips! These sound super yummy 🙂
Jill says
So, what happens if you use ordinary instead of heavy-duty foil? Does it rip when you take them off?
Rebecca says
It does tear… dreadfully! 😀
Kathryn says
Could you explain what “Garden variety” heavy-duty foil means? I live in Europe and am not sure what you mean by that.
Can hardly wait to try this!
Rebecca says
You bet! In the US, you can find two common varieties of foil in most stores. There is standard foil which is thin and inexpensive, and there is also heavy-duty foil which is thicker and sturdier and slightly more expensive. When I said “garden-variety” heavy duty foil, I just meant it is commonly found in grocery stores and big box stores.
Sommer @ASpicyPerspective says
I am crushing on these fries! Pinning
Melissa @ Bless this Mess says
You are a NINJA! I’m making these now!
Rebecca says
WOOHOO! Can’t wait to hear what you think!
Lauren @ Healthy Delicious says
wow – these really do look perfect!
Maria | Pink Patisserie says
Love, love these and those awesome tips! I can eat my weight in sweet potato fries! I have a problem but I don’t care. 🙂
Rebecca says
Same here. I can’t stop eating them until they’re gone, usually!
Claire Gallam says
These fries look simply perfect!!!