This post may contain affiliate links. Please read our disclosure policy.
My Sweet Potato Casserole lightened up still has all the buttery, brown sugar flavor of a traditional casserole with half the calories!
Sweet Potato Casserole is my favorite Thanksgiving side dish. It wins by a mile. Pair this dish with my vegetable casserole recipe and you have Thanksgiving Gold as far as I’m concerned. I will happily pile up my plate with gravy-free turkey, steamed green beans and a whole-wheat roll as long as I have my sweet potato casserole.
Who doesn’t love eating dessert WITH dinner before getting to the real dessert…pie?!
In high school and college, my best friend, Julia, regularly joined my family for Thanksgiving. She was in charge of bringing her sweet potato casserole…It was crazy good. Sweet, buttery filling topped with a toothachingly sweet brown sugar pecan topping. The good stuff.
Last year when I was planning on hosting Thanksgiving for the first time, I requested the recipe from Julia, and I almost fell out of my chair. There was more butter and sugar in the casserole than I even had in my cupboard!
So, with the help of my husband, I lightened it up.
This isn’t a healthy sweet potato casserole; so don’t even go there. It’s just not as indulgent as a traditional sweet potato casserole recipe with pecans!
Most of the calorie savings are from drastically reducing the butter and sugar in the filling. To me the topping is sacrosanct and shouldn’t be messed with, but you could always reduce the sugar and add more flour and oats as filler. But why? It’s Thanksgiving, the day of indulgence!
This casserole has brown sugar in every bite but it isn’t cloyingly sweet. Toasting the pecans is calorie free flavor boost! It has the added benefit of keeping them a touch crunchier even after refrigerating. Since I reduced the amount of butter and sugar in the filling, the actual sweet potato flavor is more pronounced and you are reminded why sweet potatoes are so awesome even by themselves!
My husband likes sliced sweet potatoes in this casserole but I got distracted (shock!) and cooked the thin slivers too long and they didn’t hold together in a beautiful layered form like last Thanksgiving. Immersion blender to the rescue!
Fortunately they are just as good when the filling is mashed. It just doesn’t look as classy.
Kitchen Tip: Boiling the sweet potatoes will preserve that beautiful, bright orange color. This will provide a gorgeous color contrast in the casserole but will also keep your sweet potato pie, cakes and cupcakes orange too!
Sweet Potato Casserole Lightened Up
Ingredients
For the Filling:
- 3 pounds uncooked sweet potatoes sliced 1/8 inch thick or cubed
- 1 cup dark brown sugar unpacked
- 2 eggs lightly beaten
- 1 ½ teaspoons vanilla
- ½ cup low fat milk
- ½ cup melted butter
- pinch salt
For the Topping:
- ½ cup dark brown sugar packed
- ⅓ cup flour
- 5 tablespoons melted butter
- 1 cup chopped pecans toasted
- Dash cinnamon
- Pinch kosher salt
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350°
- In a large bowl combine brown sugar, eggs, vanilla, milk, butter and salt. Whisk to combine.
- Boil sweet potatoes in cold water, just covering, until fork tender. Drain well.
- Toss sweet potatoes in the butter mixture. If you are going to puree your potatoes, you can do it at this stage or you can press the potatoes through a ricer after draining.
- Pour into a 1 ½ – 2 quart casserole dish.
- Mix all the topping ingredients together in a medium bowl and sprinkle over the top.
- Bake 30-40 minutes until bubbling.
I have never eaten something delicious like this before. I loved your blog.
Thanks!
Love how vibrant your dish is, it looks great. Thanks for linking up to Sweet and Savoury Sunday, stop by and link up again. Have a great day!!
Thanks, Laura!
This sounds amazing. Thank you for linking up to Party Time and we hope to see you again next week!
Thanks, Jacqui! Absolutely!
Stopping by from Moonlight & Mason Jars link party. I will have to make this next week! Yum!
Thanks for stopping by! I hope you do make it, Melinda!
This is going to sound weird, but I’m not a fan of mash sweet potatoes, but I love eating it in chunks. Do you think this would work if I didn’t puree the potatoes and just left them in chunks?
We all have our preferences! Absolutely you can leave them in chunks and it will taste just as good. I like to make this casserole with sliced sweet potatoes, which I planned to do here but I forgot about them on the stove and they cooked too long to stay whole, so I had no choice but to mash them!
I make a casserole similar to this and have lightened it up significantly as well…still not healthy…but lighter. 🙂 It’s one of my favorite side dishes too, and I like the idea of using sliced sweet potatoes, too!
Yours is probably way healthier than this one..and that is why you are so thin! 🙂 The sliced sweet potatoes were so pretty…if only I hadn’t been distracted!
Haha! I think we were separated at birth…as soon as I saw “gravy-free turkey,” I knew we must be related somehow. I can’t stand gravy on my turkey! Now to be fair, we might be like distant cousins or something because I just don’t love sweet potato casserole. Sweet potato pie? Now that’s a whole different story…but I have some weird issue with sweet and savory flavors combined in a savory style dish. With all of that said, your sweet potato casserole looks amazing…and I love the toasted pecans. Nice work!
My money is on distant cousins. But let me make sweet potato casserole for you and we’ll see how you feel then, mmkay? Maybe it will help if you think about sweet potato casserole as a crustless, deep-dish pie with a crumble topping?
Sweet Potato Casserole is one of my favorite! I’ve got one coming up tomorrow!
Mmmm can’t wait to see yours!