Sweet Potato Graham Cracker “French Toast” Sticks

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Please do not judge a book by its cover.

Sweet Potato Graham Cracker Sticks

Sometimes the strangest and weirdest looking food tastes the best.

These lumpy, bumpy, crusty potato sticks may not win any beauty pageants, but they are the best potatoes I have ever eaten.

Sweet Potato Graham Cracker Sticks

I don’t really love potatoes, but I loved these.

Sweet Potato Graham Cracker Sticks

These crazy looking potato sticks, which look like they came from the depths of the ocean and belong in a Jacques Cousteau book, don’t actually taste like potatoes.

They taste like french toast sticks that weren’t actually made with any toast.

Sweet Potato Graham Cracker Sticks in jar

Haven’t you heard?  French toast that’s orange and bumpy is the best kind.

Sweet Potato Graham Cracker Sticks

Confused yet?  Okay, good.

Start with a dry rub of graham cracker crumbs, corn starch, cinnamon and sugar, and beat an egg.

Bowl of graham cracker crumbs and corn starch

Slice the potato into sticks.

Sweet potato sticks

Batter and bread the sticks, and place them on the lined baking sheet.

Sweet potato sticks with bowl of graham cracker crumbs and eggs

It’s okay if you have excess mixture at the bottom of your baking sheet.  The excess crumbs and egg run-off turns into the sweetest tasting “bread crust” on the “French Toast” sticks.

Graham Cracker sweet potatoes before cooking

And those blobs of graham cracker crumbs, cinnamon, and sugar?

Graham Cracker sweet potatoes before cooking

They bake up into an almost streusel-like topping for the potato sticks French Toast sticks.

I’ve heard of self-glazing cakes before and I’d call these little spuds self-glazing or self-streuseling.

Graham Cracker sweet potatoes after cooking

You could finish them off with a sprinkling of powdered sugar or serve them with warm maple syrup, but I don’t think they need anything more.

That’s a bold statement coming from me because I love a vat of syrup for two bites of pancakes.  I keep waitresses at pancake houses busy, asking for extra syrup x3.

Graham Cracker sweet potatoes sticks after cooking

Brown sugar and graham cracker crumbs can do no wrong.

These sticks were sweet and wonderful both from the dry-rub-turned-streusel-coating and because sweet potatoes are already sweet, which is how I prefer anything, including potatoes.

Graham Cracker sweet potatoes sticks in jar

Please trust me that despite these sticks looking like they hailed from another planet, they were ridiculously good.

Soft and tender like French toast.

Graham Cracker sweet potatoes sticks

If you are looking for crispy ‘n crunchy potato sticks, these are not that.  Try these potatoes instead.

If potatoes can masquerade as French Toast, or as dessert, this is how to pull it off.

Graham Cracker sweet potatoes sticks in jar

 

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Sweet Potato Graham Cracker “French Toast” Sticks (with Gluten-Free and Vegan suggestions)

1 large sweet potato or yam

1 egg, beaten

1/2 cup graham cracker crumbs

1/3 cup cornstarch

1/4 cup brown sugar

1/4 cup white sugar

1 teaspoon cinnamon

Preheat oven to 375F and prepare a baking sheet with a Silpat liner, foil, parchment paper (lining your sheet will save you immense headache in the cleanup process). Peel the sweet potato, rinse it with water, and slice it into sticks about 1 centimeter wide (the length does not matter as much as the width). In a large bowl, beat an egg with a fork and place the sweet potato sticks into the egg mixture and toss. In another large bowl, combine all the dry ingredients and stir to create the dry rub. Grab a handful of egg-coated sweet potatoes and toss them in the dry mixture, then place them on the prepared pan. Repeat with all remaining potatoes. If you have extra egg mixture or extra dry rub, you can sprinkle that over the top of the sweet potatoes on the baking sheet before baking them. I used up all the coating mixture in the photos shown, but if you do not want your sticks as breaded, don’t dredge them as fully with dry rub. Bake potatoes for 30 minutes, then flip them. The will likely have become stuck to the pan so use a spatula and flip the entire thing over. Bake for another 10 to 20 minutes, and use your judgment based on browning levels, thickness your coating mixture was applied, the size of your potato sticks, and personal taste preferences. Remove from the oven and if the potatoes are stuck together, either tear them apart with your hands after they’ve cooled a bit or place them on a cutting board and slice with a knife as needed. Serve immediately, with or without a dusting of powdered sugar over the top or maple syrup for dipping. Store extras in an airtight container for up to 2 days on the countertop, using common sense. They won’t stay crispy and will become almost donut-like and spongecake-like the longer they are stored.

To keep gluten-free, use gluten-free graham crackers. To keep vegan, replace the egg with a chia or flax egg or other liquid egg replacer.

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These potatoes made a potato lover out of me.  I made this recipe with sweet potatoes, not yams, but as discussed last week, Americans tend to use the names interchangeably and sometimes incorrectly.

Graham Cracker sweet potatoes sticks in jar

And I’ve nearly confused myself when it comes to tubers.

There are so many varieties of sweet potatoes, and yams, which adds to the name-game confusion.

Two sweet potatoes

All I know if if I can make plain ole orange-colored potatoes taste like rich, sweet, decadent baked french toast, I’m not going to get hung up on nomenclature.

Sweet Potato Graham Cracker Sticks

I’ve got sweet crust bites to nibble on.

Sweet Potato Graham Cracker Sticks in jar

If you’d like to try something a little less sweet and decadent, while still using sweet potatoes, try Roasted Sweet Potato Fries

Roasted Sweet Potato Fries
Roasted Sweet Potato Fries

I also made Cinnamon Sugar & Ginger Roasted Potato Sticks from regular Russet baking potatoes when I was trying to butter Scott up awhile back.

Cinnamon Sugar & Ginger Roasted Potato Sticks

Last week I made Caribbean Citrus Roasted Sweet Potatoes.  Crunchy on the outside, soft ‘ n tender on the inside.

Caribbean Citrus Roasted Sweet Potatoes

It’s been very tuberous here lately.

Are you a potato fan or a sweet potato fan?  Do you label yams and sweet potatoes interchangeably?  Do you know how to tell the difference?

As I’ve mentioned, potatoes in general aren’t my biggest love.  They’re fine, but they’re not something I go out of my way for because I’d rather allot my mindless carb-eating to something more useful.  Like a donut.

But I will say that if all potatoes taste like French toast, potatoes may be replacing donuts.

I thought I finally had it figured out but realized that true yams are rare in the U.S. and that most of us are probably eating sweet potatoes, rather than yams, in one of their many different varieties, shapes, and colors.

Are you a French toast fan?

I love French toast but it’s been ages since I’ve made it.  Must work on that.

I prefer French toast to pancakes and I’d say that it ties with waffles.  I don’t have a waffle iron though.  Must work on that, too.

What was the last “ulgy” food you ate that tasted great?

I don’t think most traditional “comfort food” is all that pretty.  Foods like soup, chili, mac ‘n cheese, beans, casseroles, dips and anything that’s warm, mushy, soft, or brown is notoriously hard to photograph but it sure can taste great.  Don’t judge a book by the cover, I say.

As photography went, I had a ball photographing these spuds.  I thought they were going to be my nemesis but it turns out I had lots of fun with my extra-terrestrial taters and the light was hitting them so perfectly.

Have a great week!

About the Author

Welcome to AverieCooks! Here you’ll find fast and easy recipes that taste amazing and are geared for real life. Nothing fussy or complicated, just awesome tasting dishes everyone loves!

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Please note: I have only made the recipe as written, and cannot give advice or predict what will happen if you change something. If you have a question regarding changing, altering, or making substitutions to the recipe, please check out the FAQ page for more info.

Comments

  1. De-lurking, love your blog! I never would have thought of this but it looks SO GOOD. I will definitely have to make these soon. Very creative idea!

  2. No judgement here, lady! I think they look fantastic. This is such a creative use of sweet potatoes. Luckily, I have all the ingredients to make these very soon.

  3. You are so creative! I love all your ideas! I eat a sweet potatoe every day, so these are a must try for me. I know my kids will eat them up too. They always beg me to make french toast on the weekends!

    1. You eat one per day? Ok then you have to work these into your repertoire and LMK what you think!

    1. I know you love your sweet taters and you could probably replace the egg wash with a chia or flax egg, just something kinda gooey for the coating.

  4. No apologies necessary for the appearance of those sticks–I think they look beautiful! And I know a lot of people who would love them, although they wouldn’t work for me (but you know I’m always on the lookout for goodies for my peeps’ tastes).

    “Yam” and “sweet potato” get interchanged somewhat, but “potato” is such a different thing it never gets conflated in my experience.

    So is your system completely ok with gluten nowadays? I’ve heard that for some people, gluten intolerance can resolve, or you can end up being ok to have it 2-3 times a week or some such threshold. If so, congrats! Definitely a sign of improved health and vitality!

    1. If I have one cookie, one brownie, some sweet potatoes, with gluten in the breading, I am usually fine. But if I over-do it, I will pay the price. So I’m fine, up to a point. But I think most people are that way; they just don’t realize they’re gluten sensitive or intolerant, whereas I notice the tiny little things like headaches and moodiness and relate it to overdoing gluten whereas other people may just dismiss it and not put the pieces together.

      1. Yes, I think you’re right that many people are that way. Of course, there’s also those of us (like me) that can’t take any gluten at all without being sick for days. I guess that’s the difference between sensitivity and allergy. Cool that you’re exploring like that.

  5. I absolutely LOVE potatoes – one of my favorite carbs. Mashed, whipped, roasted, french fried, pretty much delicious any which way. I never understand what the different between sweet potatoes and yams, all I know is I hate the orange-fleshed one. But there is a lighter “sweet potato or yam” that is delicious.

    As long as it tastes good I don’t care if my food is pretty or not. The one that people look grossed out by the most though is a simple green monster. I finally convinced my husband to try it and he had to admit that it “wasn’t bad.” But my mother-in-law still thinks I’m insane! lol

    1. Green smoothies can be really good; some are awesome, some are…not. I’d love to try your version one day.

  6. These look fantastic! My boys would love these. And I just so happen to have graham cracker crumbs and sweet potatoes. It’s meant to be :)

  7. We love sweet potatoes in our house and I tend to buy a lot throughout the fall and winter (although it’s hard to talk about fall and winter in SoCal:). I have to try these on my girls – I see no reason they would not fall in love with them.
    And I don’t think they are ugly – more ruggedly handsome:)

  8. These are gorgeous, Averie! I love sweet potatoes, I can imagine that they lend themselves very well to the sweet flavors of French toast. And the graham cracker crumbs…genius!

  9. I will judge this book by its cover because they look A-mazing!!! What a fantastic idea! Gorgeous photos, as always.