Mexican Stuffed Sweet Potatoes (Vegan Taco
Boats)

Roasted sweet potato boats mashed with butter, then piled high with smoky tofu “beef,” cool guacamole,
charred corn, and a fresh tomato-onion salsa. One bowl, all the taco flavor, zero meat.


There is a certain kind of dinner that hits every note at once: creamy, smoky, fresh, a little crispy at the edges. This is that dinner. We take humble sweet potatoes, roast the cut sides until they caramelize and turn jammy, then stuff them with everything you would want on a taco night. The result eats like a fully loaded burrito bowl, except the “bowl” is the sweet potato itself.


I make this when I want something that feels indulgent but still leaves me full of good energy. Sweet potatoes bring slow-burning carbs and a hit of beta-carotene, the tofu crumble does the heavy lifting on protein, and the guacamole and salsa keep everything bright. It is the kind of plate that looks impressive enough for guests but comes together on a regular weeknight.


Why You’ll Love This Recipe

•  All the taco flavor, no tortilla needed. Naturally gluten-free and built around real, simple ingredients. •  Protein-packed. The tofu “beef” crumble gives it staying power, so this works as a full main, not just a side. 

•  Make-ahead friendly. Roast the potatoes and cook the crumble in advance, then assemble in minutes. •  Endlessly customizable. Swap in black beans, add jalapeño, or pile on extra guac. It is hard to get wrong. 

Want to save this recipe?

Enter the email address and we'll send it straight to the inbox. Plus, weekly recipes from Dr. Vegan

How to Make Mexican Stuffed Sweet Potatoes 

The whole thing comes down to roasting the sweet potatoes properly, then layering. Here is the flow before we get to the full recipe.

Two roasted sweet potato halves with caramelized cut sides held over a parchment-lined tray
Roast cut side down: Halve the sweet potatoes lengthwise, rub the cut faces with olive oil, salt, and pepper, and roast them face down so they caramelize. 
 Fork mashing roasted sweet potato flesh with melting vegan butter in a white bowl
Mash with butter: Once tender, scoop them into a bowl, add a knob of butter, and mash the flesh right inside the skin so it soaks everything up.
Smoky tofu beef crumble being spooned over cheesy stuffed sweet potatoes
Add cheese and crumble: Scatter over dairy-free shredded cheese while the potato is hot, then spoon on the smoky tofu “beef.”
Mexican stuffed sweet potatoes topped with guacamole, charred corn, and fresh tomato-onion salsa in a white bowl
Top and serve: Finish with a generous dollop of guacamole, charred corn, and a fresh tomato-onion salsa. 

The Sweet Potato Base 

The trick here is roasting the halves cut side down. As the exposed flesh sits against the hot tray, the natural sugars caramelize into a deep, almost toffee-like edge, while the inside steams soft. Once mashed with a little butter, you get a creamy base that tastes far richer than the effort suggests. Pricking the skin first lets steam escape so the potatoes cook evenly. 

The Smoky Tofu “Beef” 

This is where the meaty satisfaction comes from. Crumbled firm tofu is crisped in the pan, seasoned with smoked paprika, cumin, and garlic, then finished with tomato sauce so it turns rich and saucy like a taco filling. If you want the full standalone method, it is built on my easy vegan ground beef recipe, which I have simplified and given a Mexican spin below. 

The Fresh Finishers 

A cool, lime-spiked guacamole, charred corn for sweetness and a little smoke, and a quick tomato-onion parsley salsa to cut through all that richness. These three are what take the dish from a plain baked sweet potato to “I need this every week.” 

Tips for the Best Stuffed Sweet Potatoes 

  • Pick even-sized potatoes so they roast at the same rate. Long, slim ones give you the best boat shape. 
  • Char the corn in a dry, screaming-hot pan and leave it alone for a minute at a time. Those blackened spots are pure flavor. 
  • Season the guacamole last. Taste it just before serving and adjust the lime and salt then, so it stays vibrant. 
  • Add the cheese while the potato is hot so it melts into the mash before the toppings go on. 

Make It Your Own 

Stir black beans into the tofu crumble for extra fiber, add a pickled jalapeño for heat, or finish with a squeeze of lime crema. Swap the parsley for cilantro if that is more your style. You can also turn the salsa into a full pico de gallo with a little chopped chili. 

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. The skin is completely edible, holds the boat together, and adds fiber. Just scrub the potatoes well before roasting. In this recipe the skin acts as the vessel you mash the flesh inside, so leaving it on is part of the method. 

You can, when you are short on time. Prick each potato a few times with a fork, microwave whole for 5 to 8 minutes, turning halfway, until soft. You will miss the caramelized roasted edges, so if you go this route, finish the halves cut side down in a hot pan or under the broiler for a few minutes for color. 

Yes. Everything here is naturally gluten-free as long as you use tamari or a certified gluten-free soy sauce in the tofu crumble. Double-check any store-bought shredded cheese or toppings to be safe. 

Roast the sweet potatoes and cook the tofu crumble up to 3 days ahead and store them separately in the fridge. Keep the guacamole and salsa fresh, made the day you serve, since avocado and tomato do not hold well. Reheat the potatoes and crumble, then assemble just before eating. 

The tofu crumble already does the heavy lifting, but you can stir in black beans, add a spoon of hemp seeds, or use a higher-protein dairy-free cheese. A side of extra crumble on top is the easiest way to push the protein higher. 

More Vegan Sweet Potatoes Recipes You Will Love 

If you enjoyed this stuffed sweet potatoes, you will love these other easy vegan recipes from the Dr. Vegan blog: 

Mexican stuffed sweet potatoes topped with guacamole, charred corn, and fresh tomato-onion salsa in a white bowl

Mexican Stuffed Sweet Potatoes (Vegan Taco Boats)

5 from 3 reviews
Roasted sweet potato boats mashed with butter and stuffed with smoky tofu “beef,” guacamole, charred corn, and fresh tomato-onion salsa. A hearty, high-protein, gluten-free dinner that eats like taco night in a bowl.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 9 hours 40 minutes
Total Time 1 hour
Servings: 2 servings
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Mexican
Calories: 1342

Ingredients
 
 

For the sweet potatoes:
For the smoky tofu “beef”:
For the guacamole:
For the charred corn:
  • 150 g corn kernels fresh, frozen and thawed, or drained canned
For the tomato-onion salsa:

Method
 

  1. Roast the sweet potatoes. Preheat the oven to 425°F (220°C) and line a baking tray with parchment. Halve the sweet potatoes lengthwise and prick the skins a few times with a fork. Rub the cut faces all over with the olive oil, salt, and pepper, then place them cut side down on the tray. Roast for 35 to 40 minutes, until the flesh is completely soft and the cut sides are deeply caramelized.
  2. Make the tofu “beef.” While the potatoes roast, heat a nonstick pan over medium-high heat. Crumble in the tofu and let it sit undisturbed for a few minutes, then stir and cook for 6 to 8 minutes until golden and dry. Drizzle in the olive oil, add the nutritional yeast, smoked paprika, cumin, garlic powder, and pepper, and toss for 1 to 2 minutes until fragrant.
  3. Sauce the crumble. Lower the heat to medium and pour in the tamari and tomato sauce. Stir well and let it simmer for 3 to 4 minutes, until the tofu is glossy and coated. Add a splash of water if it looks dry. Taste and adjust the salt, then keep warm.
  4. Char the corn. Heat a dry pan over high heat. Add the corn in a single layer and leave it for about a minute before stirring, repeating until you see charred spots all over, 3 to 4 minutes total. Set aside.
  5. Mix the salsa and guacamole. Combine the diced tomato, red onion, parsley, lime juice, and salt in a small bowl. In a second bowl, mash the avocados with the lime juice, red onion, and salt until creamy but still a little chunky.
  6. Mash the base. When the potatoes are done, transfer them to serving bowls. Add the vegan butter and use a fork to mash the flesh inside the skins until creamy, leaving the skins intact as boats.
  7. Assemble. Scatter the dairy-free cheese over the hot mashed potato so it melts in. Spoon the warm tofu crumble over the top, then add a generous dollop of guacamole. Finish with the charred corn and a spoonful of the fresh tomato-onion salsa. Serve right away.

Nutrition

Calories: 1342kcalCarbohydrates: 122gProtein: 38gFat: 84gSaturated Fat: 14gPolyunsaturated Fat: 15gMonounsaturated Fat: 47gTrans Fat: 0.1gCholesterol: 6mgSodium: 2300mgPotassium: 2913mgFiber: 32gSugar: 26gVitamin A: 50976IUVitamin C: 57mgCalcium: 453mgIron: 9mg

Notes

  • For the best texture, let the tofu crisp undisturbed before you start stirring; patience is what gives it that meaty bite. 
  • The tofu crumble and roasted potatoes both keep well for up to 3 days, so this is an easy meal-prep base.
  • Always taste and brighten the guacamole and salsa with extra lime just before serving. 

Tried this recipe?

Let us know how it was!