Once seen as a humble side, the sweet potato is now a nutritional favourite, powering gym routines, home cooking and even smoothie bars from São Paulo to Seattle.

More than a side dish
Sweet potatoes come in a surprising range of colours: white, cream, orange and deep purple. Each variety carries a slightly different mix of nutrients and plant compounds, but they all share the same basic strengths: slow-release carbohydrates, plenty of fibre and a solid dose of vitamins and minerals.
Far from being just a Sunday roast extra, sweet potatoes are edging into the “functional food” category: they feed and actively support health at the same time.
Nutritionists highlight their balance of energy and fibre. The starch fuels muscles and brain function. The fibre slows digestion and extends satiety, which can steady appetite and reduce snacking.
Why athletes and gym-goers love sweet potatoes
In sports circles, sweet potatoes have become a go-to carbohydrate. They sit comfortably between performance fuel and everyday comfort food.
- Complex carbs: support long training sessions without sharp energy crashes.
- Fibre: keeps digestion steady even when calorie intake rises.
- Potassium and magnesium: help with muscle function and reduce cramps.
- Versatility: work in pre-workout meals, post-workout bowls or snacks.
Bodybuilders often pair roasted sweet potatoes with lean protein such as chicken, tofu or fish. The combination delivers both amino acids for muscle repair and carbs to refill glycogen stores after intense exercise.
For people trying to gain muscle without relying on ultra-processed supplements, sweet potatoes offer a straightforward, home-cooked alternative.
Antioxidants that show on your skin
Orange and purple sweet potatoes are particularly rich in antioxidants. The headline name here is beta-carotene, the pigment responsible for the bright orange flesh. Once eaten, beta-carotene can be converted into vitamin A, which supports skin, eye health and immune function.
Sweet potatoes also carry vitamin C, another antioxidant with a direct role in collagen formation. Collagen keeps skin firm and resilient and is gradually lost with age, sun exposure and pollution.
This pairing — beta-carotene and vitamin C — makes sweet potatoes a quiet ally for anyone concerned about premature ageing, fine lines or dull complexion.
Colour on the plate, nutrients in the body
The different colours of sweet potatoes hint at varying phytonutrients:
| Colour | Main compounds | Notable effects |
|---|---|---|
| Orange | Beta-carotene | Supports vision, skin health and antioxidant defence |
| Purple | Anthocyanins | Linked to reduced inflammation and vascular protection |
| White/cream | Lower pigments, more starch | Gentler flavour, useful in neutral-tasting recipes |
Gut health: fibre that actually does the work
One of the less glamorous but most valuable benefits of sweet potatoes is their impact on the gut. They provide both soluble and insoluble fibre, a combination that supports regular bowel movements and feeds beneficial gut bacteria.
Regular intake of fibre-rich foods like sweet potatoes can ease constipation, support toxin elimination and stabilise digestion long term.
Soluble fibre forms a soft gel in the gut, slowing the absorption of sugars and fats. Insoluble fibre adds bulk to stool and keeps things moving. For people dealing with sluggish digestion, replacing refined side dishes — such as white rice or fries — with baked sweet potato a few times a week can make a tangible difference.
Blood sugar and diabetes risk
Sugary taste often raises alarms for people watching their blood glucose. Yet sweet potatoes generally have a lower glycaemic index than regular white potatoes, meaning they raise blood sugar more slowly.
This slower response comes from the combination of complex starch and fibre. For people with type 2 diabetes or prediabetes, that can make sweet potatoes a more manageable choice, especially when they are boiled, baked or steamed rather than fried.
When paired with protein and healthy fats, sweet potatoes can help form meals that satisfy without causing dramatic glucose spikes.
Portion size still matters. A heaped plate of mashed sweet potato can push blood sugar up, just as any carb-heavy meal would. Dietitians tend to suggest around half a medium sweet potato at a time for those closely managing diabetes, paired with vegetables and protein.
Immune support during seasonal shifts
Colds and mild infections tend to spike when temperatures swing. The same nutrients that support skin and eyes also help underpin immune defences.
Vitamin A, vitamin C and beta-carotene all play roles in maintaining barriers such as the skin and respiratory lining. They support the production and function of white blood cells, which fight invading microbes.
Regularly including sweet potatoes in stews, soups or warm salads during seasonal changes can gently support the body without resorting to heavy supplement regimens.
From chips to juice: unexpected ways to eat sweet potato
Baked, boiled and mashed versions are familiar. The current trend expands far beyond that, turning sweet potatoes into snacks and even drinks.
Healthier “chips” for the snack cupboard
Sweet potato crisps or chips can be made at home with thin slices baked instead of deep-fried. A light drizzle of oil and a sprinkle of salt, smoked paprika or herbs can replace ultra-processed snacks that typically carry high levels of saturated fat and additives.
They still count as a treat, but they bring fibre and antioxidants that classic crisps lack. For families trying to tweak children’s diets without banning snacks outright, swapping one bag of regular crisps for a tray of homemade sweet potato chips once or twice a week can be a realistic shift.
Yes, people are drinking sweet potato
In some Brazilian kitchens, sweet potato is even turning up in juice recipes. A typical version blends cooked sweet potato with fresh mint, passion fruit pulp and water. The cooked tuber adds creaminess and natural sweetness, while passion fruit provides tartness and mint gives freshness.
Used in smoothies or juices, sweet potato works almost like a natural, nutrient‑dense thickener, reducing the need for added sugar.
For a similar drink at home, cool small chunks of boiled sweet potato, add them to a blender with citrus juice, herbs like mint or basil, water and ice, then blend until smooth.
Sweet potato as a “mood food”
Carbohydrates influence serotonin levels, a neurotransmitter tied to mood and relaxation. Whole, fibre-rich carbs such as sweet potatoes can support steadier energy and, by extension, more stable mood throughout the day.
They also contribute B vitamins and minerals that participate in nerve function. While a single food will not treat anxiety or depression, a pattern of balanced meals that includes complex carbs can help keep emotional peaks and troughs less extreme.
How to add sweet potatoes to a busy week
For people who cook once and eat several times, sweet potatoes fit easily into batch-prep routines. A tray of whole sweet potatoes can bake alongside other dishes. Once cooled, they keep in the fridge for several days.
During the week, those pre-cooked roots can be:
- Reheated and topped with cottage cheese, beans or leftover chilli.
- Cut into cubes and tossed into salads with leafy greens and seeds.
- Blended into soups to add natural thickness and sweetness.
- Mashed with olive oil and garlic as a side for fish or lentils.
People following gluten-free diets often rely on sweet potatoes as a filling base instead of bread, using slices as “toast” under eggs or avocado.
A few cautions and combinations to keep in mind
Most adults can eat sweet potatoes several times a week without any issue. Those with kidney disease or specific conditions affecting potassium handling should speak with a clinician first, as the tuber is relatively rich in this mineral.
For better vitamin A absorption, pairing sweet potatoes with a source of fat helps. Olive oil, avocado, nuts or seeds in the same meal can increase uptake of fat-soluble nutrients such as beta-carotene.
On a practical level, a plate combining roasted sweet potatoes, leafy greens, a handful of nuts and a piece of grilled fish or tofu offers a compact mix of energy, fibre, protein and protective compounds.
That kind of simple, repeatable meal pattern shows why this old-fashioned tuber is enjoying such a modern revival: it slots neatly into healthier eating habits without demanding restaurant-chef skills or specialist ingredients.
