The Baked Potato That Earned a Spot in the Dinner Rotation
Baked sweet potatoes are one of those things that are easy to underestimate. They are often treated as a side dish or a plain, forgettable base rather than the centerpiece of an actual meal. This recipe changes that.
A sweet potato baked until soft, split open, stuffed with shredded rotisserie chicken, and loaded with the protein Alfredo sauce from the sauces section on the blog. Then hit under the broiler for a few minutes until the top is bubbly and golden. Finished with freshly grated Parmesan and a scatter of fresh parsley.
It sounds like a lot but the actual work involved is minimal. The oven does most of it. The whole thing comes together in 25 minutes if you are using the microwave for the potato, or about an hour if you prefer the oven method. Either way, the result is a meal that tastes rich and indulgent and comes in at 38 grams of protein per serving.
This is one of those recipes that works on a busy weeknight when you want something that feels like comfort food but fits the way you are eating. It is filling, it is fast, and it does not taste like a compromise. If you have the protein Alfredo sauce already made and a rotisserie chicken on hand, this comes together in almost no time.
A Sweet Potato Has No Business Tasting This Good
The combination of sweet potato and Alfredo sounds unusual until you eat it. The natural sweetness of the potato plays against the savory, creamy richness of the sauce in a way that genuinely works. It is the same reason a little sweetness in a savory dish often makes it taste more complex and interesting rather than out of place.
The protein Alfredo sauce is the thing that ties it all together. Made with cottage cheese and Parmesan as the base, it is creamy and rich without the heavy cream and butter load of a traditional Alfredo. It has a clean, well-seasoned flavor that pairs naturally with chicken and holds up well under the broiler without breaking or separating.
Stuffing the potato with rotisserie chicken before adding the sauce means the chicken absorbs some of the sauce as the broiler runs. The top layer gets slightly caramelized and the cheese melts into the chicken and potato in a way that makes the whole thing pull together as one cohesive loaded potato rather than separate components sitting on top of each other.
The broiler step is short but important. Two to four minutes at high heat creates a golden, slightly crispy top that contrasts with the soft potato and creamy sauce underneath. Do not skip it. It is the difference between a loaded potato that tastes finished and one that just tastes assembled.
Freshly grated Parmesan goes on top before the broiler, not from a green can. Freshly grated melts properly and adds a nutty, salty finish. Pre-grated Parmesan from a bag works as a backup but the freshly grated version is noticeably better here.
Let’s Talk Ingredients
2 medium sweet potatoes
Medium-sized potatoes that are roughly even in size so they cook in the same amount of time. Pierce them several times with a fork before cooking so steam can escape. In the oven at 400 degrees they take 40 to 50 minutes depending on size. In the microwave they take 6 to 8 minutes on high, turning halfway through. Both methods work. The oven gives you a slightly drier, more caramelized skin. The microwave is faster and the flesh is slightly more moist. Either is fine for this recipe since the potato is getting loaded and broiled anyway.
1 1/2 cups rotisserie chicken, shredded
Rotisserie chicken is the right call here. It is already cooked and seasoned, it shreds easily, and it has a juiciness that plain cooked chicken breast often lacks. A mix of white and dark meat gives you the best flavor and texture. Pull the meat while the potato is cooking so everything is ready to assemble at the same time. If you are cooking your own chicken, boneless thighs work well and stay moist under the broiler.
1 cup protein Alfredo sauce
The sauce from the sauces section on the blog. It is made with blended cottage cheese and Parmesan as the base, which gives you a creamy, protein-rich Alfredo that behaves like a traditional cream sauce without the heavy cream. Make it ahead and keep it in the fridge so it is ready when you need it. One cup is generous enough to cover both potatoes with sauce to spare for spooning over at the table. If the sauce has been sitting in the fridge and thickened, warm it slightly before using so it spreads and spoons easily over the chicken.
1/4 cup freshly grated Parmesan
Sprinkled over the top before the broiler runs. Freshly grated Parmesan melts properly and gets slightly golden under the broiler. It adds a salty, nutty layer on top that finishes the dish. Pre-grated works as a substitute but fresh is worth the extra 30 seconds of effort for a recipe this simple.
Salt and pepper, to taste
Season the inside of the potato after fluffing and before adding the chicken. The sweet potato itself is naturally sweet and mild and needs salt to balance it. The chicken and sauce bring their own seasoning but the potato base needs its own. A good pinch of salt and a few cracks of pepper on the flesh before loading makes a noticeable difference.
Fresh parsley, chopped
The finishing touch after the broiler. Fresh parsley adds a bright, herby note and a pop of green color that makes the loaded potato look as good as it tastes. It also adds a freshness that cuts through the richness of the Alfredo sauce. A small handful scattered over the top right before serving is all you need.
Make It Work for Meal Prep
This recipe is designed for two servings but it scales easily. Make four potatoes at once and store them in the fridge for quick lunches or dinners through the week. Baked sweet potatoes keep well in the fridge for up to four days, and the components reheat without much fuss.
For meal prep, store the baked potatoes, shredded chicken, and Alfredo sauce separately. Assemble and broil fresh when you are ready to eat. This takes about five minutes once everything is prepped and gives you the best texture since the broiler step works better with cold components going in than with a fully assembled potato being reheated.
If you want to reheat a fully assembled potato, cover loosely with foil and warm in a 350 degree oven for about 15 minutes until heated through, then uncover and broil for a couple of minutes to refresh the top. The microwave works in a pinch but the top will not have the same texture.
This also works well as a build-your-own situation if you are feeding more than two people. Put the baked potatoes, shredded chicken, warm Alfredo sauce, and toppings out and let everyone load their own. It is a crowd-friendly format that does not require plating anything and works well for family dinner.
One practical note on timing: if you are using the oven method for the potatoes, start them first since they take the longest. Get the chicken shredded and the sauce warmed while the potatoes bake. By the time the potatoes come out of the oven and get split and fluffed, everything else should be ready to go. The broiler step is the last thing and it only takes a few minutes.