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Candied Yams Recipe

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Candied Yams
Difficulty: Easy | Total Time: | Active Time: | Makes: 6 servings

Too often candied yams are cloyingly sweet and push holiday diners over the edge. These yams have a great balance of sweet and spice for a perfect Thanksgiving turkey pairing.

INGREDIENTS
  • 3 1/2 pounds yams or sweet potatoes, as uniformly sized as possible
  • 2 teaspoons kosher salt
  • 1 teaspoon whole cloves
  • 4 tablespoons unsalted butter (1/2 stick)
  • 1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons firmly packed light brown sugar
  • 2 teaspoons apple juice
  • 2 cups mini marshmallows (optional)
INSTRUCTIONS
  1. Heat oven to 350°F. Place yams in a large pot (they should fit in a single layer). Cover with cold water and add salt and cloves. Bring to a boil over medium heat; cover pot and reduce heat to medium low. Simmer until yams give only a little resistance when pierced with a sharp knife, about 20 minutes. Drain yams and rinse under cold water.
  2. Butter an 11-by-7-inch baking dish. When yams are cool enough to handle, peel and cut into 1-inch cubes. Transfer to the baking dish and set aside.
  3. Melt butter in a small frying pan over low heat. Add sugar, stirring until dissolved. Stir in apple juice, drizzle mixture over yams, and bake, stirring occasionally, until yams are syrupy, bubbly, and completely cooked, about 20 minutes.
  4. If topping with marshmallows, heat broiler. Sprinkle marshmallows over yams and broil until lightly toasted, about 1 minute. (Watch carefully so they don’t burn.) Serve.
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  • Candied Yams Recipe
    3

    danna, you got me to look it up. From Goodness Greeness: "So why do Americans call orange sweet potatoes yams? In colonial Virgina (including North Carolina, the state that leads the US in sweet potato production), farmers took to calling the paler varieties of Ipomoea batatas sweet potatoes. African slaves in the colony used the word nyami to describe orange sweet potatoes, which bear some resemblance (but no relation) to true yams. Use of the abbreviated African word yam became widespread to differentiate sweet potatoes by color. The name yam has stuck for over 300 years, commonly used to describe the tastiest and most nutritious varieties of sweet potato to thrive on this continent. Even at Goodness Greeness we call some sweet potatoes yams. The Garnet Yam and the Jewel Yam are the most popular sweet potatoes we handle."

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COMMENT

  • Why MUST people call sweet potatos "yams"? They are not yams. Yams are a starchy white tuber not normally used in American cooking.