Two years ago during a super busy week, I needed dinner that felt like real food but wasn't complete junk. I had leftover rotisserie chicken, some sweet potatoes sitting around, and Oliver asking for "something spicy like Dad's wings." I threw together these buffalo chicken stuffed sweet potatoes thinking it was just a random weeknight thing. Oliver ate two whole ones, asked if we could make them again the next day, and now we eat them probably once a week. We've made them at least 150 times - for regular Tuesday nights, game day parties, and those Sundays when we want food that tastes good but doesn't make us feel like garbage after.
Why This Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes Works
I've made these buffalo chicken stuffed sweet potatoes about 150 times over two years for weeknight dinners, meal prep Sundays, and game day stuff. The sweet potato does two things at once - it's your plate and your side, so you're not making rice or pasta or whatever else. You just bake the potatoes, stuff them, dinner's done. The sweetness from the potato cuts the heat from buffalo sauce in a way regular bread or tortillas don't, so you get spicy without your mouth burning. Kids who normally won't touch vegetables eat these because the cheese and chicken hide the fact they're eating something orange that's actually good for them.
These work for actual busy life because you can make everything ahead and just heat it up later. I've baked the sweet potatoes on Sunday, made the Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes part, and kept them separate in the fridge until Wednesday when we needed fast dinner. Just stuff and reheat for 10 minutes. They're also one of those weird dinners that tastes good hot, warm, or even sitting out - I've eaten leftover ones straight from the fridge standing at the counter and they're fine. The buffalo sauce keeps the chicken from getting dry, and the sweet potato stays soft even after three days in the fridge.
Jump to:
- Why This Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes Works
- Ingredients For Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
- How To Make Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
- Equipment For Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
- Variations On Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
- Smart Swaps for Your Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
- Storage Tips
- Top Tip
- Grandma's Secret Fix Passed Down for Generations
- FAQ
- Time to Get Cooking!
- Related
- Pairing
- Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
Ingredients For Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
The Base:
- Large sweet potatoes
- Cooked chicken
- Buffalo sauce
- Shredded cheddar cheese
- Cream cheese
- Ranch dressing
- Butter
- Salt
The Toppings:
- Green onions
- Blue cheese crumbles
- Extra ranch for drizzling
- Celery sticks on the side
Optional Stuff:
- Garlic powder
- Black pepper
- Hot sauce
- Sour cream instead of ranch
See recipe card for quantities.
How To Make Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
I've made these 150 times, so here's what actually works without wasting time:
Bake Your Sweet Potatoes Right
- Preheat oven to 400°F and line baking sheet with foil for easy cleanup
- Scrub sweet potatoes clean and poke holes all over with a fork
- Rub outside with a little olive oil and sprinkle with salt
- Bake for 45-60 minutes until they're soft when you squeeze them
- Let them cool for 10 minutes so you don't burn your hands
Make the Buffalo Chicken Filling
- Shred your cooked chicken into small pieces in a big bowl
- Add softened cream cheese and mix until it's all coated
- Pour in buffalo sauce and melted butter, stir it all together
- Taste it and add more buffalo sauce if you want it spicier
- Mix in half the shredded cheddar cheese
Stuff Those Potatoes
- Cut a slit down the middle of each cooled sweet potato
- Scoop out some of the inside to make room for filling
- Mix the scooped sweet potato into your buffalo chicken mixture
- Pile the buffalo chicken filling back into each potato skin
- Top with remaining shredded cheddar cheese
Bake Until Bubbly and Golden
- Put stuffed sweet potatoes back on the baking sheet
- Bake at 375°F for 15-20 minutes until cheese melts and bubbles
- Top with chopped green onions and drizzle with ranch dressing
- Serve hot with extra buffalo sauce and ranch on the side
Equipment For Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
- Baking sheet (for the potatoes)
- Mixing bowl (big enough for all the chicken)
- Fork (for poking holes and mashing)
- Sharp knife (for cutting potatoes open)
- Spoon (for scooping out the insides)
Variations On Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
BBQ Chicken Version:
- Swap buffalo sauce for BBQ sauce in the filling
- Use sharp cheddar and add diced red onion
- Top with crispy fried onions instead of green onions
- Drizzle with extra BBQ sauce instead of ranch
- Tastes like pulled pork but healthier
Loaded Baked Potato Style:
- Skip the buffalo sauce completely
- Mix chicken with sour cream, bacon bits, and chives
- Use lots of cheddar cheese and butter
- Top with more bacon and sour cream
- For people who can't handle spicy
Ranch Chicken Sweet Potato:
- Use ranch seasoning packet mixed with chicken
- Add diced celery and carrots to the filling
- Skip the hot sauce for kid-friendly version
- Top with ranch and shredded lettuce
- Oliver's friends who don't like spicy eat these
Mexican Street Corn Style:
- Replace buffalo with taco seasoning
- Mix in corn, black beans, and cotija cheese
- Top with cilantro and lime juice
- Drizzle with chipotle mayo instead of ranch
- Completely different but really good
Smart Swaps for Your Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
I've made these for people with different diets and food issues, here's what works:
Protein Options:
- Rotisserie chicken → Canned chicken (drain it good)
- Chicken → Ground turkey (brown it first)
- Regular → Shredded turkey breast
- Meat → Black beans for vegetarian
Dairy Switches:
- Cream cheese → Greek yogurt
- Cheddar → Pepper jack for spicier
- Blue cheese → Skip it if you hate it
- Regular cheese → Dairy-free cheese
Sauce Changes:
- Frank's RedHot → Any buffalo sauce you like
- Ranch → Blue cheese dressing
- Store-bought → Homemade buffalo sauce
- Regular → Sugar-free buffalo sauce
Healthier Swaps:
- Full-fat cream cheese → Light cream cheese
- Regular ranch → Greek yogurt ranch
- Lots of cheese → Half the cheese
- Butter → Skip the butter in filling
Storage Tips
Counter Storage (2 hours max):
- Don't leave them out longer than that
- Buffalo chicken can go bad fast
- Fine for parties where people eat them quick
- Cover with foil if they're sitting out
Fridge (4-5 days):
- Let them cool all the way first
- Wrap each one in foil or plastic wrap
- Stack them in a container
- Reheat at 350°F for 15 minutes or microwave 2-3 minutes
Freezer (2-3 months):
- Freeze before adding toppings like green onions or ranch
- Wrap really good in plastic wrap then foil
- Write the date on them
- Thaw in fridge overnight, then reheat
Meal Prep Method:
- Bake all the sweet potatoes on Sunday
- Make the buffalo chicken filling separate
- Keep them apart in the fridge
- Stuff and heat when you're ready to eat
- Stays fresher this way
Top Tip
- Oliver figured out the best part of these Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes totally by accident about six months ago. We were making a bunch for his team party and I was running around trying to get everything done. Oliver was supposed to drizzle ranch on top at the end, but he got impatient and dumped a big glob of ranch right into the buffalo chicken filling before we even stuffed the potatoes.
- We stuffed them anyway because we didn't have time to make more chicken, and when they came out of the oven, everyone kept asking what was different about them. The ranch in the filling made everything creamier and cooled the heat down just enough so it wasn't burning anyone's mouth but still tasted spicy. It also kept the chicken from getting dry during the second bake.
- The other thing Oliver does now is he takes the sweet potato we scoop out and mixes it back into the filling instead of eating it or throwing it away. I thought that was stupid at first, but it makes the filling go further so you get more stuffed potatoes from the same amount of chicken. Plus the sweet potato mixed in there makes the Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes sauce less hot, so his friends who cry from spicy food can actually eat them.
Grandma's Secret Fix Passed Down for Generations
My grandma had a totally different way of making Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes that she picked up back in the 1970s from her neighbor who was from Louisiana. Instead of mixing everything together cold, she'd take the scooped-out sweet potato and mash it with the cream cheese while both were still hot. The heat would melt the cream cheese into the sweet potato and make this really smooth base that was way creamier than just throwing cold stuff together. Then she'd fold in the Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes and the whole thing would come together less chunky, more like a smooth filling that didn't fall apart.
The last thing she did that nobody else does is she'd broil them for the final two minutes instead of just baking until the cheese melted. Those two minutes under the broiler made the cheese get brown and bubbly and a little crispy on top instead of just melted and flat. Now when I make these buffalo chicken stuffed sweet potatoes, I do all three of her things - hot mash with cream cheese, flip them while baking, and broil at the end. Oliver doesn't know any different because he's only ever had them this way, but when I make them the regular way to compare, everyone says they're not as good. Sometimes I get lazy and skip the flipping.
FAQ
Does sweet potato go well with chicken?
Yeah, sweet potatoes and chicken go together really well. The sweet potato's sweetness balances out savory chicken stuff, and the soft texture works with any kind of chicken - baked, grilled, shredded, whatever. In these buffalo chicken stuffed sweet potatoes, the sweetness cuts through the spicy buffalo sauce so it's not destroying your mouth.
Why do you soak sweet potatoes before baking?
You don't have to soak sweet potatoes before baking them. Some people do it to get rid of extra starch, but honestly it's pointless for these buffalo chicken stuffed sweet potatoes. Just scrub them clean, poke holes with a fork, rub with oil, and bake. Soaking them just wastes time.
Is a buffalo chicken wrap healthy to eat?
Buffalo chicken wraps can be okay depending on what's in them. These buffalo chicken stuffed sweet potatoes are better than regular wraps because sweet potatoes have fiber and vitamins, and you're not eating a processed tortilla. They've got protein from chicken, but also buffalo sauce, cheese, and ranch, so they're not diet food - just better than eating a pile of wings.
What meat pairs best with sweet potatoes?
Lots of meat works with sweet potatoes. Pork and sweet potatoes are good together. Beef works too. But chicken is probably easiest because it doesn't have strong flavor that fights with the sweetness. These buffalo chicken stuffed sweet potatoes work because the mild chicken lets both the sweet potato and spicy buffalo sauce do their thing without everything clashing.
Time to Get Cooking!
Now you've got every secret behind these Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes - from Oliver's ranch-in-the-filling trick to how to reheat them so the skin doesn't get chewy and gross. These things prove that food that's actually somewhat good for you doesn't have to taste like cardboard or like you're being punished. What started as me freaking out during a crazy busy week with random stuff from the fridge turned into the dinner Oliver asks for at least once a week, and his friends' parents won't stop texting me asking how to make them because their kids came home and wouldn't shut up about them.
Craving more easy dinners that actually taste good and don't make you feel gross after eating them? Try our Best Chicken Kiev Recipe that looks super fancy when you serve it but takes way less time than you'd think. Need another crowd-pleasing thing that people fight over? Our Delicious Cheesy Bacon Onion Bombs have that same savory, cheesy, bacon thing everyone loses their mind over. Want to keep eating healthier without suffering through boring grilled chicken again? Check out our Healthy Street Corn Chicken Rice Bowl that's loaded with flavor and doesn't feel like you're on some awful diet!
Share your Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes wins and whatever toppings you tried! We love seeing what you came up with and hearing about your own kitchen accidents that turned into something good!
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Pairing
These are my favorite dishes to serve with Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
Buffalo Chicken Stuffed Sweet Potatoes
Equipment
- 1 Baking sheet (Line with foil for easy cleanup)
- 1 Mixing bowl (Large enough for shredded chicken)
- 1 Fork (For poking holes and mixing filling)
- 1 Knife (To cut open baked sweet potatoes)
- 1 Spoon (To scoop out and stuff potatoes)
Ingredients
- 4 large Sweet potatoes - Scrubbed and poked with a fork
- 2 cups Cooked chicken - Shredded (rotisserie works great)
- ⅓ cup Buffalo sauce - Adjust to spice preference
- 1 tablespoon Butter - Melted
- 4 oz Cream cheese - Softened
- 1 cup Shredded cheddar cheese - Divided, half for topping
- 2 tablespoon Ranch dressing - Plus more for drizzling
- ¼ teaspoon Salt - Or to taste
- 2 Green onions - Chopped, for garnish
- 2 tablespoon Blue cheese crumbles - Optional
- Celery sticks - For serving
- Optional spices - Garlic powder, black pepper, extra hot sauce
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 400°F (200°C). Scrub and poke sweet potatoes all over with a fork. Rub with olive oil and salt. Bake for 45-60 minutes until tender. Cool for 10 minutes.
- In a large bowl, shred the cooked chicken. Add softened cream cheese, buffalo sauce, melted butter, and half of the cheddar cheese. Stir until evenly combined.
- Cut a slit in each baked sweet potato. Scoop out some of the flesh and mix it into the chicken filling. Spoon the buffalo chicken mixture back into each potato skin.
- Reduce oven to 375°F (190°C). Return stuffed potatoes to the baking sheet and bake for 15-20 minutes until the cheese melts and tops are bubbly.
- Garnish with chopped green onions, blue cheese crumbles, and a drizzle of ranch dressing. Serve hot with celery sticks.
- For a crispy top, broil for 2 minutes at the end until the cheese is golden brown.




















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