This is my favorite kind of post-Easter supper: the kind where the oven does all the work while I sit on the couch and pretend I’ve totally got my life together. It uses just four things you probably already have after the holiday—leftover ham, sweet potatoes, a little butter, and brown sugar—and turns them into these glossy, caramelized, fibrous little morsels swimming in a thick amber glaze. I started making this when I was commuting home late and needed something cozy that felt like real cooking without actually requiring me to stand over the stove. Everything roasts together in one glass baking dish, gets deeply browned around the edges, and comes out looking (and smelling) like you spent way more effort than you actually did.
Serve this straight from the hot glass baking dish with a simple green salad or steamed green beans to balance the sweetness. Warm dinner rolls or leftover Easter bread are perfect for soaking up the caramelized glaze at the bottom of the pan. If you want to bulk it up, spoon the glossy sweet potato and ham mixture over plain rice or quinoa. A crisp white wine or a cold glass of apple cider works really well with the salty-sweet flavors, but honestly, it’s just as good with iced tea on a weeknight.
4-Ingredient Post-Easter Caramelized Ham & Sweet Potato Bake
Servings: 4
Ingredients
1 1/2 pounds leftover cooked ham, cut into chunky bite-size pieces
2 pounds sweet potatoes, peeled and cut into 1-inch chunks
4 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
1/3 cup packed brown sugar (light or dark)
Directions
Preheat your oven to 400°F (200°C). Grab a 9x13-inch glass baking dish so you can see all the glossy caramelization as it cooks.
Add the sweet potato chunks to the baking dish in an even layer. Scatter the ham pieces over the top and in between the sweet potatoes so everything is nestled together.
Sprinkle the brown sugar evenly over the ham and sweet potatoes. Dot the top with the small pieces of butter, spacing them out so they’ll melt and coat everything as it bakes.
Use clean hands or a large spoon to gently toss everything right in the baking dish until the sweet potatoes and ham are lightly coated with the sugar and butter. Spread back into an even layer so it roasts evenly.
Cover the baking dish tightly with foil and bake for 30 minutes. This helps the sweet potatoes steam and soften while the butter and sugar melt into a glossy, amber sauce.
Remove the foil, give everything a gentle stir to coat in the developing glaze, and return the dish to the oven uncovered. Bake for another 25–35 minutes, stirring once more halfway through, until the sweet potatoes are very tender, the ham edges are deeply browned, and the sauce has thickened into a rich, caramelized glaze.
For extra caramelized, glossy bits, switch the oven to broil for 2–4 minutes at the end, watching closely so the sugars don’t burn. You want dark, sticky edges and steaming, fibrous sweet potato chunks swimming in the thick amber sauce.
Let the dish rest for 5–10 minutes out of the oven so the glaze thickens slightly. Serve hot, spooning plenty of the caramelized sauce over each portion.
Variations & Tips
If you like a little contrast with the sweetness, sprinkle freshly cracked black pepper or a pinch of red pepper flakes over the top before baking. For a slightly less sweet version, reduce the brown sugar to 1/4 cup and add a small splash of water or chicken broth to the bottom of the dish so you still get plenty of sauce. You can swap sweet potatoes for peeled carrots or a mix of carrots and parsnips for a different kind of fibrous, caramelized vegetable base. If your ham is very lean, you can add an extra tablespoon of butter to help create more glossy glaze. To prep ahead, you can assemble everything in the glass dish, cover tightly, and refrigerate up to 24 hours; just add 5–10 extra minutes to the covered bake time to account for the cold start. Leftovers reheat well in a small covered baking dish at 350°F until hot and bubbly, or in a skillet over medium-low heat until the glaze loosens and starts to shimmer again.