This smoky sweet potato salad with black beans is full of nutrients and flavor and so easy to prepare! Vegan, gluten-free, nut-free, soy-free, and oil-free.
Today I’m bringing this Smoky Sweet Potato Salad to your plate. To energize and nourish you – while tasting fabulously delicious!
After the holidays, January arrives with detox plans, and unfortunately quick-fix diets.
I feel one of the perks of eating a whole-foods plant-based diet is that the majority of our foods are already… clean, real, minimally processed – detoxifying! Even when we enjoy some sort of treat or indulgent foods, the bulk of our diet is naturally nourishing and cleansing.
Like this Smoky Sweet Potato Salad with Black Beans!
This salad is full of color, texture, flavor and offers abundant vitamins, minerals, and fiber.
I once read “healthy eating is a one-way street”. There’s something to that. The more we move towards healthier eating, the more we feel how bad it feels to go ‘backwards’, returning to dairy or meat or more processed foods.
I’m no food saint. I enjoy my chocolate and ice creams, and other treats. But if I’m not eating a good amount of whole foods and vegetables, I simply feel the drag of missing those foods.
This Sweet Potato Salad comes from Let Them Eat Vegan, and can become a staple for you throughout the winter and also summer. In winter, rely on those heavier, deeply satisfying sweet potatoes. In the summer, try swapping the sweet potatoes with fresh mangoes.

I love the blend of ingredients and flavors in this sweet potato salad. The smoky, spicy, bright dressing plays off the sweet, comforting spuds and hearty black beans. It’s tasty, nutritious, and very satisfying!
This sweet potato salad is also a perfect example of how one dish can be served in different ways to be enjoyed for a lighter lunch, a more substantial lunch, or for an even more substantial dinner…
- Serve on its own, in a bowl as-is!
- Or, serve how I usually enjoy it – in a ‘lunch bowl’ with steamed kale, raw spinach or lettuce.
- Spoon and roll in green wraps, or simply spoon into smaller, crispy romaine leaves for “salad boats”!
- Do I need to mention it’s even more fabulous topped with avocado or avocado cream?
- Try layering with that guacamole in a serving dish to serve at parties. Pair with tortilla chips (see recipe note, below).
- Transform into a heartier dinner meal: serve over quinoa or brown rice (again with avocado), or over baked potatoes drizzled with a savory cashew cream, use as a taco filling, or tuck into whole-grain tortillas and bake for warm burritos to serve with salad and guac on the side!
Wishing you a bright new year – and a delicious one! x Dreena
For more salads and bean dishes, check out these recipes:
Smoky Sweet Potato and Black Bean Salad
Ingredients
- 2 cups cooked sweet potato cut in cubes (see note for baking tips)
- 2 14 oz cans black beans rinsed and drained
- ¾ cup red or yellow bell pepper diced
- ½ cup cucumber diced (seeds removed) (or jicama, peel trimmed and diced)
- 2 tbsp chives roughly chopped, or green portion of green onions, sliced
- 2 tbsp flat-leaf parsley minced (cilantro can also be used)
- 1 – 1 1/2 tsp fresh oregano minced
- 4 – 5 tbsp freshly squeezed lime juice will need about 2-3 limes
- 1 tsp sea salt little scant
- Freshly ground black pepper
- ½ tsp chipotle hot sauce I use Tabasco brand; can use another ½ tsp if you like it smokier/hotter
- 1 tsp ground cumin
- ¼ tsp allspice
- 1/4 tsp smoked paprika
- ¼ – 1/2 tsp pure maple syrup or agave nectar
Instructions
- To bake potatoes, place on a baking sheet lined with parchment. Bake at 400 for 40-60 minutes (baking time will depend on whether you are using smaller or larger sweet potatoes). Check the potatoes a few times in the last 10-15 minutes of baking. They can be baked until quite soft, which will give potatoes that meld into the salad (losing most of their structure). While baking and cooling sweet potatoes (see note), prepare other ingredients. Once sweet potatoes cool to just warm or cool, cut in cubes and add to a large bowl with remaining ingredients (starting with 4 – 4 ½ tbsp lime juice, I like to use close to the 5 tbsp myself). Toss through to combine well. Taste, and add additional lime juice if desired, and season to taste with additional salt, pepper, or chipotle hot sauce if desired. Salad is delicious at room temperature, but can be chilled for a picnic or to keep for lunches during the week.
Notes
photo credit: Emma Potts
What are your favorite meals for regular healthy eating and weekly meal routines? Please share your tips/ideas.






Tami@NutmegNotebook says
This looks so good. I think I would skip the cucumber and wrap it all up in a whole wheat wrap with salsa. Yum!
Jamie | Thrifty Veggie Mama says
Love this! I love black beans and sweet potatoes together.
Christina Dyke-Hill says
Hi Dreena!
This salad looks incredible! Healthy, delicious, substantial and easy! I will have to try it really soon 🙂
I do cleanse regularly; I mix it up by doing either daily cleansing, one or two day cleanses. It gets rid of the environmental toxins you mentioned, helps decrease sugar cravings, increases energy and mental clarity. It is a cellular level cleanse, so you don’t spend all day on the toilet which is such an added bonus 😉 I also take a one ounce shot of a liquid herbal supplement that supplies my body with antioxidants and adaptogens to help me deal with whatever is thrown at me during the day (i.e. stress, fatigue, sore muscles, etc.). If you are interested in more information, please check out my website and/or email me.
Christina
P.S. I love reading your posts and recipes; you have become so successful and knowledgeable about healthy eating and sharing your passion with others. You are inspiring 🙂
Anneli says
This looks so good! I think I will be making this today. Thank you for another great recipe! Anneli
Debbie says
I left some information out that may be helpful to anyone wishing to lend advice… I already am a fan and true subscriber to coconut oil (as opposed to canola, corn or vegetable) and use it daily along with grape seed oil in my cooking. Also coconut and almond flours instead of any other flours, almond milk instead of cow’s milk and stevia has replaced ALL sugar in my home. Stevia was replaced long before cancer… and my only beverage daily has been water since 2004. My biggest issues are tolerating fresh, raw veggies as all my body is willing to tolerate is unhealthy white flour based carbohydrates. I need serious help in order to continue this journey. Thanks again.