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The advantage of having your own vegetable garden is that you have a ready supply of fresh vegetables that you know are free from chemicals. The downside is sometimes you have a glut of something. This summer it was spinach, I didn’t expect it to seed so well, or grow well with all the rain. Fortunately I also have lots of friends who I like to cook for and so a glut turns into lunch.
I also helps that I love having people over for lunch at the weekend, so I needed to find something to use up lots of spinach as well as being filling and delicious. A quick search and I found this fabulous bake courtesy of BBC Food.
Sweet Potato & Spinach Bake

- 300ml single cream (or double if you feel indulgent – I always do)
- 1 garlic glove, peeled
- 2 sprigs thyme (or rosemary)
- 250g bag frozen spinach
- freshly grated nutmeg
- butter
- 850g sweet potatoes, peeled and thinly sliced (about 3mm think) – I used my mandolin
- 25g grated hard cheese (Parmesan or veggie equiv.)
Directions
- Heat oven to 200C/180C fan/gas 6. Put the cream, garlic and herb sprigs into a small saucepan and slowly bring to just below boiling. Turn off the heat, season and leave to infuse.
- Put the spinach into a colander, pour over a kettle of boiling water and leave to drain for a few mins. Then squeeze out as much water as possible. Season with salt, pepper and freshly grated nutmeg.
- Grease an ovenproof dish generously with butter and spread half the sweet potato slices across the bottom. Top with a layer of spinach, then the remaining potato. Pour over the cream mixture, through a sieve to remove the garlic and herbs, then sprinkle with cheese. Bake for 45-55 mins until golden and tender.
That’s it, easy-peasy. I probably used more fresh spinach and just wilted it with almost boiling water from the kettle, and a couple of garlic cloves rather than just one. I also used thyme – although the original recipe says you can use rosemary, it didn’t appeal to me. I just served this with a huge bowl of salad (mixed leaves, halved baby plum tomatoes, sliced cucumber, sliced red and yellow peppers and finely sliced half-moons of red onion) and lots of fresh crusty bread with butter.
This is a delicious vegetarian lunch dish. You could use it as a side dish (like dauphinoise potatoes), but why complicate things? It should feed 4 people easily and perhaps 6 as a side. I made a dish and a half for 6 as a main. Oh and I apologise for pinching the photo…..I made this long before I started taking photos of everything I eat.