Roasted Sweet Potato Salad with Apples & Pecans (Warm Fall Salad or Side Dish)
This is the roasted sweet potato salad I pull out when I’m tired of the usual fall or Thanksgiving sides but don’t want to make something people won’t touch. It is familiar enough for a holiday spread, but it’s not another casserole, and there’s no mayo anywhere.

This post may contain affiliate link(s). As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. See Disclosure.
The trick is serving the potatoes warm, not hot. They should still be roasty at the edges when they hit the greens, just cool enough to glaze the vinaigrette without wilting the arugula into mush. That’s the real difference between this working and not.
Chef Jenn’s Take on Roasted Sweet Potato Salad with Apples & Pecans
Most warm salads fall apart because the potatoes get tossed in while they’re still too hot. The greens wilt, the cheese melts into a slick, the apple loses its crunch, and what should have been lunch is now disappointing.
After making this a handful of times, I landed on a 5-minute rest off the sheet pan as the sweet spot. Any shorter and the greens go limp; any longer and the potatoes lose the warmth that makes this feel like a cooked dish instead of a cold salad with roasted cubes on top.
The version that works uses warm sweet potatoes, not hot, plus a sharp cider vinaigrette built around smoked paprika. The paprika is what separates this from every other sweet potato salad online, and it’s the ingredient I’d never skip. If you like this warm-meets-cool approach, my Chef Jenn’s Warm German Potato Salad uses bacon and a sharper dressing but the same principle.

What You’ll Love
- Warm roasted sweet potatoes against a cold crisp apple is the contrast that makes this worth making instead of a standard green salad.
- Hearty enough for a solo lunch, dressy enough for the holiday table without turning into a second Thanksgiving casserole.
- No mayo anywhere. Every other sweet potato salad online uses it, and I don’t want that taste here.
Ingredients

For the salad:
- Sweet potatoes – Look for firm, heavy ones. 2 pounds gives you roughly 4 to 5 cups cubed. Cube into 1-inch pieces. Smaller and they dry out roasting.
- Olive oil – Any regular olive oil works for roasting. Save the good stuff for the vinaigrette.
- Kosher salt – I use Diamond Crystal. If using Morton’s or table salt, cut the amount in half.
- Black pepper – Freshly ground if you have it.
- Crisp apple – Honeycrisp or Gala both work. Fuji and Pink Lady are fine too. Skip Red Delicious, it goes mealy in dressing.
- Pecans – Toast them yourself, even if the bag says roasted. Fresh-toasted is the only way they actually taste like pecans.
- Dried cranberries – Raisins or dried cherries work if that’s what you have.
- Mixed greens – Arugula if you want peppery, spring mix for milder. Baby spinach works but goes limp faster under warm potatoes.
- Goat cheese or feta – Goat is creamier, feta is saltier. Pick the one you like. Skip entirely if you don’t do soft cheese.

For the cider vinaigrette:
- Apple cider vinegar – Don’t swap for white or rice vinegar. You want the Apple Note.
- Dijon mustard – Yellow mustard is not a swap. If you don’t have Dijon, skip it rather than substitute.
- Honey – Maple syrup works if you want it more fall-forward.
- Olive oil – This is where the good olive oil matters. You’ll taste it.
- Smoked paprika – Don’t skip this. Sweet paprika isn’t the same thing.
- Salt and black pepper – Same notes as the salad.
How to Make Roasted Sweet Potato Salad with Apples & Pecans
Scroll down for the full recipe card with exact measurements and printable instructions.
Preheat the oven to 425°F and line a baking sheet with parchment. The parchment matters here. Sweet potatoes stick to bare metal every time, and the sugar in them burns past the point of useful browning.
Toss the sweet potatoes with olive oil, salt, and pepper directly on the sheet pan, using your hands to coat every cube. Spread them in a single layer, leaving a little space between the cubes. Crowding steams them rather than roasting them, and you won’t get the brown edges that matter here.
Roast for 25 to 30 minutes, flipping once at the halfway mark. You want deep brown on at least two sides of each cube, with the centers tender but not collapsing.
While the potatoes roast, make the vinaigrette. Whisk the apple cider vinegar, Dijon, honey, smoked paprika, salt, and pepper in a small bowl, then slowly drizzle in the olive oil while whisking until glossy and emulsified.

Pull the potatoes out and let them sit for 5 minutes, warm but not hot. This is the whole move, the one step most people skip. Hot potatoes wilt the greens; warm potatoes dress them and soften the apple just at the edges.
Combine the mixed greens, apple slices, pecans, and cranberries in a large serving bowl. Add the warm sweet potatoes and drizzle lightly with vinaigrette, tossing gently just to coat. You want glossed, not soaked.

Scatter the goat cheese or feta over the top right before serving. Don’t toss it in, the warm potatoes will smear it through everything and turn the salad into paste.

Make It A Meal
I serve this alongside my Roast Pork with Apples more often than anything else. Apple shows up in both, which keeps the plate cohesive without being repetitive. For a bigger fall spread, I’ll add Brussels Sprouts with Brown Butter & Almonds, so there’s another green on the plate that isn’t raw greens.
If you’re eating it as a standalone lunch, I’ll set out a cup of Cream of Butternut Squash & Sweet Potato Soup next to it. Or plate it alongside a Slow Cooker Herb-Crusted Pork Roast for an easy Sunday dinner.

Storage
Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 2 days. If you know you’ll have some left over, dress lightly from the start, over-dressed greens go soggy fast. Don’t freeze this one. Greens and apples turn watery on thaw, and the sweet potatoes go mushy.
Frequently Asked Questions
Partially. Roast the sweet potatoes up to 1 day ahead and refrigerate, then warm them in a 350°F oven for about 10 minutes before tossing the salad. The vinaigrette can be whisked up to 3 days ahead. Assemble and dress just before serving.
Honeycrisp or Gala are my top picks. Fuji and Pink Lady also work. Skip Red Delicious, it goes mealy in dressing and has no acid to counter the sweet potato.
Yes, even if the bag says roasted. Toasting fresh in a dry skillet for 3 to 4 minutes over medium heat brings out the oils and makes them taste like actual pecans instead of packaging.
Yes. The salad works without cheese if you don’t do soft cheese or want it dairy-free. The vinaigrette and cranberries give you enough contrast without it.

Roasted Sweet Potato Salad with Apples & Pecans (Warm Fall Side Dish)
Ingredients
For the Salad
- 2 pounds sweet potatoes peeled and cut into 1-inch cubes
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- ½ teaspoon black pepper
- 1 crisp apple Honeycrisp or Gala, thinly sliced
- ½ cup pecans toasted
- ⅓ cup dried cranberries
- 4 cups mixed greens arugula or spring mix works well
- ¼ cup goat cheese or feta crumbled
For the cider vinaigrette
- 3 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
- 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
- 1 tablespoon honey
- ⅓ cup olive oil
- ½ teaspoon smoked paprika
- ½ teaspoon salt
- ¼ teaspoon black pepper
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 425°F and line a baking sheet with parchment.
- Toss sweet potatoes with 2 tablespoons olive oil, kosher salt, and black pepper on the sheet pan until evenly coated.
- Spread in a single layer with space between cubes.
- Roast 25 to 30 minutes, flipping once, until tender with deeply browned edges.
- While potatoes roast, whisk apple cider vinegar, Dijon, honey, smoked paprika, salt, and pepper in a small bowl.
- Slowly drizzle in the ⅓ cup olive oil while whisking until emulsified.
- Remove potatoes from oven and let rest 5 minutes, until warm but not hot.
- In a large serving bowl, combine mixed greens, apple slices, pecans, and cranberries.
- Add warm sweet potatoes and drizzle lightly with vinaigrette, tossing gently to coat without soaking.
- Scatter crumbled goat cheese or feta over the top and serve immediately.
Notes
Recipe Card Tips
- Let the potatoes rest for 5 minutes after roasting. Warm, not hot. Hot wilts the greens into a sad slick.
- If your sheet pan is smaller than a half-sheet, roast in two batches. Crowded cubes steam and won’t brown.
- Toast the pecans in a dry skillet over medium heat for 3 to 4 minutes, not in the oven. They go from raw to burnt fast, and the skillet gives you more control.
Nutrition
A Note on Nutritional Information
Nutritional information for this recipe is provided as a courtesy and is calculated based on available online ingredient information. It is only an approximate value. The accuracy of the nutritional information for any recipe on this site cannot be guaranteed.
