Vegan Bánh Mì-Style Sandwiches With Tempura Sweet Potato and Avocado Recipe

Lightly battered and deep-fried tempura sweet potato makes for an excellent sandwich filling.

A cross-section view of banh mi-style vegan sweet potato and avocado sandwich split into two halves.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Why It Works

  • Tempura-fried sweet potato gives the sandwich a great crisp element and adds back some much-needed fat.
  • Hainanese-style ginger-scallion oil lightly soaks into the bread and gives the sweet potato a rich texture.
  • Creamy avocado replaces mayonnaise and adds richness without distracting from the main ingredient.

As my vegan experience got progressively more fun. I passed the stage where I needed to worry, "What the heck can I eat today?" and moved squarely into the way cooler, "How can I make my lunch even more delicious than it already is?" phase. If you're a first-time vegan and still struggle, give it a bit of time. It takes a while to unlearn old habits and form all new ones, but pretty soon you'll be eyeing those vegetables the same way you used to peruse the meat aisle.

The difference? There's a lot more selection in the produce department, which can make lunch both exciting, and perhaps daunting. Sometimes it's best to just make a selection and go with it. Tell yourself, "Today, I'm going to focus my meal on sweet potatoes, come hell or high water." This kind of forced creativity can often lead to excellent end results.

Building a Satisfying Vegan Sandwich

Case in point: This sandwich, a Vietnamese-style bánh mì made with tempura sweet potato and avocado, which I developed after saying those exact words to myself.

To be honest, I'd already been working on a good vegan version of the iconic Vietnamese sandwich. It shouldn't be too hard, right? I mean, most of the ingredients are already vegan to begin with. That's what fellow part-time-vegan Erin and I thought until we tasted every vegan sandwich offered at the three shops within a one-block radius of our office. Very few of them were tasty, and none of them were satisfying.

Crusty sandwich roll, pickled daikon and carrot, strips of green chile pepper and cucumber, half avocado, Maggi seasoning, cilantro sprigs, and container of ginger-scallion oil arranged on a wooden cutting board.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

I'd gotten to work, initially planning on using mushrooms in some form or another as my sandwich base, but I couldn't get anything that had the satisfying contrast of textures and flavors that a bánh mì should have. I wasn't happy with any of the results, but it did mean that I had plenty of bánh mì ingredients on hand. Once I got the sweet potato home, I put two and two together and a sandwich was born.

Opening up a jar of pickled daikon and carrot.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

As a part-time vegan, one of my biggest challenges is a lack of fat in my diet, which leaves me feeling a little unsatisfied unless I plan carefully.

Batter It Up and Fry

In this case, rather than simply sautéing or steaming the sweet potato—which would lead to soft texture in a sandwich that already had some soft elements, I decided to batter it in a tempura-style batter before deep-frying it. This added not only a great crisp element to the mix, but also added back some of that much-needed fat.

The key to a great tempura batter is to limit the amount of gluten formation in your batter. Gluten is the network of proteins that develops when flour mixes with water. It's desirable in sturdy baked goods like bread or pizza, but can cause a frying-batter to turn tough.

To limit formation, I use a combination of regular wheat flour mixed with cornstarch (rice flour works too), and make sure to only mix my batter immediately before using it. Cornstarch and rice flour are both pure starches that contain none of the protein that can lead to toughness. In place of plain water, I use seltzer water, which contains bubbles of carbon dioxide that help keep things light. Keeping the seltzer ice cold will also help minimize gluten formation and lead to a light, crisp coating. For an even lighter, crisper batter, you can substitute part of the seltzer for ice cold vodka, which has the advantage of both vaporizing faster than water, and further limiting gluten formation.

Infused Oil Is the Secret Sauce

When assembling the sandwiches, to really up the ante, I used a trick I learned at the awesome Banh Mì Ba Le in Dorchester, MA: add a ladleful of infused oil to the mix.

The infused oil soaks into the bread ever so slightly, like in a good New Orleans muffuletta. I tried a few different combinations—lemongrass, basil, ginger, garlic, and scallions—but settled eventually on the classic Hainanese pairing of ginger and scallions. Since I already had my oil hot for frying the potatoes, making the infused oil was as simple as pouring a ladleful of hot oil over a bowl full of sliced scallions and ginger, then seasoning it with salt.

When spread over the crisp sweet potatoes, it soaks into that crust, giving them a rich texture that is—dare I say—meaty?

Assembling the Bánh Mì

The rest of the sandwich is pretty standard. I always have a jar of homemade Viet pickled carrots and daikon (đồ chua) in my fridge for emergencies. To that I added spears of fresh cucumber, sprigs of cilantro, and slivers of jalapeño pepper. A drizzle of liquid aminos (such as Maggi or Bragg's) adds the umami factor.

A cross-section view of sweet potato bánh mì layered with avocado, cucumber, pickled daikon and carrot, and fresh cilantro.

Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

The only missing element? The sweet mayo spread that adds a fatty, creamy texture to the mix.

Last week Erin walked into the office and proclaimed that "avocados are like vegan butter." And she's absolutely right. Creamy, rich, and mildly flavored, they can add richness to most dishes without distracting from the main ingredient.

This was a helluva satisfying lunch.

With a fridge full of bánh mì ingredients, I'm not stopping now on the filling front. My goal is to have a whole arsenal of fully satisfying vegan sandwiches to get into my regular rotation even once I return to my omnivorism.

This recipe was originally published as part of the column "The Vegan Experience."

February 2013

Recipe Details

Vegan Bánh Mì-Style Sandwiches With Tempura Sweet Potato and Avocado Recipe

Prep 10 mins
Cook 20 mins
Active 30 mins
Total 30 mins
Serves 4 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 quarts vegetable, peanut, or canola oil
  • 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/4 cup cornstarch
  • Kosher salt
  • 3/4 cup ice cold seltzer water (see note)
  • 1 sweet potato, cut in half lengthwise, then cut into 1/4 to 1/8-inch planks
  • 4 Vietnamese-style baguettes, or 4 soft hoagie rolls
  • 2 teaspoons liquid aminos, such as Maggi or Bragg's
  • 1 recipe Hainanese ginger-scallion oil
  • 1 avocado, thinly sliced
  • 1 recipe Vietnamese pickled carrots and daikon (đồ chua)
  • 1 cucumber, seeds removed, split lengthwise into 8 spears
  • 1 jalapeño pepper, seeds and stem removed, sliced into thin spears
  • 1 bunch cilantro leaves and fine stems

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F (177°C). Heat oil in a large wok, Dutch oven, or deep fryer to 400°F (205°C). Combine flour, cornstarch, and 1/2 teaspoon salt in a medium bowl and stir with chopsticks to combine. Add soda water and stir rapidly to combine. Do not overmix (some lumps are ok). Add sweet potato slices and working one piece at a time, lift potato slice, allow excess batter to drip back into bowl, then slowly lower into hot oil. Repeat until all potato slices are in the fryer. Cook, agitating and flipping slices constantly until pale golden brown and very crisp, about 2 minutes. Transfer sweet potato slices to a paper towel-lined plate and season with salt.

    Frying slices of tempura sweet potato in a wok full of hot oil.

    Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

  2. Place baguettes in oven until crisp, about 4 minutes. Split baguettes. Sprinkle bottoms and tops with liquid aminos, then spoon on a thin layer of the ginger-scallion oil. Spread half of avocado along bottom surface of sandwich, then divide sweet potatoes on top of avocado. Top sweet potatoes with more ginger-scallion oil, then add pickled carrot/daikon mixture, cucumber spears, jalapeño, and cilantro. Spread remaining avocado on top half of bun. Season to taste with salt, then close sandwiches, split in half crosswise, and serve immediately.

    Spooning ginger scallion oil over sliced avocado layered in an opened sandwich roll

    Serious Eats / J. Kenji López-Alt

Special Equipment

Wok, Dutch oven, or deep fryer

Notes

For even lighter batter, replace 1/4 cup of seltzer with 1/4 cup ice cold vodka.

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