Some bowls are just food in a bowl. And then there are bowls like this one — where every single component earns its place and the whole thing comes together into something that actually makes you stop and appreciate what you just made.
I put this together on a fall evening when I had sweet potatoes that needed to be used, a bunch of kale sitting in the fridge looking hopeful, and an idea about a maple Dijon sauce that had been living rent free in my head for a week. What came out of that oven was one of those meals that immediately gets added to the permanent rotation. The maple Dijon sauce alone is worth making this for.
This bowl hits everything you want from a good dinner — sweet, savory, a little tangy, hearty without being heavy, and genuinely nutritious without tasting like it is trying to be healthy. That last part matters a lot to me. Food should taste good first. Everything else is a bonus.
Why you’ll love this recipe
- The maple Dijon sauce is the star. Sweet maple, tangy Dijon, a little garlic, and a splash of apple cider vinegar — this sauce is so good you will want to put it on everything. Roasted vegetables, salads, sandwiches. Everything.
- The sweet potatoes roast to caramelized perfection. At 400°F the edges of the sweet potato chunks get golden and slightly crispy while the insides stay soft and sweet. It is the best version of sweet potato you will ever eat.
- It is a genuinely complete meal in one bowl. Protein, complex carbs, greens, and a flavorful sauce. You are not missing anything nutritionally or flavor-wise.
- It is naturally gluten free and dairy free. No swaps needed, no substitutions required. It just is. Which makes it a great option for feeding people with different dietary needs without making two separate meals.
- It works beautifully for meal prep. Roast the sweet potatoes and make the sauce ahead of time and you are more than halfway to dinner before you even start cooking the chicken.
- It looks stunning in the bowl. The golden chicken, deep orange sweet potatoes, dark green kale, and purple red onion against each other make this one of the most visually striking bowls you will put on a table. IMO it photographs just as well as it tastes.
Ingredients with key notes
For the roasted vegetables:
- 2 medium sweet potatoes, peeled and cut into 1-inch chunks — Cut them into similar sized pieces so they roast evenly. Uneven chunks mean some will be mushy while others are still firm. Take the extra minute to cut them consistently.
- 1 medium red onion, cut into wedges — Red onion sweetens and softens beautifully in a hot oven. The outer edges caramelize and get slightly jammy which is exactly what you want in this bowl.
- 3 tablespoons olive oil — Divided between the sweet potatoes, onion, and kale. Do not skimp on the oil for the sweet potatoes — it is what gives them those golden caramelized edges.
- 1 teaspoon smoked paprika — Tossed with the sweet potatoes before roasting. It adds a subtle smoky warmth that complements the sweetness of the potato beautifully.
- 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
- Salt and black pepper to taste
For the kale:
- 4 cups curly kale, stems removed and roughly torn — Remove the tough center stems completely. They do not soften properly in the oven and the texture is unpleasant. The leaves are what you want.
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- Pinch of salt — Massaging the kale with olive oil and salt for about 30 seconds before roasting softens it slightly and helps it wilt perfectly in the oven without burning.
For the chicken:
- 4 boneless skinless chicken thighs — Thighs stay juicy under the high heat of the skillet in a way that breasts often do not. If you prefer breasts, use them but watch the cooking time carefully.
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
- 1/2 teaspoon smoked paprika
- Salt and black pepper to taste
For the maple Dijon sauce:
- 3 tablespoons pure maple syrup — Pure maple syrup, not pancake syrup. The flavor difference is significant and the real thing is worth every cent.
- 2 tablespoons Dijon mustard — Dijon has a sharp, clean tanginess that works perfectly against the sweetness of the maple. Whole grain mustard works well here too and adds a pleasant texture to the sauce.
- 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar — This is the brightness that keeps the sauce from being too sweet. It also helps the sauce cut through the richness of the chicken.
- 1 garlic clove, finely minced or grated
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- Salt and black pepper to taste
- 1 to 2 tablespoons warm water — To thin the sauce to a drizzleable consistency if needed.
Step-by-step instructions
Step 1: Preheat the oven and prep the vegetables
Preheat your oven to 400°F / 200°C. Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper. Toss the sweet potato chunks and red onion wedges separately with olive oil, smoked paprika, garlic powder, salt, and pepper. Spread them on the baking sheet in a single layer with space between the pieces. Crowding the pan steams the vegetables instead of roasting them — and steamed sweet potatoes are not what we are going for here.
Step 2: Start roasting the sweet potatoes and onion
Place the baking sheet in the preheated oven and roast for 15 minutes. The sweet potatoes need a head start before the kale goes in because they take longer to caramelize properly.
Step 3: Add the kale
While the sweet potatoes roast, toss the torn kale leaves with olive oil and a pinch of salt. Massage it briefly with your hands until the leaves are lightly coated and just starting to soften. After the sweet potatoes have had their 15 minutes, add the kale to the baking sheet. Tuck it around the sweet potatoes and onion. Return everything to the oven for another 12 to 15 minutes until the sweet potatoes are golden and caramelized at the edges, the onion is soft and jammy, and the kale is wilted and slightly crispy at the edges.
Step 4: Make the maple Dijon sauce
While the vegetables finish roasting, whisk together the maple syrup, Dijon mustard, apple cider vinegar, minced garlic, and olive oil in a small bowl until smooth and fully combined. Season with salt and pepper. If the sauce is thicker than you want, whisk in a tablespoon of warm water at a time until it reaches a consistency you can drizzle easily. Taste it. Adjust the maple or mustard ratio to your preference.
Step 5: Season and cook the chicken
Season the chicken thighs on both sides with garlic powder, smoked paprika, salt, and black pepper. Heat olive oil in a skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering. Add the chicken thighs smooth side down and cook without moving them for 5 to 6 minutes until deeply golden and they release naturally from the pan. Flip and cook for another 4 to 5 minutes until cooked through and the internal temperature reaches 165°F / 74°C. Remove from the heat and let them rest for three minutes before slicing.
Step 6: Assemble the bowls
Divide the roasted kale between bowls as the base. Pile the roasted sweet potatoes and caramelized red onion on top. Slice the rested chicken thighs and arrange them over the vegetables. Drizzle the maple Dijon sauce generously over everything. Serve immediately with extra sauce on the side.
Serving suggestions
This bowl is a complete meal on its own but here are a few ways to build on it:
- Add a base of cooked grains. A scoop of quinoa, farro, or brown rice underneath the kale adds extra substance and makes the bowl even more filling. The grains soak up the maple Dijon sauce in the most satisfying way.
- Top with toasted pumpkin seeds. A handful of toasted pepitas scattered over the top adds a lovely crunch and a nutty flavor that pairs beautifully with the sweet potato and maple Dijon. They also make the bowl look even more impressive.
- Add sliced avocado. Creamy avocado alongside the tangy maple Dijon sauce and sweet potato is a combination that works really well. Add it right before serving so it stays fresh.
- Serve with a soft boiled egg on top. A jammy soft boiled egg cut in half and placed on top of the bowl adds extra protein and richness. The runny yolk mixes with the maple Dijon sauce in a way that is genuinely excellent.
- Drizzle with extra maple Dijon right at the table. Make a double batch of the sauce and put it in a small pitcher on the table. Everyone will use more than you expect and having extra means nobody has to ration it.
Storage tips
Chicken: Store cooked chicken in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. Reheat gently in a skillet over low heat with a tiny splash of water or chicken broth to keep it moist. Microwaving works but can dry the chicken out if overdone.
Roasted vegetables: Store the roasted sweet potatoes, kale, and onion in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. Reheat in a 375°F oven for 8 to 10 minutes to bring back some of the caramelized texture. Microwaving works but the kale will lose its slight crispiness.
Maple Dijon sauce: Store in a small jar or airtight container in the fridge for up to 7 days. The sauce may thicken slightly when cold — bring it to room temperature or whisk in a tiny splash of warm water before using. This sauce keeps so well that making a double batch just makes sense.
Meal prep: This bowl was practically made for meal prep. Roast the vegetables and make the sauce on Sunday. Cook fresh chicken when you are ready to eat each portion — it only takes 10 minutes and fresh seared chicken is always better than reheated. Store everything separately and assemble when ready.
Freezing: The roasted sweet potatoes freeze reasonably well for up to 2 months. The kale does not freeze well after roasting — it becomes mushy. The chicken freezes well for up to 3 months. Do not freeze the sauce — make it fresh each time since it takes less than two minutes.
A quick closing thought
This maple Dijon chicken bowl came from one of those evenings where I was cooking without a plan and ended up somewhere really good. That happens more than you would think in my kitchen — some of the best recipes start as improvisation.
The maple Dijon sauce is the thing I keep coming back to. It is simple, it takes less than two minutes to make, and it genuinely transforms everything it touches. Put it on roasted vegetables, use it as a salad dressing, drizzle it over grain bowls, spread it on a sandwich. Once you make it the first time you will find yourself making it on repeat.
If you make this bowl I want to hear about it. Did you add avocado? Did you eat it for meal prep four days in a row? Did the maple Dijon sauce become your new obsession? Tell me everything. Good food is always worth talking about.
Keep cooking things that make you feel good. That is the whole point.
With gratitude, Kip
Maple Dijon chicken bowl with roasted sweet potatoes — a sweet savory dinner worth repeating
Description
Golden seared chicken thighs, caramelized roasted sweet potato chunks, wilted kale, and roasted red onion all piled into a bowl and finished with a warm tangy sweet maple Dijon sauce. This bowl is hearty, healthy, and packed with flavors that work together in the best possible way. Weeknight dinner has never looked this good.
Ingredients
For the roasted vegetables:
For the kale:
For the chicken:
For the maple Dijon sauce:
Instructions
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Preheat oven to 400°F / 200°C. Toss sweet potatoes and red onion with olive oil and seasonings. Spread on a lined baking sheet and roast for 15 minutes.
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Toss kale with olive oil and salt. Add to the baking sheet after 15 minutes. Roast everything for another 12 to 15 minutes until sweet potatoes are caramelized and kale is wilted.
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Whisk all maple Dijon sauce ingredients together until smooth. Season to taste and thin with warm water if needed.
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Season chicken thighs with garlic powder, smoked paprika, salt, and pepper. Sear in hot olive oil over medium-high heat for 5 to 6 minutes per side until golden and cooked through to 165°F / 74°C. Rest for 3 minutes then slice.
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Assemble bowls with kale as the base, topped with sweet potatoes, red onion, and sliced chicken. Drizzle generously with maple Dijon sauce and serve immediately.
