These oven baked sweet plantains are a healthier alternative to frying! Baked with just enough oil, and a sprinkling of cinnamon sugar if you'd like, these maduros are easy to enjoy guilt-free.
Although originally wrote this post to celebrate Hispanic Heritage month , we don't need an excuse to enjoy some Cuban food!
In fact, I happen to know for a fact that I could serve up lechon asado and rice with plantains or black beans 5 nights a week and they'd be eaten enthusiastically. The menu has been suggested to me!
Even though we do cook a lot of Cuban comfort food, we've recently been trying to cut back on the amount of things we fry. A few weeks ago, I shared how to make baked green plantain chips (mariquitas), so today I'm showing you how to make oven baked sweet plantains that are roasted instead of fried in oil.
These baked platanos maduros are perfect for people who are watching their fat intake or who just aren't use to eating a lot of fat.
You know what else is totally cool? Plantains are Paleo-friendly and make a fantastic Paleo dessert or breakfast idea. Of course, they're also a delicious side dish for pretty much any meal.
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When you want to make platanos maduros, you need really ripe plantains.
If they're black, that's totally okay as long as the inside isn't super mushy or moldy. They should look more like this than that little patch of green plantain you can see in the background:
Honestly, they could even be a bit riper than that and the finished sweet plantains would be even tastier.
It's the super-ripe plantains that make beautiful, caramelized platanos maduros.
Table of Contents
How to cut a sweet plantain for maduros
In case you've never done it before - you don't peel a plantain like a banana. Instead, you cut the ends off:
Then you make a slit down the peel from end to end and just unwrap the plantain. This leaves the plantain ripe and ready for cutting on the diagonal into lozenge-shaped pieces.
Cutting the plantains on a diagonal is very important when you're making platanos maduros. It maximizes the surface area available for delicious caramelization! Make each slice about ½" thick.
As a side dish, one plantain is never enough for both of us, but two usually feels like a little too many. Two plantains usually fit quite nicely on a normal baking sheet without overcrowding the pieces, so this recipe calls for two plantains.
You can always cook more, but I don't recommend crowding the slices too much because they won't caramelize as nicely.
When I'm making sweet plantains (at least a once a week occurrence around here), I always use my Cook's Illustrated recommended baking sheet and my Silpat mat.
They help ensure even cooking and caramelization, and using the mat makes cleaning the pan super simple.
They're pretty affordable and they're totally worth it. I use these two items several times every week.
Ready to make some ripe baked plantains? Here we go!
Ripe baked plantains recipe
You can print the recipe card below for easy offline access, or check out the recipe right here!
How to make oven "fried" sweet plantatins
Ingredients
- 2 very ripe plantains
- 2 tablespoons of oil (vegetable oil, coconut oil, etc.)
Method
- Adjust an oven rack to the middle position and preheat your oven to 400º Fahrenheit.
- Cut your plantains on the diagonal, as shown above, into slices about ½" thick.
- Place the plantain slices in a bowl, add the oil, and toss them gently to coat. Ripe plantains can be very soft, so take care.
- Arrange the plantain slices on a baking sheet and place in the preheated oven.
- Cook for 15 minutes.
- Carefully flip the plantains with a pair of tongs or spatula.
- Cook for an additional 10 minutes, or until you're happy with the level of caramelization on both sides.
- For super delicious plantains, turn on the broiler when the plantains have about 5 more minutes of baking left. Keep a careful eye on them and remove them from the oven when the tops are looking nice and caramelized, even if the 5 minutes isn't quite up.
- Enjoy fresh and hot!
To make your baked sweet plantains even more delicious:
- Sprinkle your platanos maduros with cinnamon.
- Sprinkle the sweet plantain slices with an unrefined sugar (like raw coconut sugar) before baking.
- Drizzle a little honey over the baked plantains.
Oven Baked Sweet Plantains - Healthier Platanos Maduros (Paleo-Friendly!)
These oven baked sweet plantains are a healthier way to enjoy platanos maduros!
Ingredients
- 2 very ripe plantains
- 2 tablespoons of oil (vegetable oil, coconut oil, etc.)
Instructions
Virtually everything we make at home is at least influenced by Cuban food, and many of the recipes I share have a Cuban flair. My husband is a huge plantain addict, so we bake with plantains a lot!
More plantain recipes
These cookies are like banana nut bread, only they're delicious, fluffy pecan cookies made with sweet plantain!
There's no need to buy oily mariquitas. Baked green plantain chips are incredibly easy to make!
After you see how easy it is to make your own green plantain chips, you'll want to try these amazingly delicious lechon asado plantain chip nachos!
How do you prefer to enjoy your plantains? Sweet? Green? Tostones? mariquitas? Let me know if any of your favorite plantain recipes are missing and I'll be happy to healthy them up!
Sheila
I'm planning to make these tonight, as a side dish to chimichurri skirt steak, but want to sweeten them up a little. im thinking of using honey. Should I add the honey to the oil prior to baking? Or bake and then add honey? Thoughts?
Natashalh
Hmmm...I think you'd probably get the best results by brushing some honey on after coating the plantains with oil. I'm not sure how well the honey and oil would mix, and if you add after then it wouldn't have the opportunity to caramelize! I hope the plantains work out for you and you enjoy. =)
Josephine
Hello! I just tried your recipe but for some reason my plantain didn't come out as soft and shiny looking as yours! The middle is soft but the edges are dry and hard.. I didn't use as much oil as the recipe called for because I only had one plantain. Do you think that was the reason? My plantain already had alot more black spots than the ones shown in your picture so I'm sure they were ripe enough..
Please help!
Natashalh
Hmm...it's hard to say. It could be because of oil, but it could also have to do with slice thickness or even your oven or pan. If your slices were fairly thin, I could see that making the edges drier. Also, if your oven heat is uneven or if it runs a little hot, that could contribute. I'd suggest just keeping an eye on them to make sure the edges aren't crispy and paying more attention to the evidence of your eyes than the exact time on the clock!