When I don’t have the energy to tackle the tricky original, which entails deep-frying fritters of battered sweet potato sticks with whole shrimp attached, without things falling about, I make my streamlined workaround: these delicately crisp sweet potato pancakes. I blend grated sweet potato with grated carrot. Seasoning with green onion and fish sauce imbues the pancakes with some of the pungency and umami depth of the original. They come together handily with little fuss.

How to Pick a Perfect Sweet Potato

At the store, choose your sweet potatoes wisely. White sweet potatoes are dry-ish and fry up crisper than their orange-fleshed friends, so these are preferred. This said, it’s fine to use orange-fleshed sweet potatoes if your grocery store doesn’t carry the white ones; your pancakes will just be a bit less crispy. If sweet potatoes aren’t available, or you prefer a more savory pancake, use a Russet potato, though the resulting pancakes will be less crispy and not sweet-savory, which is part of the allure of these morsels. Because you’ll be peeling and grating the potato and carrot, expect some ingredient waste during prep. To hit the right quantity for the recipe and to avoid scraping your fingers on the grater trying to get every last bit, buy a little more than what’s needed. To grate the potato and carrot, employ the largest holes on a box grater. (Or cut the vegetables into big chunks and put them through the large shredding disk of a food processor.) You want them to retain some character and texture. Massaging salt into the vegetables quickly forces out moisture, the enemy of pancake crispiness.

The Best Lettuce for Lettuce Wraps

Shop for soft leaf lettuce, such as butter (Boston) or red leaf, or green leaf. Their leaves are tender and easy to manipulate (if the leaves are huge, cut or tear them into palm-size pieces). Romaine and iceberg are too crisp to easily fold around all the goodies that you’ll be wrapping up.

Make-Ahead Tips

These wraps are inherently fairly quick and easy to make. However, here are a few tips to save you some time:

The lettuce and herbs may be washed, spun dry, and refrigerated in separate zip-top bags up to one week in advance.On the day you want to serve the dish, you can make the sauce up to eight hours before serving, cover it with plastic wrap, and set aside at room temperature. If you want to retain bright chile heat, add it to the sauce before serving.Either the night before or a few hours before cooking, you can also prep the veggies, cover, and chill. Then mix with the remaining ingredients and fry.To make the pancakes up to four hours before serving, slightly under-fry them, then cool them on a wire rack. Partially cover with aluminum foil and let them hang out at room temperature. About 15 minutes before serving, refry the pancakes over medium-low heat to crisp and finish.

Whether made ahead and enjoyed at the table, or prepared on the spot and eaten at the kitchen counter, these pancakes are a terrific way to savor Viet flavors. They’re great as a snack, or paired with curry-scented beef for a lettuce wrap feast! Or double the recipe, and eat them for dinner!

Want More Great Vietnamese Recipes?

Check out Andrea’s latest cookbook Vietnamese Food Any Day for more easy Vietnamese recipes, or try these recipes:

Char Siu Chicken Chicken Curry with Sweet Potato and Lemongrass Quick Chicken Pho Vietnamese-Style Noodle Bowls with Chicken Shrimp Spring Rolls with Peanut Sauce

This recipe is easily doubled to feed a larger crowd or serve as a meal.

1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon sugar 1 1/2 to 2 tablespoons fresh lime juice 1/4 cup warm water, or as needed 1 teaspoon unseasoned Japanese rice vinegar (optional) 1 1/2 to 2 tablespoons fish sauce 1 Thai or serrano chile, thinly sliced (keep seeds intact); or 1 to 1 1/2 teaspoons chile garlic sauce or sambal oelek (optional, good for heat) 1 clove garlic, minced (optional, good for pungency)

For the pancakes and garnishes:

3 cups (12 ounces) grated white sweet potato (buy a 1 pounder for easy prep) 1 cup (3 1/2 ounces) grated carrot (start from a 4-ounce carrot) Rounded 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt 3 tablespoons lightly packed, finely chopped green onion (green and white parts) 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper 2 teaspoons fish sauce 1 tablespoon cornstarch 3 tablespoons white or brown rice flour, such as Bob’s Red Mill (or all-purpose flour) 1 large egg About 1/3 cup canola or other neutral oil Leaves from 1 head of soft-leaf lettuce, such as butter, Boston, or red leaf 6 to 8 bushy sprigs mint, basil, or other soft leaf herbs 10 to 12 sprigs cilantro

Taste the limeade, and if needed, add the remaining 1 teaspoon sugar and/or 1 1/2 teaspoons lime juice; dilute with water if you go too far. If there’s an unpleasant tart-bitter edge, add the vinegar to rounds things out. Finally, add the fish sauce to create a bold, forward finish. If desired, add the chiles and/or garlic. Set aside. You should have 1/2 cup of nuoc cham, and this can be made and refrigerated up to 8 hours before serving. Dump the veggies into a dry bowl. For each one, use a fork and your fingers to scoop up the 1/4 cup portions of the potato-and-carrot mixture (one wedge of the “pie”). Deposit into the skillet, spreading and flattening the mixture with the measuring cup bottom and fork to make a 3 1/2-inch-wide pancake (mine often look like Australia). Fry for about 3 minutes, until bits of the fringe-like edges are richly brown and crisp. Drizzle 2 to 3 teaspoons of oil on top of the pancakes, then wield 2 spatulas to carefully flip each one over. (The pancakes are delicate, so 2 spatulas are super handy.) Fry for about 3 minutes longer, until crisp and brown underneath. Cool on a rack. Fry the remaining batch.