Red potato salad lands on the table with a creamy dressing that clings to every piece, tender potatoes that keep their shape, and enough bite from celery, onion, and Dijon to keep each forkful interesting. The skin stays on, which gives the salad a rustic look and saves you from the fussy peeling step that can turn a simple side into a project.
The trick here is cooking the potatoes just until they’re tender, then letting them cool before the dressing goes in. Warm potatoes soak up the mayonnaise mixture too aggressively and can turn soft at the edges. Red potatoes hold up better than waxy-white types because they stay intact after boiling, which is exactly what you want in a salad that gets tossed and chilled.
Below you’ll find the small details that keep this salad from getting watery, plus a few ways to adjust it for a lighter table, a sharper bite, or make-ahead convenience.
The dressing coated every potato without turning gluey, and the red onion gave just enough sharpness after it chilled. I served it after two hours in the fridge and it held up all through dinner.
Save this red potato salad for the side dish that stays creamy, cools beautifully, and tastes better after it chills.
The Reason Red Potato Salad Stays Creamy Without Turning Mushy
Most potato salads get into trouble in one of two ways: the potatoes are undercooked and chalky, or they’re cooked too long and collapse when tossed. Red potatoes give you a wider margin, but they still need attention. Pull them when a knife slides in with little resistance and the cubes still hold their corners. That texture is what lets the dressing coat the salad instead of disappearing into it.
The other point that matters is cooling. If the potatoes go into the dressing while they’re hot, the mayonnaise loosens and the whole bowl can turn slick rather than creamy. Let them steam off first. Chilling for at least two hours finishes the job and gives the mustard and vinegar time to settle into the potatoes instead of tasting sharp and separate.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing In This Salad

- Red potatoes — These are the backbone of the dish. Their thin skins stay tender after boiling, and the waxy flesh holds together far better than starchy potatoes, which means you get distinct pieces instead of a mashed bowl of dressing and crumbs.
- Mayonnaise — This gives the salad its body and carries the seasoning. A standard grocery-store mayo works fine here. If you use a lighter version, expect a thinner, less plush dressing.
- Dijon mustard — Dijon sharpens the whole bowl and keeps the dressing from tasting flat. Yellow mustard will work in a pinch, but it tastes simpler and less rounded, so the salad loses some depth.
- White wine vinegar — The vinegar cuts through the richness and wakes up the potatoes after chilling. If that’s all you have, apple cider vinegar is the closest swap, though it brings a slightly fruitier edge.
- Celery, red onion, and parsley — This trio keeps the salad from feeling heavy. Celery adds crunch, onion brings a clean bite, and parsley freshens the finish. Dice the onion fine so it doesn’t overpower the creamy dressing.
How To Build The Salad So The Potatoes Hold Their Shape
Cooking The Potatoes Just To Tender
Start the potato cubes in cold water so they heat evenly, then simmer them until a fork slides in without resistance but the pieces still look intact. If the water is at a hard boil the whole time, the outsides can break down before the centers are done. Drain them well and let the steam escape for a few minutes so you don’t trap extra water in the bowl.
Mixing The Dressing First
Stir the mayonnaise, Dijon, vinegar, salt, and pepper together before you add the potatoes. That gives you an evenly seasoned base and keeps you from overmixing the salad later. If the dressing tastes a little sharper than you want at this stage, that’s fine; chilled potatoes calm it down.
Folding Without Crushing
Add the potatoes, celery, onion, and parsley, then toss with a gentle hand until everything is coated. Use a spoon or rubber spatula instead of aggressive stirring. If you beat at the bowl, the potato edges break off and the salad starts looking heavy and paste-like instead of rustic and clean.
Chilling For The Finish
Cover the salad and refrigerate it for at least two hours before serving. That rest is where the texture settles and the flavor gets balanced. If the salad seems a little thick after chilling, loosen it with a spoonful of mayo or a small splash of vinegar rather than trying to remix it hard.
How To Adjust This Red Potato Salad For Different Tables
Make It Lighter Without Losing The Creamy Texture
Swap half the mayonnaise for plain Greek yogurt if you want a tangier, slightly lighter salad. The texture will be a little looser and the flavor a touch sharper, so chill it fully before serving. I wouldn’t replace all the mayo unless you’re happy with a less classic result.
Dairy-Free Style That Still Tastes Rich
This recipe is already dairy-free if your mayonnaise is made without dairy, which most are. Just check the label and use a vegan mayo if needed. The finished salad stays creamy and stable, and nobody misses the dairy.
Add Eggs For A More Traditional Picnic Salad
Chopped hard-boiled eggs bring a softer, richer texture and make the salad feel a little more substantial. Fold them in gently at the end so they don’t disappear into the dressing. This version turns the dish into more of a classic deli-style side.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for 3 to 4 days. The potatoes soften a little more each day, but the flavor stays good.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this salad. Mayonnaise-based dressings separate after thawing and the potato texture turns grainy.
- Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold. If it’s too firm straight from the fridge, let it sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes. Don’t microwave it or the dressing can break.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Red Potato Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Bring a Dutch oven of water to a boil over high heat and add the cubed red potatoes (skin on). Boil for 10–15 minutes, until tender when pierced with a fork, then drain well.
- Spread the drained potatoes on a tray or in the pot and cool until no longer steaming. Allow 5–10 minutes at room temperature so the salad dressing won’t thin.
- In a bowl, whisk the mayonnaise, Dijon mustard, white wine vinegar, salt, and pepper until smooth and creamy. Taste and adjust with more salt and pepper if needed.
- Add the cooled potatoes, diced celery, finely diced red onion, and chopped parsley to a large bowl. Toss gently to distribute the mix evenly.
- Pour the dressing over the potato mixture and toss well until every piece is coated. Scrape the bottom of the bowl to avoid dry spots.
- Cover and refrigerate for at least 2 hours before serving. Chill until cold and slightly thickened, with a cohesive creamy texture.


