Red potato salad earns its place at the table because it stays sturdy, creamy, and full of texture instead of collapsing into a bland mash. The skin-on potatoes hold their shape after chilling, which means every forkful gives you tender centers, little bites of celery, and that classic tangy dressing clinging to the edges.
The trick is in the timing. Red potatoes need to be cooked until just tender, not falling apart, and then cooled enough that they don’t steam the dressing into thinness. Dijon and white wine vinegar do the heavy lifting here, giving the salad enough sharpness to balance the mayonnaise without tasting heavy. A short chill lets the potatoes absorb the dressing instead of sitting in a bowl of it.
Below you’ll find the little details that keep this salad from going gluey, plus a few useful ways to adapt it for different diets and make-ahead timing.
I loved that the red potatoes held their shape after chilling, and the dressing got even better by the second day. The celery stayed crisp and the mustard gave it just enough bite without overpowering the potatoes.
Save this red potato salad for picnics and cookouts when you want a creamy side that still has bite.
The Trick to Keeping Red Potatoes from Turning Gluey
Potato salad goes wrong when the potatoes are cooked past the point of tenderness and then stirred while they’re still hot. Red potatoes are a little forgiving because of their waxy texture, but if you boil them until they start splitting apart, the salad turns pasty no matter how good the dressing is. Stop cooking them when a knife slides in with only the slightest resistance, then drain them well so no extra water dilutes the mayonnaise.
The other thing that matters is cooling. Warm potatoes drink in dressing, but steaming-hot potatoes break it down and make the whole bowl loose and oily. Let the potatoes cool until they are no longer steaming before mixing, and the finished salad will taste brighter and hold together better after chilling.
What the Dressing and Add-Ins Are Doing Here

- Red potatoes — These are the right potato for a sturdy salad because they stay intact after boiling and chilling. Leave the skins on for texture and a more rustic look; peeled potatoes lose some of that clean bite and tend to get softer faster.
- Mayonnaise — This gives the salad its creamy base and carries the mustard and vinegar through every bite. Use a good full-fat mayo if you want the dressing to stay thick and smooth after chilling.
- Dijon mustard — Dijon adds sharpness and depth without making the salad taste aggressively mustardy. Yellow mustard works in a pinch, but it reads flatter and sweeter.
- White wine vinegar — The vinegar keeps the dressing from tasting heavy. If you swap in apple cider vinegar, expect a slightly fruitier edge; if you use distilled vinegar, the salad will taste harsher and less balanced.
- Celery, red onion, and parsley — These add crunch, bite, and freshness so the salad doesn’t turn soft and one-note. Dice the celery and onion finely enough that they scatter through the bowl instead of overwhelming each forkful.
Building the Salad So It Stays Creamy After Chilling
Cooking the Potatoes Just Right
Cut the potatoes into even cubes so they cook at the same rate. Start them in cold, salted water, then bring the pot up to a boil; that helps the centers cook through without the outside going mushy. Drain them as soon as they’re tender, then spread them out briefly if you need to knock off extra steam.
Mixing the Dressing First
Stir the mayonnaise, Dijon, vinegar, salt, and pepper together before the potatoes go in. That way the seasoning is distributed evenly and you don’t end up with pockets of plain mayo in the finished salad. If the dressing tastes a little sharper than you’d expect, that’s right; the potatoes will mellow it once they chill.
Folding Everything Together
Add the potatoes, celery, onion, and parsley, then toss gently until every piece is coated. Use a broad spoon or spatula and lift from the bottom instead of stirring hard, or the cubes will break down and turn the salad dense. Once it’s combined, cover and chill for at least 2 hours so the flavors settle and the dressing thickens around the potatoes.
Three Ways to Adjust This Salad Without Losing Its Character
Dairy-Free Version
This recipe is already dairy-free as written, which makes it a handy picnic side when you need something creamy without butter, milk, or sour cream. Stick with a mayonnaise you like on its own, since the dressing doesn’t have much else to hide behind.
Lighter Dressing
Swap half the mayonnaise for plain Greek yogurt if you want a tangier, less rich salad. The texture will be a little looser and the flavor more tart, so chill it well before serving to let it thicken back up.
Sharper Picnic Style
Add a spoonful of pickle relish or a little finely chopped dill pickle if you want more bite. That pushes the salad toward a classic deli-style potato salad, but keep the amount modest or the dressing will start tasting crowded.
Lower-Carb Serving Idea
For a lower-carb plate, serve this alongside grilled chicken, burgers, or sliced tomatoes instead of trying to turn the salad itself into something it isn’t. The potatoes are the point here, so the cleanest adjustment is changing the rest of the meal, not the salad base.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Keeps for 3 to 4 days in a covered container. The potatoes will absorb more dressing as it sits, so you may want to stir in a spoonful of mayo before serving leftovers.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this salad. Mayo-based dressings separate after thawing, and the potatoes turn watery and grainy.
- Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold or cool, not heated. If it has been in the fridge a while, let it sit out for 15 to 20 minutes so the dressing softens and the flavors open up.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Red Potato Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Place cubed red potatoes (skin on) in a Dutch oven with enough water to cover and bring to a boil over high heat; boil until tender, 8–12 minutes, until a knife slides in easily and the pieces look slightly softened.
- Drain the potatoes in a colander, then cool them until they are no longer steaming, 10–15 minutes, so they won’t melt the dressing.
- In a bowl, whisk mayonnaise, Dijon mustard, and white wine vinegar together, then add salt and pepper; whisk until smooth and creamy, 1–2 minutes, with no mustard streaks.
- Add the cooled potatoes to the dressing and toss until every piece is coated, 2–3 minutes, so the mixture looks thick and creamy.
- Fold in diced celery, finely diced red onion, and chopped fresh parsley; toss gently 30–60 seconds, until evenly distributed and brightly speckled.
- Transfer the potato salad to a container, cover, and refrigerate at least 2 hours (up to overnight) to set the flavors, 2+ hours, until cold and cohesive with no pools of dressing.