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Steakhouse Potato Salad

Roasted potato salad changes the whole mood of a picnic table. The potatoes stay firm at the center with crisped edges instead of collapsing into a soft, mayo-heavy mash, and ... Read more

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Steakhouse Potato Salad

Roasted potato salad changes the whole mood of a picnic table. The potatoes stay firm at the center with crisped edges instead of collapsing into a soft, mayo-heavy mash, and that little bit of char gives the dressing something to cling to. With bacon, blue cheese, and chives in the mix, it eats like the side dish version of a steakhouse wedge salad — bold, salty, and a little bit indulgent.

Roasting the potatoes instead of boiling them is the move that makes this version stand out. Baby potatoes hold their shape better, and once they cool completely, they soak up the sour cream dressing without turning watery. The white wine vinegar and Worcestershire keep the richness in check, while the blue cheese adds sharpness that cuts straight through the bacon and mayo.

Below, I’ve included the couple of details that matter most: how to get the potatoes browned without drying them out, why the salad needs that chilling time, and a few smart swaps if you want to adjust the tang, the saltiness, or the texture.

The potatoes stayed perfectly tender with those crispy edges, and the dressing didn’t get soupy after chilling. I used extra chives on top and it tasted like something from a really good steakhouse.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Love the crispy potatoes, blue cheese, and bacon in this steakhouse potato salad? Save it to Pinterest for your next cookout or steak night.

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The Trick Is Roasting the Potatoes Before They Ever Meet the Dressing

Boiled potatoes absorb water, and that extra moisture is what turns a good potato salad into something loose and bland a few hours later. Roasting changes the game. The cut sides caramelize, the centers stay creamy, and the potatoes hold their shape when they’re tossed with the dressing. That texture matters even more here because the sour cream and mayo coating is rich enough to soften the edges without making the whole bowl heavy.

Let the potatoes cool completely before you dress them. Warm potatoes will melt the mayonnaise and thin the sour cream, which makes the salad slippery instead of coated. The chilling time isn’t just for serving temperature either — it gives the vinegar, Worcestershire, bacon, and blue cheese time to settle into the potatoes so every bite tastes seasoned all the way through.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Salad

Steakhouse Potato Salad loaded, creamy, savory
  • Baby potatoes — Their small size means more surface area for browning and less chance of a waxy center turning mealy. Halve them so the cut sides can roast properly; whole potatoes won’t pick up nearly as much flavor.
  • Sour cream and mayonnaise — Sour cream brings tang and body, while mayo gives the dressing a smoother, more stable texture. You can swap in all sour cream if you want it sharper and lighter, but the salad won’t feel as silky.
  • Blue cheese — This is the steakhouse note. Use a blue cheese you actually like eating plain, because the sharpness comes through clearly once the salad chills. If blue cheese is too strong for your crowd, feta is the closest swap, though it loses that classic steakhouse edge.
  • Bacon — Bacon adds salt, crunch, and a smoky finish that keeps the salad from reading as just rich. Cook it until crisp so it holds up after chilling; chewy bacon softens fast once it’s mixed in.
  • White wine vinegar and Worcestershire sauce — These two ingredients keep the dressing from tasting flat. The vinegar wakes up the potatoes, and Worcestershire adds that deep savory note you can’t get from salt alone.
  • Chives — Fresh chives give the final bowl a clean onion note without overpowering the blue cheese. Add some inside the salad and more on top so the flavor stays bright after refrigeration.

Building the Salad So It Stays Creamy, Not Heavy

Roasting for Browning, Not Dryness

Toss the halved potatoes with enough oil to coat the cut sides and roast them at 425°F until the edges are deep gold and the centers are tender when pierced. If they look pale, they’re not ready; pale potatoes tend to taste flat in the finished salad. Pull them as soon as they’re cooked through, because over-roasted potatoes can turn dry and crumbly once chilled.

Mixing the Dressing Before It Touches the Potatoes

Stir the sour cream, mayonnaise, vinegar, Worcestershire, salt, and pepper together in a bowl before adding anything else. That gives you a smooth base and keeps the seasoning even. If you try to season after everything is mixed, the blue cheese and bacon can make the bowl taste salty in one bite and dull in the next.

Folding, Not Smashing

Add the potatoes, bacon, and half the blue cheese to the dressing and fold gently until coated. The goal is a salad with some rough edges, not mashed chunks. Save the rest of the blue cheese and the chives for the top so the finish stays fresh and you still get pockets of sharp cheese in the final bowl.

Chilling for Flavor

Refrigerate the salad for at least 2 hours before serving. That rest time lets the dressing thicken back up after mixing and gives the potatoes time to take on the seasoning. If you serve it straight away, the flavor will taste separate instead of blended.

How to Adapt This for Different Tables and Tastes

Make It Lighter Without Losing the Tang

Swap half the mayonnaise for more sour cream or plain Greek yogurt. The salad will taste a little sharper and less plush, but it still holds together well. Greek yogurt works best if you like a cleaner finish and don’t mind a slightly more tart dressing.

Skip the Blue Cheese for a Milder Bowl

Use feta or shredded sharp cheddar instead of blue cheese. Feta keeps the salty bite but loses the funky edge, while cheddar makes the salad more familiar and less assertive. Either one still works with the bacon and chives, but the final bowl tastes less like a steakhouse side and more like a classic loaded potato salad.

Turn It Into a Gluten-Free Side Dish

This salad is naturally gluten-free as long as your Worcestershire sauce is gluten-free, which is worth checking on the bottle. Everything else in the recipe does the same job either way, so there’s no texture penalty here. It’s one of the easier crowd-pleasing sides to serve when labels matter.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The potatoes will keep their shape, though the bacon softens a little as it sits.
  • Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this salad. The dairy dressing separates and the potatoes turn grainy after thawing.
  • Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold. If it’s been chilled hard, let it sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes before serving so the dressing loosens and the blue cheese flavor comes forward.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make steakhouse potato salad the day before?+

Yes, and it actually benefits from sitting overnight. The potatoes absorb the dressing and the flavors mellow together, which makes the salad taste more unified the next day. Hold back a little chives for serving so the top still looks fresh.

How do I keep the potatoes from getting mushy?+

Roast them until they’re just tender, then let them cool completely before mixing. Mushiness usually comes from overcooked potatoes or from tossing them warm into the dressing. Baby potatoes help here because their waxy texture stays intact better than starchy baking potatoes.

Can I use a different cheese instead of blue cheese?+

Yes. Feta gives you the same salty punch with a milder flavor, and sharp cheddar makes the salad feel more familiar and less funky. The salad will still work either way, but blue cheese is what gives it that steakhouse character.

How do I fix potato salad that tastes flat after chilling?+

Cold food needs more seasoning than warm food, so a flat salad usually needs a little more salt, a splash of vinegar, or both. Stir in a small amount, then taste again after a few minutes. The potatoes need that extra lift once the dressing has had time to mellow.

Can I leave out the bacon and still keep the same texture?+

You can, but you’ll lose the salty crunch that balances the creamy dressing. If you need a vegetarian version, add toasted walnuts or sunflower seeds for texture and a pinch more salt for depth. Without that extra crunch, the salad reads softer and less layered.

Steakhouse Potato Salad

Loaded potato salad with steakhouse style flavors: golden roasted baby potatoes, blue cheese crumbles, and crispy bacon folded into a tangy sour cream dressing. Finish it with extra blue cheese and chopped chives, then chill so the dressing clings and the texture sets.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
Chilling 2 hours
Total Time 2 hours 45 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 540

Ingredients
  

baby potatoes
  • 3 lb baby potatoes Halved for roasting.
bacon
  • 8 slice bacon Cooked and crumbled.
sour cream dressing
  • 1 cup sour cream
  • 0.5 cup mayonnaise
  • 2 tbsp white wine vinegar
  • 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 0.25 salt To taste.
  • 0.25 pepper To taste.
blue cheese and toppings
  • 0.5 cup blue cheese crumbles Use half in the salad and reserve half for the top.
  • 0.25 cup fresh chives Chopped for topping.

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Roast the potatoes
  1. Heat the oven to 425°F and roast the halved baby potatoes on a sheet pan for 25-30 minutes until golden.
  2. Let the roasted potatoes cool completely before assembling the salad.
Make the dressing
  1. In a bowl, mix sour cream, mayonnaise, white wine vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, salt, and pepper until smooth.
Assemble and chill
  1. Combine the cooled potatoes with the crumbled bacon and half the blue cheese.
  2. Toss the potato mixture with the dressing until evenly coated.
  3. Top with the remaining blue cheese and the chopped fresh chives.
  4. Refrigerate for 2 hours before serving.

Notes

For best flavor and scoopable texture, cool the potatoes completely so they don’t melt the dressing. Store covered in the refrigerator for up to 4 days; the salad can also be frozen for up to 1 month, though chives and texture may soften. For a lighter option, use reduced-fat sour cream and mayonnaise (taste will be slightly less rich but still tangy).
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