Blue cheese and bacon potato salad hits the table with a kind of sharp, smoky heft that regular potato salad just doesn’t have. The potatoes stay tender without turning mushy, the bacon adds crunch and salt, and the blue cheese brings that bold, creamy edge that makes people go back for a second scoop before they’ve finished the first.
The trick is keeping the potatoes warm enough to soak up the dressing without breaking apart. Red potatoes hold their shape better than starchy varieties, and the dressing gets its balance from sour cream, mayonnaise, and just enough buttermilk and vinegar to keep the whole bowl from tasting flat. The blue cheese goes in two stages for a reason: some melts into the salad, and some stays on top so every bite doesn’t taste exactly the same.
Below, I’ll show you how to keep the potatoes from getting waterlogged, when to add the bacon so it stays crisp, and how to adjust the dressing if you like your potato salad a little tangier or a little richer.
The potatoes stayed firm, the bacon kept its crunch, and the blue cheese wasn’t overpowering. I chilled it for two hours like the recipe said and the dressing thickened up beautifully.
Love the creamy blue cheese, crispy bacon, and chilled steakhouse-style finish? Save this potato salad for your next cookout or dinner with grilled meat.
The Mistake That Turns Blue Cheese Potato Salad Mushy
The part most people miss is timing. If the potatoes sit in the pot until they’re collapsing, they’ll soak up too much water and break down the second you toss them with the dressing. Red potatoes are forgiving, but they still need to be cooked just until a knife slides in with a little resistance. Drain them well and let the steam escape before the dressing goes on. That one pause keeps the salad creamy instead of wet.
The other failure point is overmixing. Blue cheese potato salad should look a little rustic, with some potatoes coated and some crumbles still visible. Stir hard enough and you turn the whole thing into a paste. Gentle folding keeps the dressing on the outside of the potatoes and leaves the texture where it belongs.
What the Blue Cheese, Bacon, and Buttermilk Are Doing Here

- Red potatoes — These hold their shape better than russets, which makes them the right choice for a salad that needs to stay chunky. Cube them into even pieces so they cook at the same rate; uneven cuts give you a mix of firm and falling-apart potatoes.
- Blue cheese crumbles — This is the ingredient that gives the salad its steakhouse character. A good blue cheese should be punchy but not harsh; if yours is especially strong, use a little less in the dressing and save more for the top.
- Bacon — Crisp bacon adds salt, smoke, and crunch, but only if it’s cooked until properly crisp before crumbling. Thick-cut bacon works, too, but it needs a little extra time so it doesn’t go chewy once it hits the potatoes.
- Sour cream, mayonnaise, and buttermilk — This combination gives you a dressing that’s rich without being heavy. Mayo carries the body, sour cream sharpens the flavor, and buttermilk loosens everything just enough to coat the potatoes instead of clumping.
- White wine vinegar — It keeps the dressing awake. Without that hit of acid, the blue cheese and mayo can taste dull and one-note.
- Green onions — Add these at the end for freshness and a mild bite. They cut through the richness and keep the salad from feeling too dense.
Building the Salad So the Potatoes Hold Their Shape
Boiling the Potatoes Just to Tender
Start the potatoes in salted water and cook them until they’re tender when pierced, but not falling apart. You want the edges to stay intact when you drain them. If they’re overcooked, no dressing can bring that texture back. Once they’re drained, spread them out or leave them in the colander long enough for the steam to disappear.
Mixing the Dressing Before It Hits the Bowl
Whisk the sour cream, mayonnaise, buttermilk, vinegar, salt, and pepper until smooth before you add it to the potatoes. That keeps the seasoning even and prevents little pockets of plain mayo from showing up in the finished salad. Taste it here, not after it’s already mixed in, because cold potatoes mute seasoning and the dressing should taste a touch bold on its own.
Folding in the Bacon and Blue Cheese
Add half the blue cheese and the bacon with the potatoes first, then spoon the dressing over everything and fold gently. This gives you flavor throughout the bowl without smashing the potatoes. Finish with the remaining blue cheese and green onions on top so the last look is as good as the first bite. Chill the salad for at least two hours; that rest is what lets the dressing settle into the potatoes and thicken up.
How to Adjust This Salad Without Losing the Point
Make It Lighter Without Making It Watery
Replace half the mayonnaise with extra sour cream if you want a tangier, slightly lighter dressing. Don’t swap in all yogurt unless you like a sharper finish, because it can overpower the blue cheese and thin out faster as the salad sits.
Skip the Bacon and Keep the Smoky-Salty Edge
For a vegetarian version, use smoked almonds or chopped roasted walnuts with a pinch of smoked paprika. You won’t get the same meatiness, but you do keep crunch and a savory note that works with the blue cheese.
Turn the Tang Down a Little
If blue cheese is usually too bold for your table, use a milder gorgonzola dolce or reduce the crumbles and add a little more green onion. The salad stays creamy and rich, but the finish becomes softer and less sharp.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Keep it covered for up to 3 days. The potatoes absorb more dressing as it sits, so the salad gets a little thicker and more seasoned by day two.
- Freezer: Don’t freeze this one. The dressing separates and the potatoes turn grainy after thawing.
- Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold or cool. If it gets too firm from the fridge, let it sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes and stir once before serving instead of trying to warm it.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Blue Cheese and Bacon Potato Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Boil the cubed red potatoes in simmering water until tender, about 10-15 minutes with occasional stirring, so they mash slightly when pressed. You should be able to pierce through easily with a fork.
- Drain the potatoes and spread them out to cool to room temperature for about 15 minutes. The surface should look dry, not wet or steaming.
- Mix sour cream, mayonnaise, buttermilk, vinegar, salt, and pepper in a bowl until smooth and fully combined. The dressing should be thick and pourable with no streaks.
- Combine the cooled potatoes, bacon, and half the blue cheese in a large bowl. Toss until the bacon is evenly distributed and potatoes look coated.
- Pour the dressing over the potato mixture and toss gently until every piece is coated. The salad should look creamy, not soupy.
- Top with the remaining blue cheese and green onions. Finish with visible crumbles and green flecks on top.
- Refrigerate for 2 hours before serving. The salad should feel chilled and set slightly, with flavors tasting more blended.


