Dill Potato Salad with Mustard Buttermilk Dressing

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Cold, creamy potato salad lands on the table with a cleaner finish here: tangy buttermilk, sharp Dijon, and a big handful of dill keep every bite bright instead of heavy. The red potatoes hold their shape, the dressing clings without turning gluey, and the whole bowl tastes like it was built to sit next to grilled food without getting lost.

The trick is in the balance. Buttermilk loosens the dressing enough to coat the potatoes, while mayonnaise and sour cream give it body so it settles into the cubes instead of puddling at the bottom of the bowl. Fresh dill matters here, and so does cooling the potatoes before dressing them; hot potatoes drink up the sauce too fast and can turn the salad soft.

Below, I’ll walk through the one step that keeps the texture intact, the ingredient swaps that still make sense, and the storage note that helps this salad taste even better after a few hours in the fridge.

The dressing coated every potato without getting watery, and after chilling for a couple of hours the dill and mustard flavor came through beautifully.

★★★★★— Megan T.

Like this dill potato salad? Save it to Pinterest for the creamy mustard dressing and fresh-herb finish.

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The Trick to Keeping the Dressing Creamy Instead of Watery

Potato salad goes wrong when the dressing gets thinned out by warm potatoes or when the potatoes are cut too small and start breaking apart as you toss them. Red potatoes help because they stay waxy and hold their shape, but they still need a full cool-down before the dressing goes on. If you dress them while they’re hot, the buttermilk mixture loosens up and slides off instead of settling into the surface of the potatoes.

The other part people miss is gentleness. This salad should be folded, not stirred like soup. You want the potatoes coated and glossy, with the onion and herbs distributed evenly, but the cubes should still look like cubes when you’re done.

What Each Ingredient Is Doing in the Bowl

Dill Potato Salad with Mustard Buttermilk Dressing creamy tangy herbs
  • Red potatoes — These are the right choice because they hold their structure after boiling. Yukon Golds work too, but they’ll give you a softer, more buttery salad and can break down a little more under the dressing.
  • Buttermilk — This is what gives the dressing its tang and keeps it from tasting flat. There isn’t a perfect substitute, but plain kefir is the closest stand-in if you have it.
  • Mayonnaise and sour cream — Mayo gives the dressing body, while sour cream adds a thicker, slightly sharper edge. Using all buttermilk would make the salad too thin, and using all mayo would mute the brightness.
  • Dijon mustard — Dijon sharpens the whole bowl and helps the dressing taste seasoned, even before you add much salt. Yellow mustard won’t give the same depth.
  • Fresh dill and chives — These are not garnish here. They carry the flavor, so use fresh herbs rather than dried if you want the salad to taste clean and lively after chilling.
  • Red onion — A small amount is enough. Dice it fine so it blends into the salad instead of hitting every bite like a raw onion chunk.

Building the Salad So the Potatoes Stay Intact

Boiling Until Just Tender

Start the potatoes in salted water and cook them until a knife slips in without resistance, but before they start flaking at the edges. If you boil them until they’re falling apart in the pot, they’ll turn mushy the second you toss them with dressing. Drain them well and spread them out so steam can escape.

Mixing the Dressing First

Whisk the buttermilk, mayonnaise, sour cream, Dijon, salt, and pepper together before anything else goes in. That gives you a smooth dressing and lets you taste the balance before it meets the potatoes. If it tastes too sharp on its own, it will mellow after chilling, so don’t overcorrect with extra mayonnaise.

Folding in the Herbs and Potatoes

Add the dill, chives, and onion to the cooled potatoes, then pour the dressing over top and toss with a light hand. The salad should look evenly coated, not flooded. If the bowl starts to look soupy, stop mixing; the dressing will tighten up a bit as it chills.

Chilling for the Finish

Two hours in the fridge gives the flavors time to settle and lets the dressing cling properly. This is where the mustard and dill get louder and the raw edge of the onion softens. Serve it cold, straight from the fridge, or let it sit out for 10 minutes if you want the flavors a little more open.

How to Adapt This Salad Without Losing the Tang

Make it dairy-free

Swap the buttermilk, sour cream, and mayo for a dairy-free buttermilk-style mixture made with unsweetened plant milk plus vinegar, and use a good vegan mayo. You’ll keep the tang and the creamy texture, though the dressing will taste a little lighter and less rich than the original.

Use Greek yogurt instead of sour cream

Plain Greek yogurt brings the same tang as sour cream with a slightly firmer finish. The salad will be a little brighter and less plush, which works well if you want a lighter side dish.

Swap in baby potatoes for a firmer bite

Baby red or baby gold potatoes work beautifully if you want a salad with smaller, cleaner pieces. Leave them whole or halve them after boiling, then dress them once they’re fully cool so the skins stay intact.

Add chopped hard-boiled eggs

Eggs make the salad more filling and push it closer to a classic deli-style potato salad. Fold them in gently at the end so they don’t break down and muddy the dressing.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Keeps well for 3 to 4 days. The potatoes may absorb a little dressing as it sits, so the salad can look thicker the next day.
  • Freezer: Don’t freeze it. The dairy dressing separates and the potatoes turn grainy after thawing.
  • Reheating: Serve it cold. If it has been in the fridge overnight, stir it gently and let it sit at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes before serving so the dressing loosens slightly.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make dill potato salad the day before?+

Yes, and this salad actually benefits from a night in the fridge. The dill, mustard, and onion mellow together, and the dressing settles onto the potatoes instead of sitting on top. If it looks a little thick the next day, stir in a spoonful of buttermilk before serving.

How do I keep potato salad from getting watery?+

Cool the potatoes completely before adding the dressing, and drain them well after boiling. Water trapped in warm potatoes is the main reason the dressing loosens up and turns thin. A waxy potato like red potatoes also helps because it holds its shape instead of releasing starch into the bowl.

Can I use dried dill instead of fresh dill?+

You can, but the salad won’t taste as bright. Fresh dill gives this recipe its clean herbal note, while dried dill tastes flatter and more muted after chilling. If you use dried, start with about 1 tablespoon and add a little more only after tasting.

How do I fix potato salad if the dressing tastes too sharp?+

Add a spoonful more mayonnaise or sour cream to round out the edge. If the salad still tastes aggressive, it usually needs a little salt and time in the fridge, not more mustard. Chilling softens the sharpness and helps the flavors blend.

Can I leave the red onion out?+

Yes. The salad will still work, though it will taste a little softer and less punchy. If you want that same bite without raw onion intensity, use thinly sliced scallions instead.

Dill Potato Salad with Mustard Buttermilk Dressing

Dill potato salad with mustard buttermilk dressing that coats every cube in a tangy, creamy finish. Boiled red potatoes are tossed with fresh herbs and red onion, then chilled for a light, flavorful texture.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
chilling 2 hours
Total Time 2 hours 40 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 420

Ingredients
  

red potatoes
  • 3 lb red potatoes, cubed
buttermilk
  • 0.5 cup buttermilk
mayonnaise
  • 0.25 cup mayonnaise
sour cream
  • 0.25 cup sour cream
Dijon mustard
  • 2 tbsp Dijon mustard
fresh dill
  • 0.25 cup fresh dill, chopped
fresh chives
  • 2 tbsp fresh chives, chopped
red onion
  • 0.25 cup red onion, finely diced
salt and pepper
  • 1 salt and pepper to taste

Equipment

  • 1 Dutch oven

Method
 

Boil and cool potatoes
  1. Boil the red potatoes in a Dutch oven over high heat for 15–20 minutes, until tender when pierced with a fork. Drain thoroughly and let them cool to room temperature.
Make the mustard buttermilk dressing
  1. Whisk buttermilk, mayonnaise, sour cream, and Dijon mustard with salt and pepper until smooth and creamy. Stop when the mixture looks evenly tinted and pourable.
Combine and chill
  1. Gently combine the cooled potatoes with fresh dill, fresh chives, and red onion until the herbs and onion are evenly distributed.
  2. Pour the dressing over the potato mixture and toss gently until every cube is coated. The salad should look glossy and lightly thickened from the dressing.
  3. Refrigerate the potato salad for 2 hours to let the flavors meld. Chill until cold throughout and slightly thickened.

Notes

For the best texture, cool the boiled potatoes fully before mixing so the dressing stays thick instead of runny. Store covered in the refrigerator up to 3 days; the flavor improves after the first hour of chilling. Freezing is not recommended because the mayonnaise-and-buttermilk dressing can separate. For a lighter option, substitute Greek yogurt for the sour cream (keep mayonnaise as written).

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