Red skinned potato salad hits the table with the kind of creamy, tender bite that disappears fast at potlucks and cookouts. The skins stay on, which means the potatoes hold their shape better and bring a little texture to every spoonful, while the dressing clings instead of sliding off. It’s the kind of side dish that tastes familiar on the first bite and still manages to get people asking who made it.
What makes this version work is balance. Red potatoes stay waxy and firm, so they don’t turn mealy after boiling, and the simple dressing leans on Dijon and white wine vinegar to keep the mayo from tasting flat. Celery and green onions add crunch and sharpness, and the parsley keeps the whole bowl tasting fresh after it chills. Letting it rest for a couple of hours matters; that’s when the potatoes absorb the seasoning and the dressing settles into a creamy, cohesive salad.
Below, I’m walking through the one detail that keeps potato salad from going bland, plus a few smart swaps and storage notes for making it ahead without losing that clean, creamy texture.
The potatoes held their shape after chilling, and the dressing soaked in without getting runny. I liked the little bite from the celery and the Dijon kept it from tasting heavy.
Creamy red skinned potato salad with Dijon and herbs — save this one for the potluck side dish that always gets finished first.
The Trick to Keeping Red Potatoes Creamy, Not Mushy
Red potatoes are the right choice here because they’re waxy and hold together after boiling. That matters more than people think. A starchy potato can break down fast once the dressing hits it, and you end up with a bowl that looks thick but eats pasty. With red potatoes, you get soft centers and defined edges, which is exactly what you want in a cold potato salad.
The other place people run into trouble is timing. If the potatoes go into the dressing while they’re still steaming hot, the mayo can loosen and the salad can get greasy instead of creamy. Let the potatoes cool until they’re warm, not hot, before mixing. That gives them time to absorb seasoning without collapsing.
- Red potatoes — The skins help them stay intact and give the salad a better texture. If you swap in Yukon golds, expect a slightly richer, softer bite.
- Dijon mustard — This is the backbone of the dressing, not just a background note. It sharpens the mayonnaise and keeps the salad from tasting flat.
- White wine vinegar — This brightens the dressing and balances the richness. Apple cider vinegar works in a pinch, but it will read a little fruitier.
- Celery and green onions — These add crunch and freshness after the salad chills. Don’t skip the diced celery unless you want a softer, one-note bowl.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in the Bowl

Mayonnaise gives the salad its creamy body, but it needs acidity and seasoning to feel complete. Use a mayo you already like on a sandwich, because its flavor shows up here. If you want a lighter result, replace part of it with plain Greek yogurt, but don’t replace all of it or the dressing turns tangy and thin.
Dijon mustard and vinegar are what keep the dressing awake after chilling. The mustard emulsifies a bit with the mayo, while the vinegar cuts through the richness so each bite tastes clean instead of heavy. If you leave one out, the salad still works, but it loses that little snap that makes people go back for seconds.
Fresh parsley, celery, and green onions matter more than they look like they should. Parsley keeps the flavor fresh, celery gives the crunch that balances the soft potatoes, and green onions add a mild bite without overpowering the dressing. Use fresh herbs here; dried parsley doesn’t bring enough lift.
Building the Salad So It Holds Together After Chilling
Boiling the Potatoes Evenly
Start the potatoes in salted water and cook them until a knife slides in without resistance, but the cubes still hold their edges. If you boil them past that point, the outer layer starts to break down before you ever mix the salad. Drain them well, then spread them out for a few minutes so extra steam can escape instead of watering down the dressing.
Mixing the Dressing First
Stir the mayonnaise, Dijon, vinegar, salt, and pepper together before the potatoes go in. That gives you a smooth, seasoned base and keeps the dressing from clumping onto dry ingredients. Taste it now, not after the potatoes are mixed in, because once the potatoes absorb the dressing, it’s harder to correct the seasoning evenly.
Combining Without Smashing
Add the potatoes, celery, green onions, and parsley while the potatoes are still slightly warm, then fold gently with a spatula. You’re coating the potatoes, not beating them into submission. If you stir too hard, the edges will collapse and the salad will go from chunky to mashed in a few turns.
Chilling for the Right Texture
Refrigerate the salad for at least 2 hours before serving. That rest is what lets the potatoes absorb the dressing and the flavors settle into one another. Serve it cold, but not icy straight from the back of the fridge; give it a few minutes on the counter if it’s been chilled overnight, then stir once before bringing it to the table.
Three Useful Ways to Change This Potato Salad Without Ruining It
Dairy-Free and Still Creamy
This recipe is already dairy-free as written, which is part of why it works so well for gatherings. Keep the mayonnaise-based dressing and you still get a creamy texture without any milk or sour cream. If you want to lighten it, swap in a dairy-free mayo one-for-one and keep the vinegar and mustard the same.
A Brighter, More Tangy Version
Add an extra teaspoon of vinegar and a little more Dijon if you want the dressing to taste sharper. That works best if the salad is being served with rich mains like burgers or fried chicken, because the extra acidity cuts through heavier foods. Go slowly; too much vinegar and the salad starts tasting thin instead of balanced.
Making It Ahead for a Crowd
You can make this a day ahead, and it often tastes better the next day once the seasoning has settled in. If it thickens too much in the fridge, stir in a spoonful of mayo before serving to loosen it back up. Add the parsley right before serving if you want the green color to stay fresh and bright.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The potatoes will firm up a bit as they chill, but the salad stays creamy if it’s mixed well.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this salad. The mayonnaise breaks after thawing and the potatoes turn grainy.
- Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold. If it’s been in the fridge overnight, let it sit at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes and stir before serving instead of trying to warm it.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Easy Red Skinned Potato Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Bring a pot of water to a boil in a Dutch oven, then add red potatoes and cook until tender, about 15–20 minutes, until a knife slides in easily. Drain the potatoes and spread them on a sheet pan to cool completely for better texture.
- In a bowl, whisk mayonnaise, Dijon mustard, white wine vinegar, salt, and pepper until smooth. Continue whisking until the dressing looks glossy and evenly combined.
- In a large bowl, combine the cooled red potatoes, celery, green onions, and fresh parsley. Toss gently so the vegetables distribute throughout the potatoes.
- Pour the creamy dressing over the potato mixture and toss well to coat every cube. Keep tossing until no dry potato pieces remain.
- Refrigerate the potato salad for 2 hours before serving, until cold and set. Serve chilled and garnish with extra parsley if desired.


