Bright, lemony potato salad tastes best when the potatoes still hold their shape and every bite carries a little briny pop from the capers. This version skips the heavy mayo and leans into a sharp Dijon-lemon dressing that coats the potatoes without turning them dense or greasy. The dill and parsley keep it fresh, and the chill time lets the flavors settle into the potatoes instead of sitting on top of them.
The trick is treating the potatoes gently from the start. Baby potatoes are the right choice here because they stay creamy inside while the edges stay intact after tossing. I also like to dress them while they’re still a little warm, not hot, so they absorb the lemon and mustard without falling apart. The capers are small, but they matter: they wake up the whole bowl and keep the salad from tasting flat.
Below, I’ve included the one step that keeps the salad lively after chilling, plus a few smart swaps if you need to adapt it for what’s in your kitchen.
The dressing soaked in beautifully after the chill time, and the potatoes stayed tender without getting mushy. The capers and dill gave it that bright, salty bite that kept everyone going back for another spoonful.
Love the lemony bite and fresh dill in this potato salad? Save it to Pinterest for a bright, make-ahead side with capers and Dijon.
The Reason This Potato Salad Stays Bright Instead of Heavy
Most potato salads go dull because the dressing gets absorbed unevenly or the potatoes are overhandled after boiling. This one avoids both problems by using a sharp, emulsified dressing and mixing it in while the potatoes still have a little warmth. That warmth helps the lemon and mustard cling to the potatoes, but they’re cool enough that the herbs stay fresh instead of wilting into the bowl.
Capers do more than add salt here. Their briny liquid and firm little pop keep the salad from tasting one-note, which matters when you’ve skipped mayonnaise entirely. If your potatoes turn crumbly, they were either boiled too long or tossed too aggressively after draining. Tender is good; falling apart is not.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Salad

- Baby potatoes — Their thin skins and creamy centers hold up best for a tossed salad. Waxy potatoes keep their shape far better than starchy russets, which tend to break down and make the bowl look mashed.
- Olive oil — This gives the dressing body and helps the lemon juice coat the potatoes evenly. Use a good everyday olive oil here; you’ll taste it, but it doesn’t need to be the most expensive bottle in your pantry.
- Lemon juice and zest — The juice brings the sharpness, while the zest carries the fragrant citrus oils that make the salad smell fresh the second you open the bowl. Don’t skip the zest; juice alone tastes thinner and more acidic.
- Dijon mustard — It helps the dressing emulsify so it clings instead of pooling at the bottom. A grainy mustard won’t give the same smooth finish, though it can work in a pinch if that’s what you have.
- Capers — These are the salty, briny punch that keeps every bite interesting. Drain them well so they brighten the salad instead of watering it down.
- Fresh dill and parsley — Dill brings the signature herbal note, and parsley keeps it from tasting too narrow or one-dimensional. If you only have dill, use it, but the parsley softens the intensity and rounds out the finish.
How to Keep the Potatoes Tender, Not Waterlogged
Boiling Until Just Tender
Start the potatoes in well-salted water and cook them until a knife slides in with almost no resistance, but the potatoes still hold their shape. If they’re falling apart in the pot, they’ll shred when you toss them later. Drain them as soon as they’re done so they don’t keep absorbing water from the hot pan.
Building the Dressing While the Potatoes Cool
Whisk the olive oil, lemon juice, zest, Dijon, salt, and pepper until the mixture looks slightly thickened and glossy. You want it cohesive, not separated. If the dressing looks broken, keep whisking for a few more seconds; Dijon usually brings it together. Let the potatoes cool just enough that they’re warm, not steaming hot, before adding the dressing.
Tossing Without Breaking the Potatoes
Add the capers, dill, and parsley with the potatoes before pouring in the dressing, then fold everything gently from the bottom up. A big spoon or rubber spatula works better than a hard stir. You’re coating the potatoes, not smashing them. After mixing, cover and chill for at least 2 hours so the lemon settles into the potatoes and the herbs mellow.
Make It Dairy-Free and Still Full-Flavored
This recipe is naturally dairy-free, which is part of why the lemon and herbs taste so clean. If you’re used to creamy potato salads, the olive oil and Dijon give enough richness to keep it satisfying without any mayo or yogurt.
Swap the Dill if You Want a Different Herb Note
Tarragon, chives, or extra parsley can stand in for part of the dill. The salad will still taste bright, but you’ll lose some of that classic fresh, anise-like edge that makes dill and lemon such a good pair.
Use Red Potatoes When You Want Firmer Pieces
Red potatoes work well if you want a salad with very defined chunks and even less chance of crumbling. They’re a touch waxier than baby golds, so the finished salad feels a little firmer and more picnic-style.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Keeps well for up to 3 days. The potatoes absorb more dressing as they sit, so the salad tastes even more seasoned on day two.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this salad. The potatoes turn grainy and the herbs lose their fresh texture after thawing.
- Reheating: Serve it cold or let it sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes before serving. Don’t microwave it; that tightens the potatoes and dulls the lemon.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Lemon & Herb Potato Salad with Dill and Capers
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Bring a pot of water to a boil, add the baby potatoes, and cook until tender, 12–15 minutes. Visual cue: a fork slides in easily with little resistance.
- Drain the potatoes and cool them for 5 minutes. Visual cue: the cut surfaces look matte and steam has subsided.
- Whisk together the olive oil, lemon juice, lemon zest, Dijon mustard, salt, and pepper until the mixture looks smooth and slightly thickened. Visual cue: the dressing is glossy with no mustard streaks.
- Combine the cooled potatoes with the capers, fresh dill, and fresh parsley in a serving bowl. Visual cue: herbs are evenly dotted throughout the potatoes.
- Pour the lemon-Dijon dressing over the potato mixture and toss well until everything is coated. Visual cue: the potatoes look evenly bright and lightly glossy.
- Refrigerate for 2 hours before serving. Visual cue: the salad looks more cohesive and flavors taste more blended after chilling.


