Herbed Potato Salad

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Herbed potato salad lands on the table with the kind of fresh, clean bite that makes a bowl go empty fast. The potatoes stay tender without turning mushy, and the dressing clings in a light, creamy coat that tastes sharper and brighter than the usual heavy picnic version. The fresh dill, parsley, and chives don’t just garnish the salad; they carry it.

What makes this version work is the balance. Red potatoes hold their shape after boiling, and their thin skins add a little texture instead of disappearing into the mix. The dressing uses mayonnaise and sour cream together, which keeps it creamy but not dense, while Dijon and lemon juice cut through the richness so the herbs stay front and center. I also like to let the potatoes cool before adding the dressing. Warm potatoes soak up flavor, but hot potatoes can make the dressing loosen up too much and slide off.

Below, I’ve included the small details that keep the texture right, the ingredient swaps that actually work, and the questions that come up most often when people make potato salad from scratch.

The herbs stayed bright and the dressing thickened up beautifully after chilling. I made it the night before a cookout, and the potatoes held their shape without getting watery.

★★★★★— Melissa T.

Save this herbed potato salad for the cookouts and potlucks when you want something creamy, bright, and packed with fresh dill, parsley, and chives.

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Why Cooling the Potatoes Before Dressing Them Matters

Potato salad goes wrong when the potatoes are still too hot. The dressing turns loose, the herbs wilt, and the whole bowl gets heavy instead of creamy. Letting the potatoes cool before tossing keeps the texture clean and gives the sour cream-mayo mixture a chance to coat each piece instead of sliding to the bottom of the bowl.

Red potatoes are the right choice here because they stay intact after boiling. Waxy potatoes hold their shape far better than starchy ones, which means you get distinct pieces instead of a mashed-up salad. That matters even more once the salad chills, because the potatoes firm up a little and the dressing settles into every crevice.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Salad

Herbed Potato Salad fresh herbs creamy dressing
  • Red potatoes — These hold their shape and give you a salad with defined bites instead of a soft mash. If you swap in Yukon golds, you’ll get a slightly creamier texture, but keep the cubes large so they don’t break down.
  • Mayonnaise and sour cream — Mayo brings body, while sour cream keeps the dressing lighter and a little tangy. Full-fat versions taste best here; low-fat sour cream can turn thin after chilling.
  • Dijon mustard — This adds sharpness and helps the dressing taste awake. It also keeps the salad from reading flat once it’s cold.
  • Fresh dill, parsley, and chives — These are the point of the salad. Dried herbs won’t give you the same clean, grassy finish, so fresh matters here.
  • Lemon juice — A little acidity cuts through the creaminess and keeps the herbs tasting bright. Bottled lemon juice will work in a pinch, but fresh is sharper and cleaner.

How to Keep the Dressing Creamy and the Potatoes Intact

Boil the Potatoes Until Just Tender

Start the potatoes in salted water and cook them until a knife slips in without resistance, about 15 minutes depending on the size of the cubes. You want tender edges with enough structure left that the pieces don’t collapse when you stir them. If they boil past that point, the outside turns fluffy and starts breaking apart, which makes the salad look rough and feel pasty.

Mix the Dressing Before the Potatoes Go In

Stir the mayonnaise, sour cream, Dijon, herbs, lemon juice, salt, and pepper together in a separate bowl until the mixture looks even and flecked with green. This keeps the herbs from clumping in one spot and makes it easier to coat the potatoes gently. If the dressing tastes a little sharp at this stage, that’s fine; chilling mellows it out.

Fold, Don’t Mash

Add the cooled potatoes to the dressing and toss with a soft hand. Use a spatula or large spoon and turn the bowl from the bottom up until every piece is coated. If you stir like you’re mixing batter, the cubes start to break and the salad loses that clean, picnic-style texture.

Chill Long Enough for the Flavor to Settle

Two hours in the fridge gives the herbs time to perfume the dressing and helps the potatoes absorb the seasoning. The salad tastes flatter if you serve it straight away, even if it looks finished. Before serving, taste again and add a little more salt, pepper, or lemon if the cold has dulled the seasoning.

How to Adapt This Bowl for Different Tables

Dairy-Free Version

Swap the sour cream for a plain unsweetened dairy-free yogurt or dairy-free sour cream and use a vegan mayo. The result is a little less rich but still creamy and bright, as long as the substitute has enough body to cling to the potatoes.

Lighter Dressing

Replace half the mayonnaise with extra sour cream if you want a tangier salad with a looser finish. It won’t taste as rich, but the herbs come through even more clearly and the salad feels a little fresher on the plate.

Make-Ahead Potluck Salad

This salad holds up well overnight. If you’re making it ahead, save a small handful of chopped herbs and sprinkle them on right before serving so the top looks fresh and the dill and chives stay vivid.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The herbs soften a little, but the flavor stays good.
  • Freezer: Don’t freeze this salad. The dressing separates and the potatoes turn grainy once thawed.
  • Reheating: Serve it cold or let it sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes. Heat makes the mayo-based dressing loosen and the herbs lose their fresh bite.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make herbed potato salad the day before?+

Yes, and it actually tastes better after a night in the fridge. The potatoes absorb the dressing and the herbs settle into the salad, which gives you a fuller flavor. Just give it a quick stir before serving and add a small squeeze of lemon if it tastes muted.

Can I use Yukon gold potatoes instead of red potatoes?+

Yes. Yukon golds give you a softer, creamier bite, which some people love in potato salad. Just watch them closely while boiling, because they can go from tender to falling apart faster than red potatoes.

How do I keep potato salad from getting watery?+

Let the potatoes cool before dressing them and drain them well after boiling. Water trapped on the surface of hot potatoes thins the dressing and pools in the bowl as it chills. A fully cooled potato also holds the mayo and sour cream instead of dissolving them.

Can I freeze herbed potato salad?+

I don’t recommend it. The mayonnaise and sour cream separate when frozen, and the potatoes change texture in a way that makes the salad grainy after thawing. This is one of those dishes that’s best enjoyed fresh from the fridge.

Herbed Potato Salad

Herb potato salad with fresh dill, parsley, and chives in a light, creamy dressing. Red potatoes are boiled until tender, cooled, then tossed gently for a summer salad that tastes bright from lemon juice.
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: 430

Ingredients
  

Potato salad base
  • 3 lb red potatoes
  • 0.5 cup mayonnaise
  • 0.5 cup sour cream
  • 2 tbsp Dijon mustard
  • 0.25 cup fresh dill, chopped
  • 0.25 cup fresh parsley, chopped
  • 0.25 cup fresh chives, chopped
  • 2 tbsp lemon juice
  • 1 salt and pepper to taste

Equipment

  • 1 Dutch oven

Method
 

Boil and cool the potatoes
  1. Boil cubed red potatoes in a pot of water until tender, about 15 minutes. You’ll know they’re ready when a fork slides in easily with little resistance.
  2. Drain the potatoes and let them cool to room temperature. The surface should look dry and matte before you mix in the dressing.
Make the herb dressing and assemble
  1. Mix mayonnaise, sour cream, Dijon, dill, parsley, chives, lemon juice, salt, and pepper until smooth and combined. The dressing should be creamy with visible green herb flecks.
  2. Pour the dressing over the cooled potatoes and toss gently to coat. Stop tossing as soon as everything looks evenly coated to keep the cubes intact.
Chill and serve
  1. Refrigerate the potato salad for at least 2 hours. As it chills, it should thicken slightly and the herb flavor will stand out.
  2. Garnish with extra herbs before serving. Add a small sprinkle on top so the herbs look fresh in the final bowl.

Notes

Pro tip: cool the potatoes completely before dressing so the mayo-sour cream mixture stays creamy instead of turning watery. Store covered in the refrigerator for up to 4 days; it does not freeze well because the texture of potatoes and the dressing can change. For a lighter option, swap half the mayonnaise for plain Greek yogurt while keeping the sour cream for the classic tang.

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