Steakhouse Potato Salad

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Roasted potatoes give this steakhouse potato salad a sturdier, more savory bite than the usual boiled version. The edges pick up a little color in the oven, which means they hold onto the dressing instead of turning soft and watery the minute everything gets tossed together. Bacon, blue cheese, and chives do the rest, bringing that classic steakhouse mix of salty, tangy, and sharp.

The trick is cooling the potatoes all the way before you dress them. Warm potatoes will steam the mayonnaise and sour cream mixture and thin it out, and they’ll also knock the blue cheese into the background instead of letting it stay in little punchy crumbles. A splash of white wine vinegar and Worcestershire keeps the dressing from tasting heavy, which matters when the salad is built around rich ingredients.

Below, you’ll find the simple roasting method that keeps the potatoes from getting mushy, plus a few smart swaps and make-ahead notes for when you want this salad sitting cold and ready before dinner starts.

The roasted potatoes held their shape all the way through chilling, and the blue cheese stayed bold instead of disappearing into the dressing. We served it with burgers, and the bowl was empty before the steaks were even off the grill.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save this roasted steakhouse potato salad with bacon, blue cheese, and chives for the next cookout or steak night.

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The Reason Roasted Potatoes Beat Boiled Ones Here

Boiled potato salad can go dense or watery fast, especially once it sits in the fridge. Roasting changes the whole texture. The cut sides develop a little structure, so the potatoes stay intact when you fold in the dressing, and the browned edges bring a deeper, almost steakhouse-style savoriness that plain boiled potatoes never get.

The other detail that matters is cooling. If the potatoes are even slightly warm, they loosen the dressing and mute the blue cheese. Let them cool completely on a sheet pan so the steam can escape. That one step keeps the salad creamy instead of greasy and gives the bacon and chives a cleaner finish.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing In This Salad

Steakhouse Potato Salad loaded creamy bacon blue cheese
  • Baby potatoes — Their waxier texture helps them keep shape after roasting and chilling. Cut them in half so the flat sides can brown; whole potatoes won’t pick up the same texture or flavor.
  • Blue cheese — This is the ingredient that makes the salad taste like a steakhouse side, not a standard picnic salad. Use a blue cheese you actually like eating on its own, because the flavor stays front and center.
  • Sour cream and mayonnaise — Sour cream brings tang, mayonnaise brings body. The combination gives you a dressing that clings without feeling heavy, and it holds up better in the fridge than sour cream alone.
  • Bacon — Crisp bacon adds salt, smoke, and crunch. Drain it well before adding it, or the rendered fat will soften the dressing and muddy the texture.
  • White wine vinegar and Worcestershire — These keep the dressing lively. The vinegar brightens the richness, and Worcestershire adds a savory backbone that makes the whole bowl taste more complete.
  • Chives — Fresh chives matter here because they cut through all the richness with a clean onion note. Add them at the end so they stay bright and don’t wilt into the dressing.

Roasting, Mixing, and Chilling Without Losing the Texture

Get Color on the Potatoes First

Toss the halved potatoes with a little oil, salt, and pepper, then spread them cut-side down on a hot sheet pan. You want browned edges and tender centers, not pale potatoes that steam against each other. If the pan is crowded, they’ll soften before they color, so use two pans if needed. Pull them when a fork slides in easily and the cut sides have real golden edges.

Cool Them Completely Before Dressing

Spread the roasted potatoes out and leave them alone until they’re fully cool. That keeps the dressing thick and stops the blue cheese from melting into the background. If you rush this and dress them warm, the salad turns loose and the bacon loses its crisp edge once everything steeps together.

Build the Dressing With Enough Tang

Stir the sour cream, mayonnaise, vinegar, Worcestershire, salt, and pepper until smooth. The dressing should taste a little sharper than you want in the finished bowl because the potatoes will mellow it out. If it tastes flat here, it’ll taste even flatter after chilling, so season it before the potatoes go in.

Fold, Then Chill

Gently toss the potatoes with the bacon and half the blue cheese, then add the dressing and fold just until coated. Finish with the remaining blue cheese and chives on top so the salad still looks fresh when it hits the table. Chill it for at least 2 hours; that rest lets the flavors settle and the dressing cling properly instead of sitting on the surface.

How to Adapt This for Different Crowds and Diets

Make It Bacon-Less But Still Savory

Leave out the bacon and add a pinch of smoked paprika plus a little extra salt. You’ll lose the crisp chew, but the paprika keeps the salad from tasting one-note and gives it a subtle grilled flavor that still fits a steakhouse spread.

Swap the Blue Cheese for Cheddar

Sharp cheddar makes this more familiar and less pungent. Grate it finely and fold most of it into the salad so the cheese melts into little pockets instead of clumping; the result is milder, creamier, and better for anyone who doesn’t love blue cheese.

Gluten-Free, No Changes Needed

This recipe is naturally gluten-free as written as long as your Worcestershire sauce is certified gluten-free. That’s the only ingredient I’d double-check, because some brands use malt vinegar or other wheat-based additives.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container for up to 4 days. The potatoes will firm up a bit as they chill, but the dressing stays creamy.
  • Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this salad. The sour cream and mayonnaise separate, and the potatoes turn grainy after thawing.
  • Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold or cool. If it’s been sitting in the fridge for a while, let it rest on the counter for 15 to 20 minutes so the dressing loosens slightly before serving.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make steakhouse potato salad a day ahead?+

Yes, and it actually improves after a few hours in the fridge. The dressing settles into the potatoes and the flavor gets more balanced, but add the final chives right before serving so they stay fresh and bright.

How do I keep the potatoes from falling apart?+

Roast them until tender, not collapsing, and let them cool before tossing. Overcooked potatoes break when you stir them, and warm potatoes break even faster because the dressing softens their surface as soon as it hits the bowl.

Can I use regular potatoes instead of baby potatoes?+

Yes, but use waxy potatoes like Yukon Golds rather than starchy russets. Russets can turn mealy in a salad like this, while Yukon Golds hold their shape and still give you a creamy bite.

How do I keep the blue cheese from getting lost in the dressing?+

Fold half of it into the salad and save the rest for the top. That gives you pockets of sharp flavor throughout the bowl and a fresh-looking finish instead of a dressing that tastes uniformly rich but a little flat.

Can I use Greek yogurt instead of sour cream?+

Yes, but the dressing will taste tangier and a little less plush. If you use Greek yogurt, go with full-fat and keep the mayonnaise in the mix so the dressing still coats the potatoes with a creamy finish.

Steakhouse Potato Salad

Loaded potato salad with a steakhouse style sour cream dressing, roasted baby potatoes, blue cheese crumbles, and crisp bacon. Chilled for 2 hours so it’s creamy, savory, and easy to serve.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes
chilling 2 hours
Total Time 2 hours 45 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 650

Ingredients
  

Potatoes, roasted
  • 3 lb baby potatoes
Bacon
  • 8 bacon slices, cooked and crumbled
Creamy sour cream dressing
  • 1 cup sour cream
  • 0.5 cup mayonnaise
  • 0.25 cup blue cheese crumbles
  • 0.25 cup fresh chives chopped
  • 2 tbsp white wine vinegar
  • 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 0.1 salt to taste
  • 0.1 pepper to taste

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Roast the potatoes
  1. Heat oven to 425°F and roast the halved baby potatoes on a sheet pan for 25-30 minutes until golden, tossing once if needed for even browning.
  2. Let the roasted potato halves cool completely so they won’t melt the dressing.
Make the dressing
  1. In a mixing bowl, whisk together sour cream, mayonnaise, white wine vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, salt, and pepper until smooth.
Assemble and finish
  1. Combine the cooled potatoes with the crumbled bacon and half of the blue cheese.
  2. Pour in the dressing and toss until the potatoes are evenly coated.
  3. Top with the remaining blue cheese and the chopped fresh chives.
Chill
  1. Refrigerate the potato salad for 2 hours before serving so flavors meld and the texture sets.

Notes

For best texture, cool the potatoes fully before dressing so the sour cream stays thick and creamy. Store leftovers in the refrigerator up to 3 days; freezing isn’t recommended because the dressing can break. For a lighter option, use reduced-fat sour cream and mayonnaise for a similar tang with fewer calories.

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