This Easy Creamy Potato Salad is a rich, tangy side dish made with just a few simple ingredients: firm gold potatoes, hard-boiled eggs, optional crunchy celery, and a quick homemade sour cream dressing. A great way to turn a budget-friendly bag of spuds into the ultimate summer potluck masterpiece!

📸 Recipe Snapshot
- Prep & Cook Time: 20 Minutes
- Chilling Time: 2 hours
- Servings: 6-8 servings
- Key Tool: Large pot and a wide, shallow baking dish
⚠️ Crucial: Make sure you use red or gold potatoes for this recipe. Starchy types like Russet potatoes will dry out terribly and crumble into mush because they lack the waxy texture needed to keep their shape during a boil and toss.

Creamy Potato Salad
Ingredients
- 2.5 pounds firm potatoes (red or gold work best; do not use Russets; scrubbed and diced small)
- 2 hard-boiled eggs (peeled and chopped small)
- 1 stick celery (finely chopped (optional))
Dressing
- ½ cup mayonnaise
- ½ cup sour cream
- 1.5 tablespoons finely chopped chives (OR green onion)
- 2 teaspoons yellow mustard
- 2 teaspoons apple cider vinegar
- ⅛ teaspoon ground paprika
- salt & pepper (to taste)
Instructions
- Prep:Get your ingredients ready.
- Cook potatoes:Place potatoes in a pot of cold, salted water. Bring to a boil, then simmer until potatoes are just tender – depending on the size you cut them, this will only take 3-6 minutes.2.5 pounds firm potatoes
- Drain and cool:Drain well and place the potatoes in a wide, shallow dish for faster cooling. Allow to cool, then cool completely in the fridge.
- Make dressing:Whisk together all ingredients for the dressing.½ cup mayonnaise, ½ cup sour cream, 1.5 tablespoons finely chopped chives, 2 teaspoons yellow mustard, 2 teaspoons apple cider vinegar, ⅛ teaspoon ground paprika, salt & pepper
- Mix salad:Place the cooled potatoes, eggs and celery (if using) in a large bowl. Add the dressing and gently toss to coat.2 hard-boiled eggs, 1 stick celery
- Chill:Cover and chill in the refrigerator for 1-2 hours before serving. Garnish with chopped chives, ground paprika, and cracked black pepper, if you like.
Notes
- The “Just Tender” knife test: Poke a potato cube with a paring knife around the 4-minute mark. It should slip off the knife easily but still hold sharp edges; if the edges look rounded or blurry in the water, drain them immediately to prevent mush.
- Peel while warm, chop when cold: If you prefer peeled potatoes, boil them with the skins on, rub the skins off with a paper towel as soon as they are cool enough to handle, but wait to dice them until they are completely cold so they don’t crumble.
- Dress only when cold: Mixing the mayo and sour cream with warm potatoes will cause the oil to separate and turn the dressing into a greasy, translucent liquid. Ensure the potatoes are cool to the touch before adding the dressing.
More easy salad recipes
🔥 Substitution & Ingredient Notes
Can I use greek yogurt? Yes. If you don’t have sour cream on hand, plain Greek yogurt works just fine as the tangy base for the dressing.
What if I don’t have apple cider vinegar? You can easily mix up a quick swap using white vinegar or a splash of lemon juice to get that necessary hit of acid. If you don’t mind a dilly note, a splash of the liquid from a jar of pickles is great, too!
Picky Eater Option: If your kids turn their noses up at little green bits, you can swap the chives for a pinch of onion powder to keep the flavor super mild and hidden.
The Celery: If you’re out or if you prefer a 100% creamy potato salad, you can leave it out. It in adds a wonderful, deep savory crunch to the salad as a contrast to the soft potatoes, if that’s what you like!
Why We Quick-Chill First
The secret to getting that classic, nostalgic potato salad flavor in your kitchen bowl comes down to managing your potato starch and temperature.
Why we spread the potatoes flat:
Do not just dump your creamy dressing onto warm potatoes! Carefully cool all that heat out of the spuds first. If you leave them warm, your mayonnaise dressing will melt into a watery, greasy mess.
Pour those drained, hot potatoes into a wide, shallow dish before they ever touch the dressing. This creates a quick-cooling setup that locks in the texture while the steam escapes, preventing the potatoes from turning into a soggy, warm mess when mixed.


The “Cold-Soak” Secret:
Use a large bowl for easy tossing and less mess in your counters. Mix the potatoes and your homemade dressing, cover, and let it chill in the fridge for another hour or two. This gives the potatoes time to drink up the flavors, making every single bite unbelievably rich and creamy.
This classic cold-batch technique is exactly how we get maximum flavor out of budget-friendly bags of produce, just like in my Creamy Macaroni Salad or in the Best Coleslaw.
How to Serve Your Potato Salad:
To turn this big batch of salad into a weekly summer rotation your family will love, try these easy serving styles:
- The Backyard Classic: Pile the cold salad high next to juicy grilled burgers or hot dogs. Top with an extra shake of paprika and fresh chives for a perfect presentation.
- The Weeknight BBQ Plate: Scoop a heavy portion onto a plate alongside shredded bbq pulled pork and a cornbread muffin for a quick, comforting diner feel at home.
- The Leftover Picnic Platter: Pack the chilled potato salad into individual containers with leftover cold oven fried chicken for an easy, no-heat Friday night dinner on the porch.
- The Family Steakhouse Night: Scoop the salad alongside a budget-friendly marinated steak and some sautéed green beans to give the kids a fancy restaurant meal without the massive receipt.


💡FAQs
Don’t rush it! Every stove and every size of potato dice is a little bit different. If the potato isn’t easily pierced with a fork, simply keep the heat on and let them simmer for another 1-2 minutes. They will get there!
Absolutely. If you want to double it, just make sure you are using a large pot so the potato cubes have room to cook in the boiling water. Add enough salt to the water so the flavor gets deep into the center of the spuds.
Keep the potato salad chilled at all times in an airtight container or a tightly covered bowl. It will keep great for 2-3 days if always kept cold.
Just remember that potato salad does not freeze well at all, so enjoy it fresh.






















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