Cajun potato salad lands with a creamy, tangy bite first, then follows with enough Cajun heat to keep each forkful interesting. The red potatoes hold their shape instead of collapsing into mash, so the bowl stays chunky and spoonable even after chilling. It’s the kind of side dish that disappears fast beside fried chicken, barbecue, or anything straight off the grill.
What makes this version work is the balance inside the dressing. Mayonnaise gives it body, Creole mustard adds sharpness, and hot sauce keeps the seasoning lively instead of flat. The Cajun seasoning needs a little time to bloom against the warm potatoes, which is why the salad tastes better after it chills rather than right after mixing.
Below, I’ve included the small details that matter most: how to keep the potatoes from turning watery, how to judge the seasoning before the chill, and what to swap if you want a lighter or egg-free version.
The dressing soaked into the potatoes after chilling, and the Cajun seasoning had just enough heat without overpowering the eggs. I served it at a cookout and the bowl was scraped clean before the burgers were even done.
Like this Cajun potato salad? Save it to Pinterest for cookouts, potlucks, and any spread that needs a creamy side with a little heat.
The Trick Is Letting the Potatoes Cool Without Drying Them Out
The biggest mistake with potato salad is dressing the potatoes at the wrong temperature. If they’re piping hot, the mayonnaise loosens too much and the whole bowl can turn slick and heavy. If they’re completely cold and dry, the dressing sits on the surface instead of soaking in, and the salad tastes flat after chilling.
For this recipe, drain the potatoes well and let them cool until they’re warm, not steaming. That’s the window where they hold their shape but still absorb the Cajun seasoning and mustard in the dressing. Red potatoes are the right choice here because their waxy texture stays intact after tossing.
- Red potatoes — They stay firm instead of turning mealy. If you swap in russets, expect a softer salad and more breakage when you mix.
- Cajun seasoning — This does the heavy lifting for color and spice. Different brands vary a lot in salt, so taste the dressing before adding extra salt at the end.
- Creole mustard — It brings sharpness and a little grainy texture that plain yellow mustard won’t match. Dijon works in a pinch, but the salad will taste less Louisiana-style.
- Hard-boiled eggs — They mellow the heat and help the salad feel fuller. Chop them after they’ve cooled completely so the whites stay neat instead of smearing into the dressing.
Building the Dressing So the Heat Stays Balanced

- Mayonnaise — Use a full-fat mayo for the best body and sheen. Light mayo can work, but the dressing will loosen more after chilling.
- Hot sauce — It sharpens the dressing without making it bitter. Add it before tasting for salt, because some sauces bring enough acid to change the balance.
- Bell pepper, celery, and green onions — These give the salad crunch and freshness so it doesn’t eat like pure starch. Dice them small enough that they scatter through the bowl instead of clumping in one bite.
- Eggs — If you want a cleaner, more picnic-style salad, keep them. If you want a brighter, punchier version, you can leave them out and add a little extra celery for texture.
Getting the Texture Right From Pot to Bowl
Boil Until the Centers Yield, Not Fall Apart
Start the potatoes in salted water and cook them until a knife slides in with only a little resistance. If they break apart in the pot, they’ll shred when you toss the salad later. Drain them well and let them sit long enough for the surface steam to disappear, because trapped water is what makes the dressing slide off instead of cling.
Mix the Dressing Before It Hits the Potatoes
Stir the mayonnaise, Cajun seasoning, Creole mustard, and hot sauce together in a separate bowl so the seasoning is evenly distributed. If you dump each ingredient straight onto the potatoes, some bites end up plain while others taste overloaded. The dressing should look smooth, pale orange, and thick enough to coat a spoon.
Fold, Don’t Mash
Add the potatoes, vegetables, and eggs, then fold gently until every piece is coated. A heavy hand will turn the salad gluey, especially once the potatoes start softening under the dressing. Taste it before chilling and adjust with salt and pepper, because cold food always tastes a little flatter than warm food.
Chill Long Enough for the Flavor to Set
Two hours in the refrigerator is the minimum here. That rest gives the Cajun seasoning time to bloom and the dressing time to settle into the potatoes. If the salad tastes a little sharp when you first mix it, don’t panic; it usually rounds out after chilling.
How to Adjust This Cajun Potato Salad Without Losing the Point
Make it dairy-free without changing the texture
This recipe is already dairy-free as written, which makes it a good fit for cookouts where people have different diets to juggle. Just check your mayonnaise and hot sauce labels, because a few brands sneak in milk solids or unexpected additives. The result stays creamy, tangy, and fully in the same lane as the original.
Turn down the heat without losing the Cajun character
Use one tablespoon of Cajun seasoning instead of two, then taste after chilling and add more if needed. Keep the Creole mustard, because it brings more sharpness than heat and keeps the salad from tasting flat. That swap gives you a milder salad that still reads as Cajun, not just plain potato salad.
Add more crunch for a picnic-style version
A little extra celery or a second diced bell pepper makes the salad crisper and brighter. If you go that route, chop the vegetables small so they don’t overpower the potatoes. This version holds up especially well on a buffet because the texture stays lively after chilling.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The potatoes soften a little more each day, but the flavor holds well.
- Freezer: Don’t freeze this salad. Mayonnaise and cooked potatoes both break down after thawing, and the texture turns grainy.
- Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold or cool. If it’s been in the fridge for a while, let it sit out for 15 to 20 minutes before serving so the dressing loosens slightly and the seasoning comes forward.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Cajun Potato Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Bring a Dutch oven of water to a boil, then add the cubed red potatoes and boil until tender, about 10–15 minutes. Drain well, then cool the potatoes fully so the dressing stays creamy.
- In a mixing bowl, combine the mayonnaise, Cajun seasoning, Creole mustard, and hot sauce until smooth and evenly colored. This creates the bold creamy spicy dressing base.
- Add the cooled potatoes, diced bell pepper, diced celery stalk, sliced green onions, and chopped hard-boiled eggs to a large bowl and toss gently to distribute the mix. Keep the potatoes coated without crushing them.
- Pour the dressing over the potato mixture and toss well until every bite looks coated. Scrape the bowl so no dressing pockets remain.
- Season with salt and pepper to taste, then refrigerate for 2 hours before serving. Chill until cold throughout for best texture.