Cold, creamy potato salad gets a sharp, savory upgrade here from blue cheese and bacon, and the result is the kind of side dish people circle back to before the main course is even finished. The potatoes stay tender but intact, the dressing clings without turning gluey, and every bite gets a little salt, tang, and crunch from the bacon and green onions.
What makes this version work is the balance. Red potatoes hold their shape after boiling, which matters because a salad like this can go from rustic to mushy fast if the potatoes are too soft. The dressing leans on sour cream, mayonnaise, and buttermilk for creaminess with enough acidity to keep the blue cheese from tasting heavy, and the vinegar sharpens everything without making it sour.
Below, I’m walking through the part that matters most: how to keep the potatoes from soaking up too much dressing while still letting the flavors blend. I’ve also included a few smart swaps for when you want this to lean lighter, richer, or a little more make-ahead friendly.
The dressing coated every potato without turning watery, and the bacon stayed crisp enough to give each bite a little crunch even after chilling overnight.
Save this blue cheese and bacon potato salad for potlucks, cookouts, and steak-night dinners when you want a bold, creamy side with real crunch.
The Trick That Keeps the Potatoes Intact Under All That Dressing
Potato salad falls apart when the potatoes are overcooked or stirred too aggressively. Red potatoes are the right choice here because they stay waxy and hold their shape, even after chilling, while still soaking up enough dressing to taste seasoned all the way through.
The other mistake is mixing everything while the potatoes are still piping hot. That sounds like a shortcut, but it usually turns the salad loose and watery. Let the potatoes cool until they’re just warm or fully room temperature, then fold them with the bacon and half the blue cheese first. That gives the dressing something to cling to instead of sliding straight to the bottom of the bowl.
What Each Ingredient Is Doing in This Salad

- Red potatoes — Their waxy texture holds up after boiling and chilling, which keeps the salad chunky instead of mashed. If you swap in russets, expect a softer, fluffier result that breaks down more easily.
- Bacon — This isn’t just for salt. The smoky fat and crisp texture cut through the creamy dressing and keep each bite from feeling one-note. Cook it until crisp, then drain it well so it doesn’t make the salad greasy.
- Blue cheese crumbles — Use a blue cheese you actually like eating on its own, because that flavor comes through clearly. A milder blue works if you want less bite; a stronger one makes the salad taste more like a steakhouse side.
- Sour cream, mayonnaise, and buttermilk — The mayo gives body, the sour cream brings tang, and the buttermilk loosens the dressing just enough to coat the potatoes without turning heavy. If you skip the buttermilk, the dressing will be thicker and a little harder to distribute evenly.
- White wine vinegar — This wakes up the dressing and keeps the blue cheese from tasting flat. You can use apple cider vinegar in a pinch, but it adds a fruitier note that changes the balance a little.
- Green onions — They add freshness and a mild bite at the end. Slice them thin so they blend in rather than dominate.
How to Build the Salad So It Stays Creamy, Not Gummy
Boil Until Tender, Not Falling Apart
Start the potatoes in salted water and cook them until a knife slips in without resistance, but the cubes still hold their edges. If they’re soft enough to crumble in the pot, they’ll turn mushy when you toss them. Drain them well, then let the steam escape before you mix anything in.
Fold in the Base Before the Dressing
Combine the cooled potatoes with the bacon and half the blue cheese first. That lets the warm edges of the potatoes catch some of the salt and fat before the dressing goes in, which makes the final salad taste seasoned instead of just coated. Stir gently with a wide spoon or spatula so you don’t smash the cubes.
Whisk the Dressing Until It Looks Smooth and Loose
Stir the sour cream, mayonnaise, buttermilk, vinegar, salt, and pepper until the dressing is fully blended and pourable. If it looks too thick at this stage, it’ll never spread evenly once it hits the potatoes, so loosen it with a splash more buttermilk. The goal is a creamy coating, not a paste.
Chill Long Enough for the Flavor to Settle
After tossing everything together, top with the remaining blue cheese and green onions, then refrigerate for at least 2 hours. That resting time lets the potatoes absorb the dressing and gives the blue cheese time to mellow into the salad. If you serve it right away, it’ll taste flatter and the dressing won’t have settled into the potatoes yet.
Ways to Adjust This Without Losing the Steakhouse Feel
Make it lighter with extra sour cream and less mayo
You can reduce the mayonnaise and increase the sour cream if you want a sharper, less rich dressing. The salad will taste a little tangier and less silky, but it still coats the potatoes well and keeps the blue cheese from feeling heavy.
Turn it into a gluten-free side without changing the method
This salad is naturally gluten-free as written, as long as your bacon and blue cheese are labeled safely. The texture and flavor stay exactly the same, so this is one of the easiest dishes to serve to a mixed crowd.
Swap in cheddar if blue cheese is too strong
Sharp cheddar gives you a more familiar loaded-potato flavor and a milder finish. You’ll lose the pungent edge that makes this salad stand out, but the bacon and dressing still carry plenty of weight.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 3 days. The potatoes soften a little more as they sit, but the flavor gets better after the first day.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this salad. The creamy dressing separates and the potatoes turn grainy 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 breaks the dressing and makes the blue cheese unpleasantly sharp.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Blue Cheese and Bacon Potato Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Bring a Dutch oven of water to a boil, add the cubed red potatoes, and boil for 15–20 minutes until tender when pierced with a fork (visual cue: no resistance when pierced).
- Drain the potatoes and cool them until they’re no longer steaming (visual cue: surface looks matte, not wet-looking from heat).
- In a bowl, mix sour cream, mayonnaise, buttermilk, white wine vinegar, salt, and pepper until smooth (visual cue: dressing looks glossy and fully combined).
- Combine the cooled potatoes, cooked and crumbled bacon, and half the blue cheese in the bowl (visual cue: bacon is evenly distributed).
- Pour the dressing over the potato mixture and toss gently until the potatoes are coated (visual cue: potatoes appear evenly tinted and creamy, not dry).
- Top with the remaining blue cheese and green onions (visual cue: blue cheese and scallions sit on top, not fully mixed in).
- Refrigerate for 2 hours before serving (visual cue: salad thickens slightly and looks set).