Golden Yukon gold potatoes hold their shape here, but the center turns creamy enough to soak up every bit of the sharp, herby dressing. That contrast is what makes this version worth making: it eats like a classic potato salad, but it lands lighter and more polished than the heavy, gluey versions that sit in the fridge until the end of the party.
The trick is using the potatoes while they’re still warm, not piping hot and not fully cold. Warm potatoes absorb the vinegar, mustard, and olive oil in a way chilled potatoes never will, which gives the salad a seasoned-through flavor instead of a dressing sitting on the outside. The celery and red onion bring crunch and bite, and the dill and parsley keep the whole bowl tasting fresh.
Below, I’ll walk through the few small details that make this salad taste intentional instead of ordinary, including the best way to cut the potatoes and when to add the herbs so they stay bright.
The potatoes held their shape beautifully, and tossing them warm with the dressing made the vinegar soak right in. I chilled it for two hours like you said, and the celery still had a nice crunch.
Ina Garten’s potato salad with warm Yukon gold potatoes, fresh dill, and that tangy vinaigrette-mayo dressing is the one to save for an elegant side that still feels easy.
The Warm Potato Trick That Keeps This Salad From Going Flat
Most potato salads taste muted because the potatoes are fully cooled before the dressing goes in. By then, they’ve tightened up and stopped taking on flavor. Here, the potatoes get tossed while still warm, which lets the vinegar and mustard settle into the cut surfaces and season the whole bowl from the inside out.
This also helps the olive oil and mayonnaise spread more evenly instead of clumping in one thick layer. The result is a salad that tastes balanced and integrated after chilling, not like potatoes with dressing spooned over them at the end. If your potato salad ever tastes bland no matter how much salt you add, this is usually why.
What Each Ingredient Is Doing in Ina Garten’s Potato Salad

- Yukon gold potatoes — Their waxy, buttery texture holds up after boiling and chilling, so the salad stays intact instead of turning mushy. Small potatoes are ideal because they cook evenly and the quarters have enough surface area to catch the dressing.
- Mayonnaise — This gives the salad body and helps the dressing cling to the potatoes. A full-fat mayo works best; light versions can taste thin once the vinegar goes in.
- White wine vinegar and Dijon mustard — These are the sharp backbone of the dressing. The vinegar wakes up the potatoes, and the mustard adds a mellow heat plus a little emulsifying power so the dressing doesn’t separate.
- Olive oil — It softens the edges of the dressing and gives the salad a more French-style finish. Use a good-tasting olive oil here because you’ll taste it.
- Celery and red onion — These add crunch and a clean bite that keeps the salad from feeling heavy. Dice them small so they distribute evenly and don’t overpower each forkful.
- Dill and parsley — Fresh herbs are what make this salad taste bright instead of one-note. Dried herbs won’t give you the same lift or that fresh green finish.
How to Build the Salad So the Potatoes Stay Intact
Boiling Until Tender, Not Falling Apart
Start the potatoes in cold water and bring them up gently so the centers cook evenly. They’re ready when a knife slips in without resistance, but the skins and edges still feel firm enough to hold their shape. If you boil them hard until they’re splitting, they’ll break apart when you toss them later. Drain them well and let them cool just enough that you can handle them before cutting.
Whisking the Dressing Until It Looks Smooth
The mayo, vinegar, mustard, olive oil, salt, and pepper should come together into a loose, glossy dressing. If the vinegar seems sharp on its own, that’s normal; the potatoes will mellow it out as they absorb the liquid. Whisk until there are no streaks of mustard left, because uneven dressing means some bites taste too sharp and others bland.
Tossing While Warm, Then Chilling Long Enough
Add the warm potatoes to the bowl with the celery and onion first, then pour the dressing over and toss gently. Use a wide spoon or spatula and fold from the bottom up so you don’t smash the quarters. Add the dill and parsley after the first toss so they stay bright and don’t disappear into the dressing. Two hours in the fridge gives the salad time to set up and lets the flavors settle into place.
How to Adapt This for Different Tables and Different Fridges
Dairy-Free and Egg-Free Without Losing the Creamy Finish
This salad is already dairy-free, and the mayonnaise gives it the creamy body people expect. If you need to avoid eggs too, use a plant-based mayo with a neutral flavor. The texture stays close to the original, though the dressing may taste a little less rich, so don’t skimp on the olive oil or Dijon.
Making It More Herb-Forward
If you want a more pronounced fresh-herb taste, double the dill and add a little chopped chives. Keep the parsley in place because it gives the salad a clean, grassy finish that keeps the dill from taking over. This version tastes especially good with grilled fish or roast chicken.
Swapping the Vinegar
If you don’t have white wine vinegar, apple cider vinegar works in a pinch, but the flavor will be a little fruitier and less crisp. Rice vinegar is milder and cleaner, so it’s the closest backup if you want to keep the dressing elegant. Avoid balsamic here; it darkens the salad and pushes the flavor in the wrong direction.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Keeps for 3 to 4 days. The potatoes absorb more dressing as it sits, so the salad gets a little softer and more seasoned by day two.
- Freezer: Don’t freeze this one. Mayo-based potato salad turns watery and grainy after thawing, and the potatoes lose their texture.
- Reheating: Serve it cold or let it sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes. Heating this salad breaks the dressing and makes the herbs dull, which is the fastest way to lose what makes it good.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Ina Garten's Potato Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Boil the whole small Yukon gold potatoes in a Dutch oven until tender, about 20 minutes. Visual cue: a knife slides in easily with little resistance.
- Drain the potatoes and let them cool slightly, then cut them into quarters. Visual cue: they should be warm but not hot to the touch.
- Whisk together mayonnaise, white wine vinegar, Dijon mustard, olive oil, kosher salt, and black pepper until smooth. Visual cue: the dressing looks glossy and fully combined.
- Combine the warm potatoes, celery, and red onion in a bowl. Visual cue: the potatoes are coated in moisture from the residual heat.
- Pour the dressing over the potatoes and toss gently. Visual cue: the potato surfaces look evenly coated, not mashed.
- Add the fresh dill and fresh parsley, then toss again. Visual cue: herbs are distributed with bright green specks throughout.
- Refrigerate the potato salad for at least 2 hours before serving. Visual cue: it firms up slightly and tastes more cohesive after chilling.