Creamy Potato Salad With Yogurt Vinaigrette Recipe (2024)

By Martha Rose Shulman

Updated Oct. 17, 2023

Creamy Potato Salad With Yogurt Vinaigrette Recipe (1)

Total Time
15 minutes
Cook Time
10 to 15 minutes
Rating
4(276)
Notes
Read community notes

You may worry about the amount of dressing in this luscious salad, but you’ll find that it is largely absorbed by the potatoes. The salad resembles a classic creamy potato salad with lots of crunchy celery, but there’s only a smidgen of mayonnaise here. The technique of softening the onions with boiling water comes from the cookbook author Deborah Madison.

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Ingredients

Yield:Serves six to eight

  • 1medium red onion, diced
  • cup vinegar (red or white wine, sherry or apple cider)
  • 1 to 2garlic cloves, to taste, minced or puréed
  • Salt to taste
  • 2teaspoons Dijon mustard
  • ¼cup extra virgin olive oil
  • ½cup plain low-fat yogurt
  • 1tablespoon Hellmann’s or Best Foods Mayonnaise (optional)
  • Freshly ground pepper
  • 2pounds red potatoes, scrubbed and quartered if small, cut in large dice if large
  • 4stalks celery, diced or sliced
  • 3tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
  • Optional: 2 or 3 hard-cooked eggs, diced

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (8 servings)

194 calories; 10 grams fat; 2 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 6 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 22 grams carbohydrates; 3 grams dietary fiber; 4 grams sugars; 5 grams protein; 459 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Creamy Potato Salad With Yogurt Vinaigrette Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    In a large bowl, whisk together the vinegar, garlic, salt, mustard, olive oil, yogurt and mayonnaise (if using). Place the onion in a bowl, and pour on boiling water to cover. Drain immediately, rinse with cold water and transfer to the bowl with the dressing.

  2. Step

    2

    Steam the potatoes above one inch of boiling water for 10 to 15 minutes until tender. Remove from the heat, and toss gently with the onion. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Add the remaining ingredients and toss together. Refrigerate for at least one hour before serving.

Tip

  • Advance preparation: This will keep for four to five days in the refrigerator.

Ratings

4

out of 5

276

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Kathy

One cannot have too much celery in potato salad--and I like celery seed too. I have for years been using my vinaigrette as the first round--when the potatoes finish cooking but are still hot. Let them "marinate" a bit and then add everything else and bind it with a mayo and mustard mix. This approach is similar to salade russe, I think. I like the idea of cutting the usual mayo with some yogurt and will try that.

speaco*ck23

Some reviewers thought this was too "vinegary". In "The Way to Cook" Julia Child suggests dressing potatoes for potato salad with part vinegar and part water saved from cooking the potatoes.

Mary Murphy

I used Greek yoghurt (the whole milk, not the non-fat variety). I thought it was a bit vinegary also, so after it chilled, I added more plain yoghurt, and that cut the vinegar and made it nice and creamy. People liked it. However, I have to say that my favorite potato salad is my mom's, which is just potatoes, salt, pepper and mayo. Her secret was to add mayo to the potatoes when they were hot, let them chill and then add more mayo. I use salt potatoes, skins and all. People love it.

Rilee

I added bacon! Before that addition, I thought the dressing was very vinegary. The salty bacon balanced the tartness. Next time I will cut the vinegar a tad. I used sherry vinegar, perhaps cider vinegar would not have been so strong tasting. Overall really like this dressing for potato salad.

Sara

This sounds really good. I am making potato salad right now, and I replaced some of the mayonnaise with a little home made tzatziki (which already has yogurt and garlic) to the dressing that I usually make.

John

Wine vinegar or cider vinegar would be my preferences. Sherry vinegar has a very different/distinctive flavor that not everybody would like in a potato salad.

Shiphrah

I, on the other hand, think there's no such thing as "too much vinegar"! :-D

M

To those who added negative responses,
My favorite aspect of cookery is applying creativity. If something doesn't turn out as expected, pull up your sleeves, trust yourself to alter or experiment - try something. Everything changes including the nature and quality of ingredients. Tell us what you did to make the dish great!

I added a pinch of Turbino sugar and used Red and Yukon potatoes - it was great.

Richard

I like the reduced fat in this yogurt version of potato salad. I find both raw onion and garlic too pungent for me (and they leave strong unpleasant aftertastes in my mouth), so I used the boiling-water-softening technique on both the onion and garlic (it's easier than sauteing the two). You can soften whole or half garlic cloves, and them mince them afterwards.

TeacyB

We LOVED this but my group loves tangy. I used a fantastic Sherry wine vinegar and greek yogurt as that was on hand. Delicious. My godson was scarping the bowl... Bacon or pancetta would have been a nice spin, if desired.

Tish

I really liked this as written, but I love vinegar (used apple cider). I added some chives and dill, just because I had them in the fridge. It is light and delicious.

Genevieve Melle

OK, but really too vinegary, i would cut the vinegar to 3 TBS.

roz jaffe

Very pleasant. Used less vinegar 1/4 instead of 1/3 cup

Kevin

First try - I already love this recipe! My first experience makes me believe that vinegar/acid is very important here, choose carefully. I had some oak aged red wine vinegar that really made it wonderful. I also used whole milk greek strained yoghurt and decided not to add any eggs. I am looking forward to experimenting with different acids and herbs.

JC Brown

This potato salad is delicious and very easy to make. The red onion trick works like magic; it mellows the onion, but keeps its flavor. Perfect for a BBQ or summer picnic. I love how creamy this dressing is without having to resort to a ton of mayo. I added some diced red bell pepper and some freshly picked basil from the garden. I'm definitely going to make this again.

smokey

Replaced some of the celery with chopped radish beans, the seed pods the plant produces when it bolts. Like green beans but spicy. A great addition if you’re growing radishes.

Susan

The finished product — still warm — is a little too vinegary for my taste. I used champagne vinegar. I’ll taste again in 24 hours and make adjustments.

Wm Taggart

Used Braggs vinegar. Happy that the yogurt tang disappeared into the dressing, but my wife found it a little too vinegary, maybe a red wine vinegar would have been better.

Krusatyr

I will add chopped crisp bacon, celery seed, cumin and chopped cilantro.

M

To those who added negative responses,
My favorite aspect of cookery is applying creativity. If something doesn't turn out as expected, pull up your sleeves, trust yourself to alter or experiment - try something. Everything changes including the nature and quality of ingredients. Tell us what you did to make the dish great!

I added a pinch of Turbino sugar and used Red and Yukon potatoes - it was great.

bem

This is the first New York Times recipe that I simply did not like. I used 1/4 cup cider vinegar, and followed the recipe otherwise. Very bland. I ended up adding fresh dill, southern seasoning, Greek seasoning salt, And I am hoping that it tastes good after it chills for a few hours. Definitely one star. I will not use this again.

Clark

I agree that the "vinegary taste" issue is a real one with this recipe. Reducing the amount of vinegar slightly, and using a less harsh vinegar, such as an apple cider vinegar, is a good choice.

MP

Good- is a little vinegary for a creamy sauce, recommend tasting before and as you add vinegar to balance dressing to taste. I put diced onion in strainer and then drained boiling potatoes into this to soften onion without using more bowls.

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Creamy Potato Salad With Yogurt Vinaigrette Recipe (2024)
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