Red Potato Salad (Light on Mayo)

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Red potato salad turns a picnic staple into something a little fresher, a little lighter, and a lot easier to keep eating. The potatoes stay tender but intact, the dressing clings without turning heavy, and the dill and green onion give each bite a clean finish instead of that dense, overly rich feel you get from some potato salads.

The trick is using Greek yogurt alongside a smaller amount of mayonnaise. The yogurt brings tang and body, while the mayo keeps the dressing from tasting sharp or chalky. Red potatoes help too, because their waxy texture holds its shape after boiling and chills well without turning mealy. A splash of white wine vinegar wakes everything up, and the salad gets better after it rests long enough for the potatoes to absorb the dressing.

Below, I’ve included the small details that matter most: how to cook the potatoes so they don’t fall apart, what the dressing should taste like before it meets the potatoes, and a few simple ways to adapt it for different diets or what’s already in your fridge.

The yogurt-and-mayo dressing coated every potato without turning gluey, and the dill was such a good call. I chilled it for two hours like you said and it tasted even better the next day.

★★★★★— Megan L.

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The Trick Is Chilling Before the Potatoes Fully Give Up Their Heat

Potato salad goes wrong when the potatoes are either too hot or too cold at the wrong moment. If they’re steaming, the dressing loosens and slides off instead of coating each piece. If they’re fully cold before you dress them, they don’t absorb much flavor. The sweet spot is warm or just barely cool, when the potatoes are no longer fragile but still open to seasoning.

Red potatoes are the right choice here because they keep their structure after boiling. Cut them into even cubes so they finish at the same time, and stop cooking as soon as a knife slides in without resistance. Overcooked potatoes break apart in the bowl and turn the salad pasty once you stir in the dressing. A short chill after dressing does the rest of the work.

What the Yogurt Is Doing That Mayo Alone Can’t

Red Potato Salad light mayo Greek yogurt fresh herbs
  • Plain Greek yogurt — This is what keeps the salad lighter without making it thin. Use full-fat if you want the creamiest result, but even low-fat works well here because the potatoes and mayo help round it out. Regular yogurt is looser and can make the dressing runny.
  • Mayonnaise — A small amount gives the dressing that familiar potato salad richness and helps it cling. Don’t skip it entirely unless you’re intentionally making a different style of salad; the yogurt alone tastes sharper and a little lean.
  • Dijon mustard — Dijon sharpens the dressing and gives it enough structure to stand up to the potatoes. Yellow mustard will work in a pinch, but it tastes softer and a little sweeter.
  • White wine vinegar — This brightens the whole bowl and keeps the salad from tasting heavy. If you need a substitute, apple cider vinegar is the closest swap, though it brings a slightly fruitier edge.
  • Fresh dill, green onions, and celery — These are not just garnish. Dill gives the salad its fresh herb note, green onion adds bite, and celery brings crunch so every bite isn’t soft all the way through. If you’re missing celery, diced cucumber is not a good replacement here because it leaks water; finely diced bell pepper is the better swap for crunch.

How to Keep the Potatoes Intact and the Dressing Creamy

Boiling the Potatoes to the Right Point

Start the potatoes in cold salted water so they cook evenly from the outside in. Once the water reaches a steady boil, keep the cubes at a gentle simmer until a knife slips in with no resistance, then drain them right away. If they boil too hard, the outsides start breaking before the centers are done, and you’ll end up with a mix of mush and firm pieces.

Mixing the Dressing Before It Meets the Potatoes

Stir the Greek yogurt, mayonnaise, Dijon, vinegar, salt, and pepper together in a large bowl until it looks smooth and glossy. Taste it before adding the potatoes; it should seem a touch bold because the potatoes will dilute it a little. If the dressing tastes flat now, it will taste even flatter after chilling.

Coating Without Crushing

Add the potatoes, dill, green onions, and celery to the bowl, then fold everything together with a wide spoon or spatula. Stir gently enough that the cubes stay intact but thoroughly enough that the dressing reaches the bottom of the bowl. If the potatoes are still hot, wait a few minutes before tossing them so the dressing doesn’t loosen and separate.

Letting the Salad Chill Into Itself

Cover the bowl and refrigerate it for at least 2 hours. That resting time lets the seasoning settle and gives the potatoes time to absorb the dressing instead of sitting on top of it. Right before serving, give it one last stir and adjust salt and pepper if needed, since chilled salads almost always need a final correction.

Three Ways to Adjust This Salad Without Losing the Point

Dairy-Free Version

Use a plain unsweetened dairy-free yogurt with enough body to coat the potatoes, then keep the mayonnaise if your diet allows it. The result will be a little tangier and less creamy than the original, so add the vinegar gradually and taste as you go.

Lighter and Higher-Protein

Use full Greek yogurt and cut the mayonnaise down a bit further if you want a leaner bowl with more tang. You’ll get a brighter, slightly less rich salad that still feels substantial, especially once it chills.

No-Dill Swap

If dill isn’t your thing, use chopped parsley and a little extra green onion for freshness. You’ll lose the classic dill-potato pairing, but the salad will still taste bright instead of heavy.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The potatoes will soften a bit more as they sit, but the flavor holds well.
  • Freezer: Don’t freeze this salad. The yogurt and mayonnaise separate after thawing, and the potatoes turn grainy.
  • Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold. If it’s too firm straight from the fridge, let it sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes and stir before serving instead of heating it.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make red potato salad the day before?+

Yes, and it often tastes better the next day. The potatoes absorb the dressing as they sit, which gives the salad a more seasoned, cohesive flavor. Hold back a small spoonful of dill and green onion if you want to freshen the top right before serving.

How do I keep my potato salad from getting watery?+

Drain the potatoes well and let them cool enough that steam isn’t trapped in the bowl. Watery salad usually comes from dressing hot potatoes or using a thinner yogurt. Greek yogurt works here because it has enough body to hold the dressing together.

Can I use yellow potatoes instead of red potatoes?+

Yes, but Yukon Golds will give you a creamier, softer salad. They’re a little less firm than red potatoes, so handle them gently after boiling or they can break down more in the bowl. If you want a salad with more defined chunks, red potatoes are still the better choice.

How do I fix potato salad that tastes bland after chilling?+

Add a pinch more salt, a little black pepper, and a small splash of vinegar. Chilled foods mute seasoning, and potatoes need more salt than people expect to taste fully seasoned. Stir, let it sit 10 minutes, then taste again before adding more.

Can I leave out the mayonnaise completely?+

You can, but the dressing will taste tangier and less rounded. If you go all-yogurt, add the vinegar a little at a time and taste carefully so it doesn’t turn sharp. A spoonful of olive oil can help replace some of the richness if you want a smoother finish.

Red Potato Salad (Light on Mayo)

Red potato salad (light on mayo) made with a Greek yogurt dressing for creamy flavor without heavy mayonnaise. Cubed red potatoes are boiled until tender, cooled, then tossed with dill and green onion and chilled for a fresh, cohesive texture.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
chilling 2 hours
Total Time 2 hours 40 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 310

Ingredients
  

Red Potatoes
  • 3 lb red potatoes
Light Creamy Dressing
  • 1 plain Greek yogurt Use plain (not sweetened) for best results.
  • 0.25 cup mayonnaise Reduced-fat works well if you prefer.
  • 2 tbsp Dijon mustard
  • 2 tbsp white wine vinegar
  • 0.25 cup fresh dill Chopped.
  • 0.25 cup green onions Sliced.
  • 0.5 cup celery Diced.
  • 0.5 salt To taste.
  • 0.5 pepper To taste.

Equipment

  • 1 Dutch oven

Method
 

Boil and cool the potatoes
  1. Bring a Dutch oven of water to a boil and boil the cubed red potatoes until tender, about 15–20 minutes, with a steady simmer. You’ll know they’re ready when a fork slides in easily but they still hold their shape.
  2. Drain the potatoes and spread them out to cool until warm or room temperature. The potatoes should no longer steam when you touch the surface lightly.
Make the Greek yogurt dressing
  1. In a bowl, mix plain Greek yogurt, mayonnaise, Dijon mustard, white wine vinegar, salt, and pepper until smooth. The dressing should look creamy and evenly speckled from the mustard.
Assemble and chill
  1. Combine the cooled potatoes with fresh dill, green onions, and celery. Toss until the add-ins are evenly distributed through the potato cubes.
  2. Pour the dressing over the potato mixture and toss well to coat every piece. Stop when the potatoes look glossy and the herbs are suspended in the dressing rather than pooling.
  3. Refrigerate the salad for 2 hours before serving. Chill until cold throughout and more cohesive when spooned.

Notes

For the best texture, cool the boiled potatoes to room temperature before dressing so the herbs stay bright and the salad doesn’t turn watery. Refrigerate in a covered container for 3–4 days; freeze is not recommended because the potatoes and yogurt dressing can change texture. If you want it dairy-free-ish, swap Greek yogurt for a thick plant-based yogurt that’s plain and unsweetened, and keep the rest the same.

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