Creamy, cool, and just sweet enough, Amish potato salad has the kind of old-fashioned balance that makes people go back for a second scoop before they’ve finished the first plate. The potatoes stay tender without turning mushy, the eggs add richness, and the dressing lands in that sweet-tangy middle ground that keeps the whole bowl from feeling heavy.
What makes this version work is the contrast between the warm, starchy potatoes and the dressing’s sharp edge. The vinegar and mustard cut through the mayonnaise, while the sugar softens the bite and gives the salad that familiar Pennsylvania Dutch finish. The trick is folding everything together gently after the potatoes cool enough to hold their shape, then giving the salad time in the fridge so the dressing can settle into every bite.
Below, I’ll walk through the part that matters most: how to keep the potatoes tender, not waterlogged, and how to get the dressing to taste balanced instead of flat. I’ve also included a few smart swaps and the questions that come up most often when people make this for the first time.
The dressing was spot on — sweet, tangy, and creamy without being runny. I chilled it overnight like you suggested and the potatoes held their shape perfectly the next day.
Save this Amish potato salad for the potluck table — the sweet-tangy dressing and tender eggs make it a dependable crowd-pleaser.
Why the Potatoes Need to Cool Before the Dressing Goes In
The biggest mistake with potato salad is dressing potatoes that are still too hot. When that happens, the mayonnaise loosens, the salad turns greasy, and the potatoes soak up the dressing unevenly. Let them cool until they’re just warm or fully cool, and the cubes hold their shape while still taking on flavor.
The other thing that matters here is size. Cube the potatoes evenly so they cook at the same rate and fold into the dressing without breaking apart. If some pieces are half the size of the others, you’ll get a bowl with both mush and underdone chunks.
What the Dressing Ingredients Are Doing in the Bowl

- Mayonnaise — This is the body of the dressing, so use a brand you actually like. A thick, full-fat mayo gives the salad that classic creamy finish and helps the dressing cling to the potatoes instead of sliding off.
- Sugar — This is what makes Amish-style potato salad taste distinct. It softens the mustard and vinegar enough to keep the dressing from tasting sharp or one-note, but it should still read as tangy, not dessert-sweet.
- Yellow mustard — Yellow mustard brings color and the familiar deli-style bite that makes the dressing taste finished. Dijon will work in a pinch, but it changes the profile and tastes more restrained.
- White vinegar — Vinegar wakes up the mayonnaise and keeps the salad from tasting heavy. If you cut it too much, the dressing tastes flat; if you add too much, it turns aggressively sharp after chilling.
- Eggs, celery, and onion — The eggs add richness, the celery gives a clean crunch, and the onion brings bite. Dice the onion finely so it disappears into the salad instead of taking over every forkful.
Building the Salad So It Stays Creamy, Not Heavy
Cooking the Potatoes Evenly
Start the potatoes in cold water and bring them up together so the cubes cook evenly from the outside in. They’re ready when a knife slips through with little resistance, but the pieces still look intact. If you boil them until they’re falling apart, the salad turns pasty once you stir in the dressing.
Mixing the Dressing Until It Tastes Balanced
Whisk the mayonnaise, sugar, mustard, vinegar, salt, and pepper until the dressing looks smooth and glossy. Taste it before it goes into the potatoes; it should be a little bolder than you want in the finished salad because the potatoes will mellow it out. If it tastes flat now, it’ll taste dull later.
Folding Without Breaking the Potatoes
Add the dressing after the potatoes have cooled and fold gently with a spatula instead of stirring hard with a spoon. You want the cubes coated, not mashed. If the salad looks a little loose at first, don’t panic — the potatoes absorb some dressing as it chills.
Letting It Chill Long Enough to Set
Give the salad at least 3 hours in the refrigerator, and overnight is even better. That resting time lets the flavors settle and the dressing thicken slightly. If you serve it too soon, the dressing tastes sharper and the salad feels unfinished.
How to Adjust This for Different Tables and Diets
Make It a Little Less Sweet
Cut the sugar back by 2 to 3 tablespoons if you prefer a sharper, more savory salad. The mustard and vinegar will stand out more, and the dressing will taste closer to a classic deli-style potato salad instead of the traditional Amish version.
Dairy-Free as Written
This recipe is already dairy-free if you use a mayonnaise that doesn’t contain dairy ingredients. Check the label if you’re serving someone with a strict allergy, since some brands add unexpected extras.
Swap In Russet Potatoes for a Softer Salad
Russets make a softer, more absorbent salad because they break down a little more than waxy potatoes. That gives you a creamier texture, but it also means you need to fold extra gently or the bowl can turn starchy fast.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The salad gets a little thicker as it sits, which is normal.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this salad. The mayonnaise breaks, 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 warm potato salad in the microwave; the dressing separates and the eggs lose their clean texture.
Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Amish Potato Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Boil the potatoes in salted water until tender, about 20 minutes, then drain and cool completely so the salad stays creamy. Spread them on a sheet pan to cool faster with visible steam fully gone.
- Hard-boil the eggs until fully set, then chop them into bite-size pieces so they distribute evenly through the salad. Keep the pieces dry and uniform in size for a traditional look.
- Combine the cooled potatoes, chopped eggs, diced celery, and finely diced onion in a large bowl. Fold gently just until evenly mixed so the potato cubes don’t break down.
- Mix mayonnaise, sugar, yellow mustard, white vinegar, salt, and pepper until smooth and glossy, about 1 to 2 minutes. Stop once there are no visible sugar grains and the dressing looks thick.
- Pour the dressing over the potato mixture and fold gently until every surface looks coated. Scrape the bottom of the bowl so no dry potato remains.
- Refrigerate for at least 3 hours or overnight to let the dressing soak in and the flavors mellow. Cover tightly and use a spoon to check that the salad has thickened slightly by the time you serve.
- Garnish the top with paprika right before serving for a classic yellow-white look. Keep it to a light dusting so the garnish is visible without overpowering the tang.