Potato Salad
My family has few traditional recipes. There's Mummo's Bourbon Cake, a Christmas treat that's made Thanksgiving weekend and then aged (with regular shots of bourbon) until Christmas. And while Mom made the bourbon cake, Dad would make eggnog, which was also aged until Christmas.
During strawberry season there would be one Saturday or Sunday night supper that consisted solely of Strawberry Shortcake, which Mom made. And summers featured Dad's salad dressing, a soy sauce-based dressing that's particularly good on a green salad that includes leftover grilled steak.
Food has replaced sex in my life, now I can't even get into my own pants ~ Unknown
In fact, for a brief period of time my brother Loren cooked for banquets at a local hotel. The first time there was leftover steak from the banquet he brought it out to my parent's house for the dogs. My mother had a fit over feeding "perfectly good steak" to the dogs so she cut it up for salad. Loren was too squeamish to eat it, but I happened to be there that day and I agreed with my mother — after all, the only things that had touched the meat were a steak knife and my brother's hands.But those few recipes are about it for traditions, except for Sutherland Potato Salad. And although this isn't your grandmother's potato salad, it is my grandmother's — maybe even her grandmother's.
This is an old recipe (if you can even call it a recipe) from my mother's family that's unusual because the dressing is just oil and vinegar, salt and pepper. The salad itself consists of nothing but potatoes and onions — no eggs, celery, pickles, relish, mayo, mustard, or anything else. Those who've never had this salad are often put off by the idea because it's so drastically different from most potato salads. Nevertheless, one bite always produces raves. It really is a case of the total being greater than the sum of it's parts.
But, given such simple ingredients, every Sutherland who makes it has their own little tweaks. Some swear by baking potatoes while others prefer red potatoes. Some use white onions and others red onions or yellow onions. My Aunt Gloria insisted on white vinegar while I think cider vinegar is best. My mother added fresh dill to her's for a while and I've come to consider the dill essential.
The basic recipe consists of:
3 lb potatoesMy version consists of:
1 lg onion
salad oil (vegetable, corn, or canola)
vinegar
salt and pepper
3 lb Yukon Gold (or baking/Russet/Idaho) potatoesIngredients
1 lg red onion (3" diameter)
canola oil
cider vinegar
1/4 c minced fresh dill
salt and pepper
Yukon Golds are perfect for this salad. I like their hint of sweetness and they're a medium-high starch potato. I avoid low starch potatoes for two reasons. First, higher starch potatoes are absorbent and will soak up the oil and vinegar, while with low-starch potatoes the dressing tends to pool in the bowl. Second, high-starch potatoes crumble a bit during mixing and these potato particles absorb more of the dressing and cling to the larger pieces of potatoes resulting in something akin in texture and function to mayonnaise. (Look at the photo, it isn't out of focus, it's grainy because of the potato sauce.)
Red (Bermuda) onions are relatively mild and slightly sweet, which offers a nice contrast to the sour vinegar. Also, the purple color makes for a much more visually appealing dish.
I use canola oil, but any neutral oil will do. The purpose of the oil is mouth feel, not flavor, so avoid olive oil.
I prefer cider vinegar, but white (distilled) vinegar is also fine. Avoid wine-based or flavored vinegars, they detract from the whole rather than contribute to it.
You can skip the dill, but of all the variations on this recipe that I've eaten over the years dill is the only one that works (although, Aunt Gloria was horrified by the idea). The dill adds an herbal, grassy note that gives the salad a freshness it is otherwise missing. And, like the red onion, it makes a more visually appealing result.
Assembly
Cut the onion in quarters vertically, then each quarter in half horizontally. Separate the layers and cut the larger pieces in half again. You should end up with a collection of 1/2 inch squares and some randomly-sized pieces from the center. Dump the onion into a large bowl.
Peel the potatoes and cut into bite-size pieces (1/2 to 3/4 inch square). Cook in boiling, salted water until completely cooked — about 12 minutes. Drain and immediately add to the onions. Mix with 1/2 cup of oil, 1/4 cup of vinegar, a tablespoon of salt and a tablespoon of black pepper. It's essential that the potatoes be hot when mixing in the oil and vinegar because they'll absorb the liquids.
Let the salad sit for a couple of minutes, then taste it (be sure to include a bite of onion). You will almost certainly need to add more oil, vinegar, salt, and pepper but at this point how much of each is a matter of your personal taste. Ideally the flavor will be on the tart side because the tartness will decline as the salad ages.
Let the salad cool to room temperature, then mix in minced dill. Taste again and tweak as needed. Chill for at least four hours, but ideally overnight. Stir and taste one last time before serving.
Note, with the coating of oil and acidity of the vinegar, this is probably the safest potato salad you could take on a picnic.
Technorati: Food | recipe | potato salad | potatoes | picnic | barbeque | salad
Labels: barbeque, food, picnic, potato salad, potatoes, recipe, salad







11 Comments:
Hello Kevin; just after I read your post I co-incidentally came across a recipe for "potato mayonnaise" from a 1946 cookbook. A different take on the idea - using mashed potatoes IN the mayonnaise. I'm not sure how it would work, but here it is:
Potato Mayonnaise.
1/2 cup mashed potato
2 tablespoons olive oil
3 tablespoons vinegar
1 teaspoon horseradish
1/2 teaspoon Worcestershire Sauce
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon mustard
1/4 teaspoon sugar.
Mix in order given and serve with cold meat.
Foodie,
I got a shiver reading a comment from you on my blog. I'm an avid fan of your blog (though my comments are few and far between) and had no idea mine was on your radar.
The mayo recipe is really intriguing. It seems to me it would be particularly good spread on the meat and then given a few minutes under a broiler.
I love your recipe -- it's potato salad for purists!
Hello Kevin - I read you regularly! you pop up in my feedreader every time you post. And I am delighted to have a Real Chef reading My blog, so thankyou!
Janet
Lydia,
It is indeed.
That is a 'real' potato salad~ no mushy, mayoee, eggee salad.
I always appreciate your detail...you are a huge help to us novices.
Sandi,
Thanks. This is such an unusual and simple potato salad that I thought it was necessary to explain why it works.
I brought this salad to a cookout a few days ago and people loved it!! Thank you.
Georgette,
I'm glad it was a success.
Your recipe for potato salad sounds very German. They use a lot of vinegar and oil dressings. My favorite one that I learned while studying over there included tarragon, S and P, tarragon vinegar, oil, sometimes a bit of chicken broth, minced onions, diced potatoes and sometimes little slices of weisswurst tossed in.
Ginger,
I know it does, but there's no German ancestory on that side of the family. And I've tried using tarrogon vinegar instead of cider vinegar and it just isn't the same.
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