Italian Potato Salad

15 minutes prep 20 minutes active cooking 35 minutes total
Makes 6 - 8 servings

Legendary cookbook author Marcella Hazan wrote that Italians judge a home cook by their potato salad, noting that there’s no “mystery about what goes into it: It’s just potatoes, salt, olive oil, and vinegar.” While an ocean of mayo can cover the mediocre potatoes and celery of the American version, a stripped down Italian potato salad can’t hide behind it. As Hazan wrote, it’s all about the potatoes.

“The flesh must be waxy smooth and compact, not crumbly; their color when cooked warm and golden, like that of maize or country butter; their flavor fresh, sweet, and nutty, with no hint of mustiness.” She’s just as adamant about how the spuds are cooked, dressed, and served. The salad must be “lukewarm or no colder than room temperature,” Hazan admonishes, “Do not keep overnight, and do not refrigerate.”

Yellow potatoes make the best salad. They’re moist, slightly waxy, and less prone to the mealy breakdown of Russets. And as much as I love the simplicity of Hazan’s salad, I like to bump up the flavor just a bit with a few more ingredients that still fit the Italian model.

What You'll Need

Ingredients

For the shopping list

  • 2 pounds of yellow potatoes, roughly the same size

From our shop

Out of stock

1/4 cup of  Capers in Sea Salt
$20.00– Pantelleria - Sicily
3 tablespoons of  Late Harvest Sauvignon Blanc Vinegar
$16.00– Napa - California
Out of stock

1/4 cup of  Novo Frantoio
$27.00– Tuscany - Italy
1 tablespoon of  Garlic Sauce
$12.00– Seattle - Washington
*or 3 cloves garlic, finely chopped
Out of stock

2 teaspoons of  Oregano
$9.00– Pantelleria - Sicily
Out of stock

2 teaspoons of  Kosher Sea Salt, Wellspent
$9.00– Gossen Island - Norway

Equipment

From the kitchen

  • 1 Medium Saucepan
  • 1 Chef's Knife
  • 1 Cutting Board
  • 1 Mixing Bowl
  • Measuring Cups
  • Measuring Spoons

What you'll have to do

Step 1

Soak 1/4 cup capers in cold water for 10-15 minutes, then drain and rinse off any excess salt. Chop coarsely.

Step 2

Boil the potatoes in their skins until they’re easily pierced with a knife. Drain, cool until you can handle them, but peel while they’re warm. Cut into bite-sized pieces and toss with 3 tablespoons vinegar.

Step 3

Add 1/4 cup olive oil, 1 tablespoon garlic sauce, 2 tablespoons oregano, and the capers. Toss well, taste, and add salt if needed (the capers are salty so taste before adding more).

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