German Potato Salad
Don't you hate it when something gets in between you and your grill? I had that problem this past weekend weekend when my neighbor was having the mortar cut out between the bricks of his house. The work spewed a fine dust across the vast expanse of my deck, and even a quick stint out there left me feeling like I had returned from a long trek across the Sahara (they're extreme mask protection and my complete lack there-of left me a little unnerved). I had a few racks of ribs going down the stairs in the backyard, and my plan was to grill up a side worthy of the new recipes I was developing, but I found that impossible in the hostile environment created just outside my back door. So I took to the kitchen, which wasn't all bad, because out of it came a German potato salad!
This was the first time I've ever made German potato salad, although I've been slowly veering toward it as regular side whenever I'm dining at a barbecue joint. The firmness and definition of the potatoes in these salads led to my choice of a waxy, rather than starchy, potato. I picked up three pounds of white potatoes, hoping they'd provide just enough structure to hold up and avoid becoming a mash.
I can't lie, the reason I've been doing the German thing is bacon—this potato salad has a lot of it. A half pound of bacon was diced and crisped while the potatoes slowed simmered until they were just tender enough to be pierced with a pairing knife with no resistance.
The bacon goodness didn't stop with those strips, the rendered fat was used to soften and brown an onion. Bacon plus bacon fat onions, there's no doubt this was on the right path to be something good.
With the potatoes done, bacon crisped, and onions browned, it was time to contemplate dressing. The salads I've been enjoying have been a little salty, a little sweet, a little tangy, and a little tart, which led to a dressing of vinegar, sugar, salt, pepper, and a little squeeze of Dijon mustard to strike upon all of those notes.
It didn't take long, about 20 minutes total, to have all the ingredients ready to come together as one. The dressing, bacon, onions, and parsley were folded into the potatoes, which lightly crumbled, but mostly held up as I was hoping. Served warmed in the traditional German style, I dug right in and was pleased with what I had created. The flavors were all there, although I would have a preference to a smidgen more dressing, and it was a great eaten alongside the various types of ribs I had smoked up.
Despite my overall happiness with the salad, I still missed my grill. I have another ribfest on tap for next weekend, and I'll be damned if I let anything or anyone stand in my way of taking to the flames then!
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Comments
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pat German potato salad? Yes please. I never knew I needed to make this. Now I do.
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fritz great site! Lot of intersting recipes. although, any reason why you never put number of servings the recipe makes?
Fritz -
Josh @Fristz Thanks for the kind words.
I can start adding in servings, but I have been leaving them off somewhat purposefully. For some recipes, I have a hard time deciding how much it should serve. For example, I would say this potato salad should serve 8 as a side, but we finished the bowl between 6 people. Then I start thinking, does it really serve 6, or were we just overly hungry? Or did someone eat more potato salad than ribs? Then my brain starts to hurt from my indecisiveness and I just drop it.
That being said, you're right, I should probably go with my first inclination on serving size and add that into my recipes. -
Chris Is this a special rub on my side dish?
Josh: No, that's masonry dust.
Okay, you were right to stay inside, ha ha. You hit on to something with the waxy vs starchy potatoes. I had been noticing my potato salad is never as good with russets compared to waxier varieties. Hearing you put it into words helped me realize what the difference was. Thanks dude. -
Engelbert Dollfuss uhm sorry but, this potato salad has as much in common with germany as hitler has with gandhi.
there is no bacon in german potato salad, but in fact there is mayonaise -
Lori My German grandmother would die if I mentioned putting mayonnaise in her potato salad. She does however cook the sugar with the onions for an extra caramel flavor. Otherwise the recipe is very similar, except for the mustard (which sounds like it would work).