Warm potato salad

This quick, warm potato salad is a little creamy, a little crunchy, a little herbaceous, a little spicy, and very delicious. #meandthemoose #sidedishes #potatoes #potatorecipes #warmpotatosalad #potatosaladrecipes

Potato salad might be the perfect transitional food: It’s reminiscent of the BBQs and long summer days that we’re leaving behind, but as we head towards fall, what’s more comforting than a bowl of starchy goodness?

Bring me to the potatoes!

This quick, warm potato salad is a little creamy, a little crunchy, a little herbaceous, a little spicy, and very delicious. #meandthemoose #sidedishes #potatoes #potatorecipes #warmpotatosalad #potatosaladrecipes
This quick, warm potato salad is a little creamy, a little crunchy, a little herbaceous, a little spicy, and very delicious. #meandthemoose #sidedishes #potatoes #potatorecipes #warmpotatosalad #potatosaladrecipes

Phew. I am in the thick of this motherhood in a pandemic thing, y’all. (While also trying to be okay with what we have [in-person school half of the time; outdoor, distanced playdates], and what we don’t [travel, grandparents without preplanning, sports, activities]. I was about to actually start this blog post asking, “from where is our worth derived?” And then I said to myself: GET A GRIP BECCA, THIS IS JUST A FUCKING FOOD BLOG.

One thing I’m really missing, and I think we can all relate to this somewhat, is that sense of having discreet portions of the day. I blame the pandemic, the world being both literally and figuratively on fire, and being home all the time, but having a 5.5 month old baby who is, thus far, schedule resistant, also doesn’t help.

Whatever the cause, I miss those few downbeat moments every day where you could switch from one mode to the next. Now I feel like I’m never able to focus on one thing completely. I can’t just test a recipe or take some photos. Instead, I’m doing that while comforting a crying baby and finding a very specific episode of Paw Patrol on the DVR and getting some water and searching for a missing Lego and nursing and and and.

On the flip side, I find myself not tuning in to my kids entirely either, which makes me really upset with myself and this fucking situation we’re in. I think that fear, anger, resentment, and frustration makes it hard for me to find the bandwidth for a really involved pretend game or art project or science experiment. But that sucks for my kids because they aren’t responsible for the pandemic. But I’m also human and I can’t be the perfect mom all day, every day. * PRIMAL SCREEEEAAAAAMMMMM *

This quick, warm potato salad is a little creamy, a little crunchy, a little herbaceous, a little spicy, and very delicious. #meandthemoose #sidedishes #potatoes #potatorecipes #warmpotatosalad #potatosaladrecipes

But anyway, time marches on and suddenly summer has turned into fall. I don’t know what we did with the warm months. Did they even happen? Who knows.

This quick, warm potato salad is a little creamy, a little crunchy, a little herbaceous, a little spicy, and very delicious. #meandthemoose #sidedishes #potatoes #potatorecipes #warmpotatosalad #potatosaladrecipes

We did celebrate summer produce thanks to our prolific cucumber, zucchini, and basil plants AND our favorite farm stand. Now that fall is bearing down on us, there’s nothing like a meal to mark the changing of the seasons and this potato salad is the culinary equivalent of a light jacket: A nod to both warm and cold, casual and cozy.

While potato salad might seem relegated to side-dishery, I topped this with a runny egg for an unexpectedly fab breakfast. Try it!

This quick, warm potato salad is a little creamy, a little crunchy, a little herbaceous, a little spicy, and very delicious. #meandthemoose #sidedishes #potatoes #potatorecipes #warmpotatosalad #potatosaladrecipes

Warm potato salad 

Time: About 15-20 minutes, mostly active
Yield:
about 3-3.5 cups of salad

1½ lbs small potatoes (new, fingerling, red, etc; cut any larger ones so that most pieces are about the same size) 
¼ cup mayonnaise or Greek yogurt 
3 Tbsp dijon mustard
¼ cup chopped red onion (about 1 thick slice from a medium or small onion) 
2 Tbsp finely chopped chives
1/4-1/2 tsp kosher salt
¼ tsp smoked paprika
Dash of red wine vinegar or 1 tsp of chopped capers 

Microwave the washed potatoes in a glass bowl covered with plastic wrap on high for 10 minutes. Or cover the potatoes with cold water until they’re just submerged. Heat over a high flame until boiling. Boil, lowering the flame slightly to avoid the water boiling over, until fork tender, about 12-14 minutes. 

While the potatoes are cooking, combine the rest of the ingredients in a large bowl and mix well. 

Once the potatoes are fork tender, add them to the mixture and stir to combine. Taste and adjust seasoning as needed.