Thursday, December 31, 2009

Holiday Potato Salad, with a little crunch.



This potato salad is very popular with our friends. It is based on my Grandmother Camilla Mellow’s recipe with a few innovations. It includes celery which adds a bit of crunch to the texture.

5 lb.. Russet potatoes, boiled in lightly salted water then peeled and chopped.
6 stalks Celery, including the interior ones and any leaves still attached.
3 Red onions
1 can Israeli packed brine dill pickles.
1/2 can Pitted black olives
1 jar Prepared diced pimentos, drained
1 bunch Fresh Italian (flat leaf) parsley, leaves only
2 tbs. Dijon mustard
2 tbs. Prepared horseradish
splash white wine vinegar
salt & pepper to taste.
2 cups mayonnaise
1 cup sour cream
6 hard boiled eggs, chopped or cut into in rounds -- optional

a. Wash half a pound of russet potatoes, put in a large pot of cold water and bring to a boil. Salt the water. Cook until a knife easily cuts though the potatoes. Drain and let cool enough to peel and chop into roughly half inch cubes.

b. Cut celery, onions, pickles and olives into smaller pieces then mince in a chopper until they are minced into roughly quarter inch size pieces. Chop the parsley leaves fine. Put all of these into a large mixing bowl with the jar of drained pimentos.

c. To the chopped vegetables add the Dijon or other sharp mustard, the horseradish, then add the cubed potatoes and mix evenly. Then add the mayonnaise and sour cream and mix again. Begin with one and half cups of mayonnaise and the sour cream and add just enough to make sure it is evenly mixed. Taste the salad and salt and pepper to taste and add a splash of white wine vinegar or fresh lemon juice to cut the richness. Be cautious with the salt since the pickles, mustard, horseradish and mayonnaise already bring a lot of salt with them. My Grandmother always used white pepper in her potato salad and her mashed potatoes as do most Europeans. The favor is sharper and does not put black flecks into the white mixture. Cover and chill for at least four hours.

d. Before serving taste the salad and add more mayonnaise it it seems dry.

Notes:

-- Only use jarred prepared pimentos, do not use roast red peppers because they bleed into the potatoes and turn the salad pink.

-- The sharp mustard and horseradish add high notes to the taste and they should not really be tasted, use just enough to give the salad some bite. The same with the white wine vinegar or lemon juice, they liven the flavor but you should not be able to taste either. Do not add the brine from the Israeli pickles, it is far too salty. If you use a vinegar cured pickle, you might want to use it's juice instead of white wine vinegar or lemon juice.

-- The very menschlich (manly in German & Yiddish) Israeli brine pickles are strong, salty, zippy, garlicky and make a real difference and cut the sweetness of the potato mayonnaise flavor of the salad. Other deli type pickles or sour dills also work. Some people use sweet pickles or pickle relish and like it, but I feel the tangy salty ones contrast with the potatoes and make a lively salad. A few times I have used French conrichons which are pickled in wine vinegar and seasoned with tarragon. It makes a sophisticated salad some people will like.
Red onions mellow out in the salad and do not have as sharp a flavor as white or brown onions. Green onions are too assertive and like dill weed tend to overpower the other flavors.

There are many other fine potato salads including the herb rich French and Italian ones where the dressing is white wine vinegar & olive oil, not mayonnaise, and the warm bacon and apple cider vinegar German potato salads. Even Asians make a mild creamy potato salad that you will find with Hawaiian cooking or as a side dish with a robust chili seasoned Korean Barbecue.

Once when I realized I didn't have any celery I took a can of water chestnuts and chopped them and added then to the salad. It provided the need crunch and blended in well.
- xxx -

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