This recipe for a classic Austrian potato salad is made with beef stock and sweet mustard. Because you can prepare the potato salad well in advance, it is a good side dish if you have guests on the holidays, for example.
Potato Salad is THE one and only side dish to Viennese Schnitzel, but also a perfect fit to any kind of grilled meat, sausages or as part of a salad buffet.
This is my very favorite recipe for potato salad. I have made this several times now and my family loves it! We lived in Vienna for almost 20 years (kids were born there) and I am so happy to have found your site for the recipes our family misses so much.
Ada from Texas (Recipe Reviews)
Ingredients
For this Austrian Potato Salad you need the following ingredients. The exact quantities can be found in the printable recipe card below.
- Waxy potatoes (salad potatoes, side potatoes): do not use floury puree potatoes, they would kind of fall apart too much during cooking
- Bought beef stock or homemade beef soup: whenever I make beef soup myself, I freeze several portions for later use
Of course, the recipe also works with vegetable soup or stock cubes - Onion: I like to use red or yellow onions for this potato salad, but shallots etc. also work well.
- Kremser Senf (Traditional Austrian sweet "Kremser" mustard): this very popular Austrian mustard from the company "Mautner Markhof" is quite important to the taste of this salad, but it is hard to get outside of Austria.
Instead of Kremser Senf, you can use a combo of French’s and Spicy Brown Mustard to get a similar taste. (Thank you Ada from Texas for the tip!)
Other sweet mustards like Bavarian Weißwurst mustard can be used as a substitute as well. - Oil: a neutral oil such as corn oil or rapeseed oil is used in this recipe
- Vinegar: I like to use white wine vinegar, table vinegar, or other quite "neutral" tasting vinegar for the salad. Apple cider vinegar or something similar is possible, but has a strong fruity taste of its own, which in my opinion competes too much with the Kremser mustard.
- Chives: fresh chives taste best, but frozen is obviously more convenient
- As in many other Austrian salads, sugar rounds off the taste. If you want to save the sugar, you can also use a little more sweet mustard (it also has sugar, of course) or reduce the sugar a bit.
But then please don't leave a nasty comment below that the recipe doesn't taste good! (I'm kidding, of course I'm grateful for any feedback) - Salt: you may have to add a little more salt after the salad has cooled down, the potatoes absorb quite a lot of salt
- Pepper: at taste
- ground caraway seeds: can also be left out if you're not as big of a fan
- Garlic, as pictured below, is optional and not really necessary unless you have a very lightly flavored beef soup, in which case I recommend it!
Instructions
Peel the potatoes and cut into slices about 2 mm thick. The quickest way to do this is with the grater insert of your kitchen machine. I use a hand grater. So that I don't injure myself when grating, I only grate about three quarters of each potato and cut the rest into thin slices with a knife.
You can of course just use a knife. The slices look prettiest when they are cut diagonally or lengthwise.
Bring about 2 liters of water to a boil and add salt. Add the potato slices and cook until tender, about 7 minutes.
Alternatively, cook whole potatoes in their skins: of course, the salad also works with potatoes that are cooked whole in their skins. Then the cooking time increases depending on the size of the potatoes. However, the potatoes should be added to the salad dressing while they are still hot or warm in order to better absorb the aroma. In this case you have to cut the potatoes into slices with a knife. If you grate them, they would fall apart.
Salad dressing
Mix the cold soup with the mustard, vinegar and oil and all the spices in a large bowl. You want the sugar and salt to dissolve in the liquid.
Chop the onion very finely and mix in. (Optional, press the garlic clove as well and mix into the dressing.)
Add the potato slices into the dressing while they are still warm/hot:
The cooked potatoes should be mixed with the dressing while they are still hot (or at least warm). This will help them absorb the flavor of the dressing.
Now, the salad should cool down for about 1 hour. (In the fridge or outside in cold temperatures.)
During this time, the potatoes also absorb a lot of the liquid. Before serving, you may add more salt and some liquid, for example oil, if the potatoes have absorbed a lot of liquid.
Austrian Potato Salad Recipe
Zutaten
- 2 lbs potatoes waxy ones {1 kg}
- 1 cup beef stock or vegetable stock {200 ml}
- 4 tbsp. oil corn oil, rapeseed oil
- 4 tbsp. white wine vinegar or other light vinegar
- 2 tbsp. sweet mustard Kremser mustard, ideally
- 1 tbsp. sugar
- ½ tbsp. salt
- 1 onion medium size, 2 small ones
- 1 pinch pepper
- 3 tbsp. chives
- ½ teaspoon caraway seeds, grated
- 1 clove garlic optional
Anleitung
- Peel the raw potatoes and cut into slices (about 2 mm thin). Boil water in a pot and cook the potatoes with a pinch of salt.
- Chop onions very finely and mix with all the other ingredients in the salad bowl.
- When the potatoes are cooked, drain and add to the dressing when still hot/warm.
- Let cool for at least one hour.
(c) by Angelika Kreitner-Beretits / Vienna Sunday Kitchen
Mai 22, 2016 Hast du das Rezept ausprobiert? Dann freue ich mich über deine Bewertung!! / Rate this Recipe!
Brian Wood meint
Good luck for the upcoming birth. May all your troubles be little ones!
wordpressadmin meint
Dear Brian! Thank you very much!
Ada Miller meint
This is my very favorite recipe for potato salad. I have made this several times now and my family loves it! We lived in Vienna for almost 20 years (kids were born there) and I am so happy to have found your site for the recipes our family misses so much. I think you have a wonderful sense of humor and your recipes are fabulous! Much love from Texas!
Angelika meint
Hallo Ada, thank you so so much for your comment!! I love that you could find recipes here that you missed!! Greetings from a grey and cloudy Vienna 😉
Ada Miller meint
Just re-visiting this to make the recipe again. I wanted to mention that in the USA we have several kind of mustards but Kremser is impossible to find. I use a combo of French’s and Spicy Brown Mustard to get a similar taste. Works pretty well. Still searching for a real semmel roll recipe. I have tried several and all resulted in decent bread rolls but none the right thing. If you have anything let us know!
Angelika Kreitner-Beretits meint
thank you for your hint with the Kremser Senf, i will put the information into the blog posting!
I am sorry, I don't have a semmel roll recipe yet. This one (in German) looks quite good, but some of the ingredients might be difficult to find (e.g. malt extract): https://www.wagners-kulinarium.at/die-wiener-kaisersemmel/