Mashed Potato Salad

What do you get when you combine potatoes with sweet pickles, mustard, mayo, and boiled eggs? This deliciously creamy and unique mashed potato salad that will have you coming back for more.

Mashed Potato Salad

So many of our beloved foods and recipes are loved for the memories attached to them, just as much as the taste. For me, this mashed potato salad is no different. It’s a Thomas Pit BBQ copycat recipe and is without a doubt the best potato salad I have ever tasted in my life.

Thomas Pit BBQ was a Madison County icon. People would line up and sit in their cars for 45+ minutes to get their juicy smoked chicken, pulled pork, white sauce, and mashed potato salad. Everything on their menu was amazing. What was even more amazing is that if you ordered a plate in that window in 1980 and then in 2014, you likely had the same people preparing that food and handing that plate to you. They were friends and family and we expected to see them when we went to Thomas’s. But some time ago, Thomas’s was bought out by a local chain. 

There isn’t a lot anyone can do now so I set about trying to recreate the two recipes that I went there for. I came awfully close with my Dutch Oven Smokehouse Chicken and of course, we all have the classic Alabama White BBQ Sauce recipe. Several years ago I figured out how to best duplicate slow-smoked pulled pork by using my slow cooker. Today, though, I’m bringing you the mashed potato salad recipe that had emails pouring into me after Thomas’s closed. 

So here it is, my best rendition of Thomas BBQ mashed potato salad. It’s so easy to make and the ingredients include potatoes, mayo, mustard, boiled eggs, onion, and sweet pickles. Can you taste it already? It’s creamy with a subtle tang and I cannot get enough! 

Mashed Potato Salad ingredients

Recipe Ingredients

  • Mayonnaise (I typically use Duke’s)
  • Yellow mustard
  • Cubed Southern-style hash browns
  • Sweet pickles in a jar (not relish)
  • Boiled eggs
  • Yellow onion
  • Salt and pepper

How to Make Mashed Potato Salad

Bring potatoes to a boil and then simmer.

Place your potatoes (hash browns) in a large pot and add enough water to cover them.

Bring this to a boil over medium-high heat.

Once boiling, allow to cook for about ten minutes or until tender, then drain.

Place drained potatoes in a large bowl.

Place potatoes in a bowl.

Finely dice sweet pickles and onions in blender.

Now here is the thing… you need to dice, by hand, 1/2 cup of sweet pickles and 1/2 cup of onion. Once they are diced you want 1/2 a cup.

Now, take that half a cup of each (I just put them all together) and run it through a blender, chopper, little smoothie mixer, or something like that because we want it really, really fine.

We don’t want it to be a puree but we want it minced like this. This will help the flavors spread throughout every bite of potato salad and is really one of the keys to why this is so good.

Mash potatoes with a potato masher.

Use a hand potato masher or a long-tined fork and mash up the potatoes a little bit.

You still want them to be lumpy but just a good bit of mashed in there with the lumps.

Add remaining ingredients to bowl except for eggs.

Add all other ingredients except for the eggs. So you’re adding in your mayo, mustard, minced pickles and onions, salt, pepper, and pickle juice.

The pickle juice just comes straight from the jar of sweet pickles. That’s why I didn’t want you to get sweet pickle relish because there isn’t enough juice in there.

Stir that up really well.

Add chopped eggs to bowl.

Then chop your eggs and add them in.

Mashed Potato Salad

Once eggs are stirred in, cover and refrigerate for several hours or until chilled.

Enjoy the best potato salad I have ever put in my mouth!

Storage

Store leftover potato salad in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 5 days.

Recipe Notes

  • I’m just using hashbrowns to make life easier, but you can use regular potatoes instead. Just chop them into small cubes before following the instructions. I recommend Yukon Gold potatoes.
  • Many mashed potato salad recipes include 1/2 cup of diced celery, so feel free to chop that up when you finely dice the onion and sweet pickles.
  • This is a great recipe to use if you have leftover roast potatoes or leftover mashed potatoes.
  • Feel free to swap the yellow onion for sweet onion, red onion, or green onion.
  • Other substitutions you can make? Swap yellow mustard for Dijon mustard, add a tablespoon of vinegar for extra tang, and swap half of the mayonnaise for 1/2 cup of sour cream or Greek yogurt instead.

Recipe FAQs

Do you have to put eggs in a potato salad?

The short answer is no. I don’t believe Thomas’ mashed potato salad had eggs in it but personally, I just love boiled eggs in potato salad. If you love them, be sure to add them in. If you don’t, feel free to leave them out. For me, they just make it extra special.

Can I use dill pickles instead of sweet pickles?

So, since posting this recipe, I’ve heard from A LOT of people that… a) feel confident Thomas’s used dill pickle instead of sweet pickle or b) can’t bear the thought of sweet pickle in a potato salad and prefer dill. So I just wanted to pop in and reiterate that this is my version of the recipe and as a person who really, really loves sweet pickles, that is what I naturally used. You, of course, are welcome to substitute dill if that is what you prefer. There is a good chance that is what Thomas’s used since they served dill pickle spears with some of their entrees. Just go with whatever cranks yer tractor.

What do you serve with mashed potato salad?

This is a great side dish to pair with so many different main meals. Here are some recommendations:

How do you make Amish potato salad?

Add diced celery and 1/4 cup of granulated sugar to this recipe and you have Amish potato salad.

Here are more pleasing potato recipes:

Loaded Baked Potato Salad

The Best German Potato Salad

Fried Potatoes Recipe

Ham and Potato Casserole

Potato Corn Chowder

Cheesy Garlic Mashed Potatoes With Mozzarella

Mashed Potato Salad

This deliciously creamy and unique mashed potato salad recipe combines potatoes with sweet pickles, mustard, mayo, and boiled eggs.
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 10 minutes
Chilling Time: 4 hours
Total Time: 4 hours 20 minutes
Course: Salad
Cuisine: American
Keyword: mashedpotatoes, potatoes, salad, sweetpotato
Servings: 8
Calories: 398kcal

Ingredients

  • 1 32-ounce package cubed frozen hash browns
  • 4 boiled eggs, chopped
  • 1/2 cup diced onion
  • 1/2 cup chopped sweet pickles
  • 1 cup mayonnaise
  • 1/3 cup sweet pickle juice
  • 1 heaping teaspoon yellow mustard
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon pepper

Instructions

  • Place hash browns in a large pot and add enough water to cover. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Once boiling, allow to cook for ten minutes or until tender.
    1 32-ounce package cubed frozen hash browns
  • Drain potatoes and place them in a large bowl. Mash all of this up a bit with a potato masher, but leave them lumpy.
  • Place chopped sweet pickles and chopped onion into a blender, chopper, or small smoothie blender and pulse a few times until very fine, almost like a relish.
    1/2 cup diced onion, 1/2 cup chopped sweet pickles
  • Place mayonnaise, pickle juice, mustard, finely minced pickles and onions, salt, and pepper in the bowl with the potatoes. Stir until well mixed, then stir in the chopped eggs just until incorporated.
    4 boiled eggs, chopped, 1 cup mayonnaise, 1/3 cup sweet pickle juice, 1 heaping teaspoon yellow mustard, 1 teaspoon salt, 1/2 teaspoon pepper
  • Cover and refrigerate for several hours or until cold. Enjoy!

Nutrition

Calories: 398kcal
Tried this recipe?Mention @southernplate or tag #southernplate!

 

Well done is better than well said.

~Benjamin Franklin

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172 Comments

  1. I have tried to duplicate the recipe for years and finally came up with one that matches the taste pretty closely. But, what I liked most about their potato salad was the taste of dill, not sweet pickles. So, give it a try with dill pickles and juice and see what you think. I also like to add fresh dill to the salad. But thank you for the hash brown potato hint. That hint will definitely cut the prep time in half! Thank you so much for all of your delicious recipes and friendly blogs!

  2. Thank you for posting this recipe! This is how I have made potato salad, but just peeled and cubed my potatoes. I need to look for the Duke’s mayo.

      1. We always eat dlvieed eggs. The first time I made them I thought my mom put seasoned salt on them so I sprinkled it on the eggs and my mom asked what I did to them because they had a zip to them, so I told her and we had a good laugh when she told me she puts paprika on them!! Every now and then I use season salt when I want a zip, but mostly we use paprika. I like to garnish mine is chopped green onion and a slice of olive. It would be interesting to see how everyone makes them. Mom never made them till she moved here to the states, so I don’t think they were common in Germany they might now, but not when she first married my dad. He was the one who taught her how to make them.

          1. put the seasoned salt in the yellow so it softens and spreads the flavor…I never thought to garnish with olive slices…hmmm

      2. A friend introduced me to JFG mayo which I order from amazon. It’s the best I’ve eaten. It’s not a “heavy” mayo which is what I appreciate. I don’t actually like mayo. If you see it, suggest you try it since you said you are not that fond of mayo.

  3. sweet pickles – really? I’ve never detected a sweet in it. I use finely chopped green olives in my Thomas salad. A friend told me they used dill. I also add white sauce and Liquid Smoke. Oh, I loved that stuff even more than the BBQ!!

  4. I’ve missed Thomas Pit BBQ landmark, it looks so naked there….. :'( Thanks for posting their famous potato salad recipe…….:-)

  5. This is the way my mother has always made potato salad, except she diced her own potatoes. She also used sweet pickle cubes (not relish) from a jar. They sell both kinds here. If this tastes anything like my Mom’s, this potato salad is AWESOME! I love to eat it when it has just been made and is still warm!

  6. With the onions and pickle, do you add the other half cup, that is not minced fine, to the salad as is?

    1. Jeff, the way I read it was there is not another 1/2 cup. It is just the 1/2 cup onion and 1/2 cup pickles. Read it again. A little bit further it states that. I thought the same as you the first time I read it.

  7. Well, I gotta tell ya, Christy, that just THIS morning I was searching for a classic potato salad recipe and happened upon one similar to yours but MUCH more fussy. It promised to be the perfect potato salad but I was dreading all the preparation. Then I clicked through when I saw your email and thought wow!! A pretty near duplicate but much easier to make. Yay Christy!! You rescued me just in time. lol. 🙂

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