If I were a food I’d be potato salad. Have you ever thought about what you’d be?

By this point in time I've written up, down, and around every food that can dance with mayonnaise, but this one's my favorite. It's the one I'd hope to be: All sturdy and resourceful, potato salad is a winning show of making something out of nothing. It's got self confidence: Give it a good lashing of vinegar, a hard-cooked egg or two, and a fistful of herbs, and the thing will practically strut. It wants for nothing, and it will tell you so.

Perhaps best of all, it’s dependable. If you have command over a strong arsenal of condiments, you can call on potato salad any time of year. You can call on it now — and you should.

Here’s how to make something out of nothing, without a recipe.

1. Decide your potato salad's destiny. My add-ins always include a few hard-cooked eggs, a bit of red onion, cornichon, and a great big pile of herbs. I like chives and parsley — when I'm feeling wild, I'll throw in a scallion — but this part welcomes improvisation. Riff on this according to your mood, or go down another road entirely — try horseradish and dill or arugula and Dijon mustard.

2. Put the potatoes into lightly salted water and bring everything up to a boil. (If you're using baby potatoes, leave them whole or cut the larger ones in half; if you're using larger potatoes, quarter or halve them before cooking.) While they bubble away, make the dressing: To a small bowl, add a heaping spoonful of mustard. Add to that about a 1/4 cup of mayonnaise (aioli really makes a difference, but store-bought will work, too), and then drizzle in an equal amount of olive oil while whisking away. It's OK if you don't measure — the most important part is that the olive oil to mayonnaise ratio be about 1:1.

3. Once they're fork-tender, drain them and immediately shower them with apple cider vinegar. (For about 2 pounds of potatoes, I like about two tablespoons.)

4. To the newly zippy potatoes, add your destined mix-ins. Pictured here: 2 hard-cooked eggs, chopped; a few spoonfuls of finely diced red onion; a handful of chopped cornichon; and a heaping 1/3 cup of chopped chives, parsley and scallion. Top if off with a few grinds of pepper and a healthy pinch of salt for good luck.

5. Pour in the dressing, starting with a little more than half, and stir. Taste. Adjust. Is the salad not awake yet? Add a dash of vinegar. Too dry? More dressing. I almost always add a few more herbs because I like mine polka-dotted green, and another pinch of salt. But this is your potato salad — you decide.

This article originally appeared on Food52.com: http://food52.com/blog/11596-how-to-make-potato-salad-without-a-recipe

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