Let’s talk about potato salad. And no, I don’t mean the mayoheavy mystery bowl at your family barbecue. This isn’t your classic potato salad. The idea of mixing cooked potatoes with herbs and dressings goes all the way back to the 16th century in Europe. It wasn’t really popularized until Germany gave us the warm vinegar style versions, but the Americans came in hot with mayo, pickles, and boiled eggs. But today, we’re changing it all up and Mediterranean mode. This is my high protein taziki potato salad packed with baby potatoes, red onions, creamy garicky Greek yogurt dressing loaded with cucumber and lemon. Don’t forget about that dill. It pairs perfectly with grilled chicken, fish, or whatever rotisserie you have kept in your fridge. So next time someone says bring a side dish, skip the store-bought slop and show up with this ancient Greece meets Jimbo masterpiece.

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  1. πŸ›’ Ingredients (Serves 6–8):
    For the salad:
    β€’ 2Β½ lb (1.1 kg) baby potatoes, halved
    β€’ 1 tbsp olive oil, salt, pepper
    β€’ Β½ small red onion, thinly sliced
    β€’ Β½ English cucumber, diced/shredded
    β€’ ΒΌ cup fresh dill
    β€’ (Optional: feta, olives, or capers)

    For the tzatziki dressing:
    β€’ 1 cup (240g) Greek yogurt
    β€’ 1 garlic clove, grated
    β€’ Juice + zest of Β½ lemon
    β€’ 2 tbsp olive oil
    β€’ 1–2 tbsp fresh dill
    β€’ Salt & pepper

    πŸ”₯ Instructions:
    1. Boil potatoes until tender (~12–15 min). Drain, toss with oil, salt, pepper.
    2. Make tzatziki: mix yogurt, garlic, lemon, oil, dill, cucumber, seasoning.
    3. Toss warm potatoes with red onion and dressing.
    4. Chill 30+ min. Top with feta or olives. Serve cold or room temp.

  2. This is super healthy for us PCOS ladies, and for diabetics type 2. high protein with Greek yogurt, let sit one full day in fridge makes resistant starch, add a few shots of avc for acidity and ask the benefits from the mother, the herbs, garlic, onion, all play important roles to support our health!