With crisp greens and tender potatoes, this French-Style Potato and Green Bean Salad is a satisfying yet light salad that yields bold Mediterranean flavors. As per French tradition, it is not tossed in mayo, but instead a delicious, zippy French-style vinaigrette spiked with briny olives, capers and fresh herbs. It’s a great side dish for gatherings or potlucks. Add hard-boiled eggs on top to make it the perfect warm-weather lunch!
What type of potatoes are best for this salad?
I recommend you make this salad with any type of small new potatoes, waxy red-skinned or even fingerling potatoes. They all keep their shape very well once cooked, which is exactly what we want here.
Alternatively, you can also use Yukon gold potatoes. They are right in-between starchy and waxy, which makes them suitable for this recipe.
However, you may need to cook them 1 or 2 minutes less, as they don’t hold their shape quite as well. Look for Yukon gold potatoes on the smaller side.
For convenience (and less pots to wash!), the potatoes and green beans are cooked together. Cook the potatoes until you can poke a knife in them – but they shouldn’t be too soft yet. Add the green beans and cook for just 2 extra minutes until the beans are cooked, yet still crisp and bright green.
You should then immediately transfer the potatoes and green beans into a large bowl filled with ice-water (cold water, ideally with a handful of ice-cubes too).
This step serves 2 purposes. First, it will immediately stop the cooking process of the potatoes and beans, ensuring they don’t turn “mushy”. Secondly, this blanches the green beans – meaning, it keeps their bright green color.
How to make perfect hard-boiled eggs
The main protein to this salad recipe is hard-boiled eggs. These are perfect to spruce up any summer salad and make them more substantial. They are also great to make if hosting, as you can prepare them up to 7 days ahead and keep them in the fridge (in the shell, unpeeled).
For making perfect hard-boiled eggs, my favorite technique is perhaps the most classic way: with boiling water, in a saucepan.
Here is my go-to process:
- Add eggs to an empty saucepan.
- Cover the eggs with room temperature water by 1 inch.
- Turn the heat to high and bring the water to a rapid boil.
- Boil for exactly 1 minute. Remove from heat immediately.
- Cover with a lid and let rest for 10 minutes.
After the 10 minutes mark, carefully take the eggs out of the water with a slotted spoon and run under cold water for 1 minute. I find it easier to peel the eggs until running water too.
Can you make this salad ahead?
Yes! This salad is even better if you let it sit for several hours to allow the flavors the develop. This is an ideal dish to make ahead if you’re planning on hosting guests, to save some time in the kitchen.
You can prepare and assemble the whole salad up to one day before and let it sit in your fridge. You can also prepare the potatoes, the green beans and the eggs on one side, and prepare the vinaigrette on the other side, and toss everything together a few hours prior to serving.
How to store this French-Style Potato and Green Bean Salad
After making and enjoying this Potato and Green Bean Salad – if you have any leftovers – you can store them in the refrigerator
- Store leftover salad in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up 1 day. Because this salad includes hard-boiled eggs, I don’t recommend keeping it any longer. If you made this salad without the eggs, you can keep it for up to 3-4 days.
- I don’t recommend freezing it, as the flavors and texture can tend to be off once defrosted and the dressing will likely separate.
Common Questions:
Can I remove the skin from the potatoes for this recipe?
Of course you can! But it’s a lot more work. The skin on small potatoes are very thin and are honestly best left on. But the choice is, of course, yours!
What other herbs could I use in place of parsley and chive for this recipe?
I strongly recommend you stick to parsley and chives for this salad recipe. They are mild tasting herbs that allow the other ingredients to shine, specifically the olives and the capers.
What type of olives can I use?
For this recipe, I highly recommend you use dry salt-cured olives, also known as brined olives. You can find these full-flavored, “wrinkled” olives in virtually any grocery store. They are usually sold in jars, or even vacuum packed.
I don’t like capers. Can I omit them?
Yes, if you would like. You can use 2 tablespoons of black olives, instead of 1 tablespoon of black olives and 1 tablespoon of capers.
I hope you’ll love this French-Style Potato Green Bean Salad as much as I do! This recipe is enough for 4 people and easy scalable to make for 8, or just 2 people. If you have any questions, please feel free to leave a comment.
More French salad recipes:
- Classic French Lentil Salad
- Classic French Celery Root Remoulade
- Cucumber Salad with Crème Fraiche
- Frisée Salad with Bacon, Egg and Croutons (Salade Lyonnaise)
- Pickled Herring and Potato Salad (Harengs Marinés Pommes à l’Huile)
- Classic French-Style Potato Salad
- French-Style Couscous Salad (Taboulé)
25 comments
Merci pour toutes vos excellentes recettes!
J’en ai fait pas mal qui on été un très grand succès!
Ça me rappelle aussi tous les bons repas que j’ai savouré en Suisse française avec mes parents et amis en France.
Vous habitez dans un très bel endroit!
Je suis en Colombie Britannique depuis pas mal d’années.
Encore merci Audrey pour votre blog!
Ghyslaine, merci beaucoup pour ces gentils mots! J’espere que vous continuerez a profiter de mes recettes. J’adore la Bretagne, mais vous aussi habitez dans un tres bel endroit – BC est vraiment magnifique!
Dearest Audrey! Made this tonight to go with lamb chops and it was like dining on a 5 star gourmet meal! How can this taste sooo good and be so easy??? When we get back to la belle Bretagne, I just might have to look you up since you are back there now. Thank you for all your wonderful recipes!
Nikki that is so kind of you to say! This dish really is so, so good. It just seems to pair well with so many things, and I can only imagine how great it goes with lamb. Sounds like a perfect meal and I’ll need to try that pairing! If you’re ever back, drop a line!
How do I access the blog where all the recipes are?
Hello Ann, sorry if I am misunderstanding the question, but this is the blog! You can Click Here and it will take you to the welcome page for my website/blog. From there you can search by category, recipe index, or roam the home page to see what’s new and what’s popular!
thankyou so sincerely your recipes are sooo great glad to have found your site …its thanks to you fab classic French Quiche Lorraine…the pastry is the Best I have made in years its now my go to recipe thankyou and have a great day…
Thank you so much for the wonderful words! I hope you continue to try new recipes and enjoy them all!
My preference is to remove potatoes with a slotted spoon when done. Add green beans to still boiling water, cook to crisp/tender – plunge into ice water. Allow potatoes to cool before assembling salad. Won’t cut and cooked potatoes dropped into water tend to take on a mushy texture?
I haven’t had a problem doing it the way I’ve done it, Donna. But with potatoes, you’re right, you have to keep a watchful eye to ensure they don’t overcook and mush. Your method would work perfectly well too! It’s good advice for others who are looking for another method with the potatoes. Thanks! 🙂
Delicious for a hot summer lunch or light dinner. I used Tarragon in place of parsley & chives.
Oooo, a nice herb switch up! I don’t think I’ve ever used tarragon in this salad, but I am definitely intrigued now! Thanks for the kind words!
Thank you so much for this recipe. The herbs and vegetables and the vinaigrette complement each other so nicely. Thank you also for the technique tip of allowing the dressing and herbs to infuse before tossing the salad. My wife really enjoys your classic French potato salad. But, this one she can’t get enough of; I was told I will be making this often when Spring returns. We grilled pork chops with garlic and herbs de Provence and had this salad. OMG. She’s barely 5 feet tall and was putting it away like a lumberjack. Thanks again.
Another huge thank you, Mike! This is one of those recipes where if you really are into French food, I have trouble believing you won’t enjoy it. It’s delicious, filling, and overall quite healthy for such a satisfying dish. Love hearing the description of your wife, as I can picture my husband saying word for word the same about me when it comes to this salad! Plus, when the spring/summer arrives, I promise this salad will taste even better… It gets better with the weather 🙂
I love this salad! It may end up on my Thanksgiving table.
Merci beaucoup, Mimi! If you ask me, I think there is always room for this salad on every table.
I did make this for thanksgiving! I had to make a lemon-parsley dressing – husband won’t eat vinegar. I included whole salt-cured olives and told my son-in-law to pick them out! So many pick people at my table! Thanks for this recipe!
It’s hard to please everyone, Mimi… But so glad you made the adjustments that suited your guests. Glad you enjoyed it and hope your dinner was a success!
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This was delicious. Thank you for the outstanding recipe and fantastic website.
Much appreciated, Jim! You’re very welcome for the recipe and I hope you’ll find some more inspiration on the site of things to try 🙂
Awesome recipe, reminds of my mother’s Portuguese warm potato salad with tinned Tuna, so I added some and made a meal out of it. My husband loved it. Thank you for the recipe and the inspiration.
You’re so very welcome, Nicole, I’m thrilled it brought back great memories for you. And adding tuna to make it a meal… Perfect!
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Done. You should receive an email to confirm that you’ve subscribed, and you’ll need to click the link in that email. Thanks for following along, Jen!