Peruvian Potato Salad (Papas a la Huancaina)
Shake up your potato salad game with Papas a la Huancaina, a Peruvian potato salad with a flavorful cheese sauce that can be made with ingredients from any grocery store.
What is Papas a la Huancaina?
Papas a la Huancaina is a traditional Peruvian potato salad, named after the Huancayo region of central Peru. It consists of boiled, sliced potatoes smothered in a unique and flavorful cheese sauce. It can be served an an appetizer or side dish.
I first started making it about a decade ago, when I worked at a food magazine. I was assigned the task of developing a Papas a la Huancaina recipe that could be made with ingredients from an American grocery store.
I tested this dozens of time before it was published, in order to get the ratio of potatoes to sauce correct, as well as make sure the cheesy habañero-infused sauce was pleasantly warm, but not too spicy for the average diner.
The recipe below is the result of many months of work, and dozens of tests. I hope you enjoy it as much as my family does.
Why you’ll love this Peruvian Potato Dish
- Potato salad with egg and bacon potato salad are great, but if you’re looking to shake things up this summer and try a truly different kind of potato salad, this is the one!
- If you’re a fan of “Hot Ones” and want to try something with habañero pepper in it, this is the perfect dish to ease you into it. Papas a la Huancaina is not necessary HOT or even spicy, but you could say it has a pleasant “warmness” to it.
What is Papa a la Huancaina made of?
- potatoes – yellow potatoes are what we want for this dish, because they cook up creamy but hold their shape well when boiled.
- queso fresco – the primary ingredient in the Huancaina sauce.
- lime juice – adds a touch of acidity to balance the richness of the cheese in the sauce.
- garlic – just one clove will give the sauce great depth of flavor.
- evaporated milk – this thins the sauce to a pourable consistency and adds a slight sweeteness.
- olive oil – adds richness to the sauce.
- habañero pepper – we’re using just a half of a pepper (and none of the seeds or membranes) to provide the sauce with its characteristic heat.
- salt – for seasoning the potato cooking water and the sauce.
- lettuce – used as a bed for the potatoes for serving.
- hard-boiled eggs – a traditional garnish that adds a contrasting texture.
- black olives – another traditional garnish that adds a briny flavor.
- chives – an optional garnish that adds a mild onion flavor and touch of color.
How to Make Papa a la Huancaina
1. BOIL. Place the potatoes in a saucepan and cover them with cold salted water. Bring to a boil and cook until the potatoes are just tender. Drain and allow the potatoes to cool slightly.
2. SAUCE. While the potatoes are cooking, make the sauce by blending the lime juice, garlic, queso fresco, evaporated milk, oil, habanero and salt in a food processor or blender until smooth.
3. ARRANGE. Arrange the lettuce leaves on a large serving platter. Peel the potatoes, slice them and arrange them over the lettuce.
4. FINISH. Pour the sauce over the potatoes. Garnish the dish with the eggs, olives and chives.
Peruvian Potato Salad Home Chef Tips
- Wear rubber gloves when handling the habanero pepper, and do not touch your eyes or face!
- Traditional Huancaina sauce is often made with an aji amarillo pepper, or aji amarillo paste, but habañero peppers are comparable and easier to find in American grocery stores, which is why we’ve used that here.
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How to serve Peruvian Potatoes
Papas a la Huancaina can be served chilled, at room temperature or just ever so slightly warm (so, by the time you drain the potatoes and allow them to cool enough to slice them, they’ll be at a good temperature).
The traditional way to serve this Peruvian potato dish is to arrange the sliced potatoes over lettuce leaves, then pour the sauce over the potatoes. Traditional garnishes are a FEW slices of hard boiled egg and black olives, but not too many (but if you want to add more, be my guest).
This dish makes a great appetizer or side dish for grilled meats or fish, like flat iron steak or grilled sockeye salmon.
Or, serve it as part of a larger spread of Peruvian dishes, such as lomo saltado or pollo a la brasa.
Papa a la Huancaina Recipe storage
If you have leftovers, transfer them to a storage container and place them in the fridge uncovered for a few hours until they are fully chilled, then cover them with the lid and keep in the refrigerator up to 2 days.
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Papas a la Huancaina
Ingredients
- 1-1/2 pounds yellow potatoes (about 4 medium potatoes)
- Juice of 1 lime
- 1 garlic clove roughly chopped
- 8 ounces queso fresco roughly crumbled
- ½ cup evaporated milk
- 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
- ½ habañero pepper seeded and roughly chopped
- ¼ teaspoon kosher salt
- ½ head iceberg lettuce
- 2 hard-boiled eggs peeled and sliced
- ¼ cup pitted black olives halved
- 1 tablespoon chopped fresh chives for garnish (optional)
Instructions
- Place potatoes in saucepan and cover with cold salted water by two inches; heat to boiling. Cook 15 to 20 minutes or until potatoes are just tender. Drain; cool slightly.
- In blender or food processor, blend lime juice, garlic, queso fresco, evaporated milk, oil, habanero and salt until smooth.
- Arrange lettuce leaves on large serving platter. Peel potatoes and cut crosswise into 1/2-inch slices and arrange over lettuce.
- Drizzle sauce over potatoes; garnish with eggs, olives and chives.
Lori, this potato salad sounds wonderful. We were in Peru earlier this year (Lima) and got to try some wonderful Peruvian food. This sounds like it will be up there with what we got to eat. (If you haven’t had Peruvian ceviche, you need to try it – it’s the best.) You make me glad that I don’t wear contacts! I’ve had enough problems with touching my area after chopping up jalapeños…
Oh, I would love to visit Peru, Susan! How is Peruvian ceviche different from other types? I’m intrigued, because I love a good ceviche.
Oops! Now I am thoroughly embarrassed, because I can’t tell you why. I can tell you that what we had mixed the fish with lime, red onion, red chile and cilantro (based on the photos I took during the cooking demonstration). The flavor of it was very rich. Maybe I’m comparing it to the ceviche they make on the cruise ship which just isn’t that good. At any rate, if you get to Lima, the Minka market in Callao (the port city) is a must visit. They have the cleanest, best smelling fish market and the most gorgeous produce I’ve ever seen – and I’ve been to markets in a lot of places. You have to go through the mall part to get to the good part; definitely worth a visit. I guess I’ll have to do some research on ceviche recipes?… 🙂
Oh, no need to be embarrassed at all, Susan! I don’t know a ton about ceviche – I’ve only made it a few times, just using a recipe one of my culinary instructors gave me. Not sure what country that version originated from, though!
That Minka market sounds amazing! I hope to get there one day, for sure.
Ouch! Sorry about your burning eyeball but this dish looks worth the pain! 🙂 Nice presentation!
Thanks Renee!
Hopefully your eyes are okay. This dish looks delicious!!!
Oh yeah, I lived to tell the tale. Thank goodness for disposable contacts!
I don’t wear contacts so I’m good to go! these layers look so pretty!
Thanks Cindy!
This is absolutely gorgeous! I love how everything is sliced and layered. Such a pretty effect.
Thanks so much, Heather!
Lori – this sounds like one amazing potato salad. Oh my I cannot even imagine how painful habanero pepper laced contacts must be…
Haha, luckily I lived to tell the tale, Bea!
Thanks goodness I don’t wear contacts ;). But man, oh man, do I want to snatch that plate and be alone with it. Sounds amazing!
“I think we’re alone now. There doesn’t seem to be anyone around.”
Just you and spuddy buddy.
I absolutely love this!!! Boiled yellow potatoes topped with a creamy and cheesy habañero-infused sauce and hard boiled eggs?! love this and can’t wait to try this!
Thanks Alice! You know what it would be good with? MORE FLANK STEAK SLIDERS. Because it’s never a bad time for chimichurri. And that makes it sort of a South American theme, right?
Gorgeous, Lori! (Pinned and G+!) So glad I’ve now got the how-to on a very gourmet Peruvian potato salad =)
So glad I have a how-to on a delicious Asian Potato Salad too, Kim! We traded!
This potato salad looks fantastic. Love the addiition of olives
Thanks so much, Isabel!
Looks so yumm!
Thanks Deanna!
Mmmmm….this looks so elegant. What a delicious potato salad!
Thanks Conni!
How original and creative…love the addition of habanero!
Thanks Wendy!
I was going to say, don’t you wear gloves when you chop hot peppers? I’ve learned that lesson and I even stopped wearing contacts! Oh the pain! the pain! Even so, this looks worth it.
Haha yeah, I don’t know WHY I don’t have a box of gloves. It’s just one of those things you never remember you need to buy …until you really need it.
What a great spin to potato salad! It looks incredible and the photos are beautiful!
Thanks so much, Jen. I was super pleasantly surprised with how these photos turned out. The sunlight that day was just right!
I see my name written on that plate of potato salad. I know it. It is calling out to me. Yum, yum, YUM!
It’s weird, that plate DOES have an etching of “Renee” under all those potatoes 😉