Root vegetables·Established·Year-round

Red bliss potato

Solanum tuberosum

Mild, slightly sweet, subtle earthiness; the red skin adds a faint bitter edge.

Category
Root vegetables
Peak form
Boiled and dressed (potato salad); roasted whole as 'new pot
Common uses
5
Cross-refs
8

About Red

Red bliss (also Red Pontiac, New Red, or simply 'red potato') is the low-starch, waxy potato with red skin and white flesh. The waxy interior holds shape exceptionally well in boiling — making red potatoes the canonical choice for potato salad, where you want intact cubes that don't disintegrate when mixed with mayonnaise. Red bliss potatoes are usually harvested young (still 'new potatoes' rather than fully mature), which contributes to the waxy texture. The red skin is delicate and almost always left on, contributing both color and slight bitterness to the finished dish. Boston-area culinary tradition particularly favors red bliss for clambakes and traditional New England boiled dinners.

Variety profile

Botanical
Solanum tuberosum
Flavor
Mild, slightly sweet, subtle earthiness; the red skin adds a faint bitter edge.
Texture
Waxy, low-starch; holds shape perfectly in boiling; doesn't mash smoothly (gets gummy if forced).
Peak form
Boiled and dressed (potato salad); roasted whole as 'new potatoes'; pan-roasted in butter.
Season window
Spring and summer harvests as 'new potatoes'; stored mature red potatoes available year-round.

Common uses

Editorial notes

Worth knowing

Don't substitute red bliss for Russets in mashed potatoes — the result is gummy. Conversely, don't substitute Russets in potato salad — the cubes will fall apart.

Cross-references

Related categories