If you're feeding a crowd, there's nothing better than a big bowl of pasta salad. Whether it's for a summer cookout, a holiday buffet, or an anytime accompaniment to a sandwich, pasta salad works and always wins. Our pasta salad recipes can be made well in advance—and toted to a potluck or picnic—and are perfect for big-batch cooking throughout the week.
A chilled pasta salad holds up remarkably well in the fridge, too: You can make a big batch of noodles and mix in fresh vegetables without dressing the salad first. The beauty of a pasta salad is that you can edit and tweak the formula any way you wish—choose your favorite noodle, a blend of vegetables, a sprinkle of protein if need be, and sauce or dressing when you're ready to serve.
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Spaghetti Salad
Here's a colorful and different pasta salad. While we generally recommend a short pasta for this dish, we also love this rendition, complete with long, skinny strands of pasta. It's chock full of bell peppers, cucumber, cherry tomatoes, olives, and feta.
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Pasta Salad with Chickpeas, Green Beans, and Basil
If you're a fan of mayo-based pasta salad, we have you covered. This hearty, delicious vegetarian pasta salad has it all: There's crunch from the green beans and protein from the chickpeas, while red onion adds a bite and fresh basil brings a wonderful aroma and herbal freshness.
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Pasta Salad with Tomatoes, Mozzarella, and Chickpeas
Our summer go-to, this vegetarian pasta salad is protein packed thanks to the mozzarella and chickpeas. It's also mayo-free—a lemony-garlic-oregano dressing brings plenty of punchy flavor.
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Orecchiette, Celery, and Olive Salad with Ricotta Salata
Orecchiette are "little ears," but in this recipe, the pasta serves as little bowls for salty, soft cheese, crunchy celery, and briny olives.
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Pasta Salad with Goat Cheese and Arugula
Gemelli pasta is combined with cannellini beans, goat cheese, arugula, and a touch of Dijon mustard for a satisfying and flavor-packed pasta salad.
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Eggplant Salad with Israeli Couscous and Basil
Tender Israeli couscous is united with sautéed eggplant and shallots, then finished with fresh basil. This flavorful salad can be on the table in 25 minutes.
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Tuna Macaroni Salad
A deli crowd-pleaser since the '70s, tuna macaroni salad is a versatile side dish or a simple lunch. Our version amps up the flavors with jalapeño and tangy buttermilk and keeps well in the refrigerator, ready to satisfy when hunger strikes.
Citrusy and cilantro-packed, this pasta salad pairs well with grilled chicken or tuna. And if you don't have cilantro, try it with mint, parsley, or a combination of fine herbs.
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Antipasti Pasta Salad
This pasta salad features the flavors of a traditional Italian antipasti platter, mixed with spiral-shaped pasta. Salami, mozzarella cheese, green olives, and jarred red peppers are called for, but feel free to add or substitute other ingredients, such as tuna, provolone, anchovies, artichoke hearts, capers, or marinated mushrooms.
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Marinated-Artichoke and Green-Bean Pasta Salad
For a fresh, light pasta salad, skip the mayonnaise and dress it with rich olive oil, artichoke brine, and lemon juice, instead. You can make the pasta salad up to four hours in advance and eat it chilled or at room temperature.
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Emeril's Macaroni Salad
This elbow macaroni salad has everything: It gets its richness from crisp-cooked prosciutto and crumbled goat cheese while olives, capers, tomatoes, fresh parsley, and a mustard vinaigrette punch up the flavor. The assembled salad can be stored and refrigerated for up to one day.
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Pasta Salad with Slow-Roasted Tomatoes and Basil
Just right for potlucks or picnics, this easygoing recipe can be served hot or at room temperature (and it travels well). Make the slow-roasted tomatoes head of time and the dish comes together in just 20 minutes.
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Three-Bean Pasta Salad
A favorite for picnics since it's easy to transfer, this pasta salad is a satisfying choice for any meal thanks to canned pinto beans and chickpeas; the green beans bring crunch and color. You can use any small shell pasta for this recipe.
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Pasta, Arugula, and Mozzarella Salad
A lemon juice-olive oil dressing makes this pasta salad sing. It's a side that can also be a main, as there's mozzarella for protein, baby arugula for the vegetable contingent, and short pasta such as campanelle for heft.
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Tortellini Salad
Here's another make-ahead pasta salad recipe. You can refrigerate this dish for up to a day for optimal freshness. Hold off on tossing in the prosciutto crisps and arugula until just before serving to keep them crisp.
It can be served chilled or at room temperature, and holds up well when tossed with dressing and other ingredients. Also, short pasta shapes, with plenty of nooks and crannies — like fusilli, farfalle, rotini, and penne — are ideal choices for pasta salad.
How long does pasta salad last in the fridge? When stored in an airtight container, pasta salad will stay fresh for 3-5 days. If some of the fresh ingredients go bad faster, it might only last 2 days, i.e. Deli/cured meats can lose their color after 2 days but will still be flavorful.
If you're making a dish that will be served chilled or at room temp—think cold soba, rice noodles, pasta salad—you do want to rinse so that you get toothsome (sorry) individual strands rather than one big gummy clump. Certain types of noodles benefit from a rinse in almost all applications.
Italian dressing is a must for making the cold pasta salads that accompany picnics and potlucks. The best dressing for these recipes, according to our Test Kitchen, is Kraft Zesty Italian Dressing. Opening up a bottle, you'll find it's a classic grocery store-style Italian dressing.
Serving salad after the main course of a meal is an older tradition in Italy, and nowadays it is usually observed at large and formal dinners rather than during everyday meals. Eating a salad after a meal can help digestion, while eating one before a meal may help discourage overeating.
Vinegar and other acidic ingredients do strange things to the flavor of pasta when used in salad-level amounts. Ever notice an irritating acerbic aftertaste just about every time you've eaten pasta salad? That's the vinegar announcing itself, and it's not pleasant.
At this point the pasta salad will have absorbed all of the dressing from the first time you dressed it, so it desperately needs more. This prevents it from being dry and flavorless and gives it a big, bold flavor — making it taste as fresh as the first day you made it.
Generally by adding some stronger flavored vegetables such as bell pepper, pimento, onion, green onion, chives, white pepper, slight amounts of mustard, paprika, black olives, sweet relish, or parsley. I like the mustard answer and will try that. Up till now, I douse bland macaroni salad with hot sauce.
For the most part, pasta salad will last between 4 to 7 days if you store it correctly. Always use sealed containers or freezer-quality storage bags. (You can also freeze it for up to three months – you can read more on freezing pasta salad in the section below.)
Anything perishable should go into the fridge within two hours. If perishables are sitting in temperatures of more than 90 degrees, the time limit to get them into the fridge goes down to one hour. Examples include leftovers, boiled or fried rice, pasta salad, cut fruit, and poultry, meat and seafood.
Properly stored, macaroni salad will last for 3 to 5 days in the refrigerator. How long can macaroni salad be left at room temperature? Bacteria grow rapidly at temperatures between 40 °F and 140 °F; macaroni salad should be discarded if left out for more than 2 hours at room temperature.
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