Italian pasta salad is the official side dish of summer: BBQs, picnics, potlucks, cookouts, beach days. A big bowl of colorful pasta studded with mozzarella, salami, fresh vegetables, and olives, tossed in a bright Italian dressing that actually tastes homemade. It costs almost nothing, feeds a crowd, takes 30 minutes of active work, and gets better in the fridge. Make it the night before your BBQ and it''ll be the dish everyone fights over.
Italian pasta salad
A classic cold pasta salad with mozzarella, salami, olives, tomatoes, and a zesty Italian dressing — the BBQ and picnic staple that actually tastes better on day two.

- Prep
- 20 min
- Cook
- 10 min
- Total
- 1 hr
- Serves
- 8
Italian pasta salad
Scaled 1×. Ingredients adjusted — but cook time, pan size, and oven temperature don't scale linearly. A bigger batch usually needs a bigger pan and a few extra minutes; a smaller batch often finishes sooner. Trust your eyes, not the timer.
Ingredients (25)
Italian dressing
To finish
You'll need
- Large pot (for pasta)
- Colander
- Large mixing bowl
- Small jar or whisk and bowl (for dressing)
- Sharp knife
Instructions
Nutrition
Estimated per serving · 1 serving (about 1 1/4 cups)What to look for when you shop
Best varieties
- Cherry tomatoes: Sungold (sweetest), grape, Sweet 100
- Bell peppers: red, yellow, orange for color (skip green — too bitter)
- English or Persian cucumbers (less watery than standard)
- Red onion (small, for sharper flavor)
- Fresh basil (Genovese, the standard)
- Kalamata olives — briny and firm
- Castelvetrano olives — buttery and mild (non-traditional but excellent)
Ripeness
Bell peppers firm and glossy; tomatoes fragrant and heavy; cucumbers crisp with taut skin; fresh herbs vibrant. Basil should smell aromatic — wilted basil tastes flat.
Imperfections are fine
Minor blemishes and irregular shapes are all fine since everything gets diced. Slightly overripe tomatoes make the salad juicier.
Good substitutions
- Swap salami for pepperoni, prosciutto, or capicola
- Vegetarian: skip meat, add 1 can chickpeas or white beans
- Swap mozzarella for cubed provolone, feta, or small fresh mozzarella balls
- Add 1 cup quartered artichoke hearts (jarred, marinated)
- Add 1/2 cup pepperoncini for extra tang
- Swap cherry tomatoes for diced ripe Roma in season
In season
Summer is peak for pasta salad — cherry tomatoes, fresh basil, cucumbers all peak June – September. Make it for every BBQ, picnic, and cookout.
How much to buy
1 pint cherry tomatoes + 2 bell peppers + 1 cucumber + 1 red onion + fresh basil.
Find your summer produce grower on CollectiveCrop
- In season June – September
- For this recipe 1 pint tomatoes + 2 bell peppers + 1 cucumber
- Freshness Picked within this week
- Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
- Diet-friendly vegetarian (skip meat)
- While you're there Fresh basil · Mozzarella from a local dairy · Good olive oil · Red wine vinegar · Fresh garlic
At the market
1 pint cherry tomatoes + 2 bell peppers + 1 cucumber + 1 red onion + fresh basil.
Best varieties
- Cherry tomatoes: Sungold (sweetest), grape, Sweet 100
- Bell peppers: red, yellow, orange for color (skip green too bitter)
- English or Persian cucumbers (less watery than standard)
Good to know
Tips
- Make it a day ahead. Pasta salad genuinely improves overnight as flavors meld.
- Salt the pasta water generously. Underseasoned pasta is the #1 cause of bland pasta salad.
- Dice everything roughly the same size — 1/2 inch. Uniform dicing makes for more attractive plating and even flavor distribution.
- Fresh herbs at the end. Adding basil during tossing bruises it; scatter fresh at serving for best color and aroma.
- Grate the Parmesan fresh. Pre-grated cheese has cellulose and tastes dusty.
- Soak the red onion in ice water for 5 minutes to soften its bite without losing crunch.
- Transport in a cooler if traveling — pasta salad shouldn't sit out above 90°F for more than 1 hour.
Storage
- Refrigerator: 4 days in an airtight container.
- Best on days 1 to 2; starts softening by day 3.
- Refresh before serving with a splash of dressing and fresh herbs.
- Freezer: not recommended (dairy and vegetables separate).
Reheating
- Not applicable — served cold or at room temperature.
- If chilled overnight, let sit at room temp 20 minutes before serving for best flavor.
Make ahead
- Full salad: 2 days ahead, refrigerated.
- Dressing: up to 1 week ahead.
- Chop vegetables up to 1 day ahead; store separately.
- Best made the day before serving.
Variations
- Caprese pasta salad: skip meat and peppers; use only mozzarella, tomatoes, basil, and dressing.
- Antipasto pasta salad: add 1 cup each of quartered artichoke hearts, pepperoncini, and prosciutto.
- Vegetarian version: swap salami for 1 can rinsed chickpeas.
- Seafood pasta salad: add 1 lb cooked shrimp.
- Greek pasta salad: swap salami for feta; add oregano, cucumber, red onion, and Kalamata olives.
- Orzo version: swap pasta for 1 1/2 cups cooked orzo — Mediterranean feel.
- Chicken pesto pasta salad: swap meat for cooked diced chicken; swap dressing for 1/2 cup pesto + 1/4 cup mayo.
- Tuna pasta salad: swap meat for 2 cans tuna in olive oil, drained.
- Tortellini version: swap pasta for cheese tortellini.
- Bacon-ranch pasta salad (non-Italian): swap Italian dressing for ranch; add crispy bacon.
Swaps
- Gluten-free: use your favorite GF pasta; chickpea pasta works great and adds protein.
- Vegetarian: skip salami; add chickpeas or white beans.
- Vegan: skip meat and cheese; add marinated chickpeas and a few tablespoons nutritional yeast.
- Dairy-free: skip mozzarella and Parmesan; add toasted pine nuts for bite.
- Lower-sodium: reduce olives and skip salami.
Frequently Asked Questions
What pasta works best for pasta salad?
Should I cook the pasta al dente?
Should I rinse pasta?
Why is my pasta salad dry the next day?
Can I make pasta salad ahead?
What kind of Italian dressing?
What can I add for protein?
How long does pasta salad last?
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