In season now — April – June (peak); May – October (extended in coastal regions)
Salad Easy American

Strawberry spinach salad

Sweet strawberries, baby spinach, feta, and candied pecans in a bright poppy seed vinaigrette — the spring brunch salad that disappears first.

A platter of baby spinach salad with sliced red strawberries, crumbled white feta, candied pecans, and red onion slivers.
Prep
15 min
Cook
5 min
Total
20 min
Serves
6

Strawberry spinach salad is the recipe that brings people to the brunch table even when they say they're skipping salads. Bright spring berries, tender baby spinach, tangy feta, sweet-crunchy pecans, and a dressing that tastes like something you made on purpose — it's what you serve on Mother's Day, at a garden party, or for yourself on a Tuesday because strawberry season is only six weeks long.

Strawberry spinach salad

Serves 6

Ingredients (15)

Candied pecans

Poppy seed dressing

You'll need

  • Large serving bowl or platter
  • Small skillet (for candied pecans)
  • Small bowl or jar (for dressing)
  • Sharp knife
Source these from local growers See growers + what's in season →

Instructions

Nutrition

Estimated per serving · 1 serving
360 Calories
6 g Protein
23 g Carbs
28 g Fat
4 g Fiber
17 g Sugar
360 mg Sodium
Ingredient intelligence

What to look for when you shop

Best varieties

  • Chandler — classic large, sweet strawberry; excellent texture for salads
  • Albion — large, firm, and holds shape when sliced
  • Seascape — everbearing variety; available late spring through fall
  • Earliglow — small but intensely flavored early-season strawberry
  • Everbearing (Quinault, Ozark Beauty) — lighter color but reliable
  • Wild strawberries — tiny but aromatic; a luxury if you can find them

Ripeness

Deeply red all the way to the stem (no white shoulders), fragrant from a foot away, and slightly yielding to gentle pressure but not mushy. Pale or white-centered berries were picked too early and will be tart and hollow.

Imperfections are fine

Irregular shape, small blemishes, and size variation are all fine — often signs of an heirloom variety or unsprayed berry. Slightly overripe berries are perfect for salads; just trim any soft spots.

Good substitutions

  • Strawberries + raspberries (mixed) for color and flavor contrast
  • Strawberries + blueberries for a red-white-blue summer version
  • Peaches in place of strawberries in July and August
  • Pears in fall — poached pears with the same dressing is elegant

In season

US strawberry season peaks April through June, with California extending through fall. Local strawberries in peak season are a different fruit from supermarket winter strawberries — sweeter, more fragrant, genuinely red inside.

How much to buy

About 1 lb — 1 pint basket, or 2 half-pint baskets.

From a grower near you

Find your strawberry grower on CollectiveCrop

Supermarket strawberries are bred to survive shipping — pale-shouldered, watery, mildly sweet, reliably uniform. Local April and May strawberries are bred for flavor — deeply red, honey-fragrant, less durable, dramatically better. CollectiveCrop is how you find the grower who picks them ripe and sells fast. For a salad that's eighty percent strawberry, the variety matters more than any other choice.

  • In season April – June (peak); May – October (extended in coastal regions)
  • For this recipe 1 lb / 1 pint basket
  • Freshness Picked within 3 days
  • Imperfects welcome Second-grade produce works great here
  • Diet-friendly vegetarian · gluten-free
  • While you're there Baby spinach and tender greens · Feta and goat cheese from a local dairy · Local honey · Fresh mint and basil · Pecans, walnuts, or almonds

At the market

About 1 lb — 1 pint basket, or 2 half-pint baskets.

Best varieties

  • Chandler classic large, sweet strawberry; excellent texture for salads
  • Albion large, firm, and holds shape when sliced
  • Seascape everbearing variety; available late spring through fall

Good to know

Tips

  • Hull strawberries with a paring knife at a 45-degree angle — cleaner and less wasteful than twisting off the leaves with your fingers.
  • Don't over-slice. Thick 1/4-inch slices weep less water than paper-thin ones.
  • Make a double batch of candied pecans. They keep 2 weeks airtight and turn every future salad into something special.
  • Soak the red onion in ice water. Five minutes transforms raw red onion from harsh to sweet-crisp.
  • Add fresh mint or basil for an herb twist — 2 tablespoons torn leaves scatter beautifully over the top.
  • For a Mother's Day brunch look, arrange the components on a platter rather than tossing in a bowl.

Storage

  • Dressed salad: doesn't store — 15 minutes max before it weeps.
  • Undressed components: 1 day refrigerated, each separately.
  • Dressing: 1 week in a sealed jar in the fridge.
  • Candied pecans: 2 weeks at room temperature in an airtight container.

Reheating

  • Not applicable — served cold.

Make ahead

  • Make dressing up to 1 week ahead.
  • Make candied pecans up to 2 weeks ahead.
  • Wash spinach and pat dry up to 24 hours ahead.
  • Slice strawberries within 1 hour of serving.
  • Crumble feta up to 3 days ahead.
  • Assemble just before serving.

Variations

  • Strawberry spinach with goat cheese and basil: swap feta for goat cheese; add fresh basil ribbons.
  • Balsamic version: swap poppy seed dressing for 3 tablespoons balsamic vinaigrette with 1 teaspoon honey.
  • Strawberry-arugula: swap spinach for peppery arugula — sharper, more adult version.
  • With grilled chicken: top each serving with sliced grilled chicken breast for a main-course salad.
  • Mint version: add 1/4 cup torn fresh mint leaves with the spinach.
  • Walnut and blue cheese: swap pecans for walnuts and feta for blue cheese.
  • Strawberry, spinach, and bacon: add 1/2 cup crumbled cooked bacon for a heartier salad.
  • Strawberry watermelon: replace half the strawberries with cubed watermelon in summer.

Swaps

  • Vegan: skip the feta, add 1/3 cup toasted chickpeas for crunch and protein; use maple syrup instead of honey.
  • Dairy-free: skip or use a plant-based feta.
  • Nut-free: replace pecans with toasted sunflower seeds or pumpkin seeds; sweeten with the same method.
  • Sugar-free candied nuts: skip candying; toast nuts dry and add 1 teaspoon honey to the dressing instead.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I use baby spinach or regular spinach?

Baby spinach — tender, pre-washed, and mild. Regular spinach has tougher stems and is often gritty, requiring more prep. For this salad's delicate texture, baby spinach is definitely the move.

How do I keep strawberries from making the salad watery?

Slice them just before serving, not hours ahead. Pat them dry after washing, and don't slice too thin (1/4-inch slices weep less than paper-thin ones). If you need to prep ahead, sprinkle with a teaspoon of sugar 15 minutes before serving to draw juice — then drain.

Can I make poppy seed dressing ahead?

Yes — up to 1 week in the fridge. Shake well before using since oils separate. Making it ahead lets the flavors meld, so same-day isn't necessarily better.

What's the best cheese for this salad?

Feta is classic — tangy and crumbly. Goat cheese is creamier and milder. Blue cheese adds bite. Fresh mozzarella or burrata work for an Italian twist. All pair well with strawberry.

Can I use frozen strawberries?

Not for this salad — frozen strawberries turn mushy and release too much water. This is a recipe where peak-season fresh berries matter. Make something else if local strawberries aren't available.

What goes with strawberry spinach salad?

Grilled chicken, quiche (perfect brunch pairing), a piece of crusty bread, poached or grilled salmon. It also makes a great light lunch on its own with protein added.

How do I candy pecans quickly?

5 minutes in a dry skillet: 1 cup pecans with 3 tablespoons sugar and a pinch of salt. Stir constantly over medium heat until the sugar melts, coats the nuts, and turns golden. Tip onto parchment to cool and harden.

Can I add protein to make it a main course?

Yes. Grilled chicken breast (sliced), blackened shrimp, grilled salmon, or rotisserie chicken turn this into a complete meal. About 4 to 6 oz protein per person.

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