Sun-Dried Tomato Pasta Salad

Category: Salads & Side dishes

Sun-dried tomato pasta salad hits that sweet spot between bright, salty, and satisfying. The pasta soaks up the herb vinaigrette as it chills, the feta softens just enough to cling to the noodles, and the sun-dried tomatoes bring a deep, concentrated tomato flavor that fresh tomatoes can’t match here. It’s the kind of side dish that disappears fast at potlucks because it eats like a full meal but still feels light on the table.

The key is balance. Rinsing the pasta after cooking stops the cooking fast and cools the noodles so they don’t soak up the dressing unevenly. Using sun-dried tomatoes packed in oil gives you more flavor and a little richness in the salad, while the red wine vinegar keeps the whole bowl from tasting heavy. Spinach adds freshness, but it needs to be chopped so it folds into the pasta instead of clumping at the bottom.

Below, I’m walking through the little details that matter most, including how to keep the feta from turning to dust, why the chill time improves the texture, and a few easy swaps if you want to adapt it for what’s in your kitchen.

The dressing soaked into the pasta after an hour in the fridge, and the feta stayed in little salty pockets instead of disappearing. I brought it to a cookout and it was the first bowl emptied.

★★★★★— Melissa R.

Save this sun-dried tomato pasta salad for make-ahead lunches and potluck bowls with salty feta and herby vinaigrette.

Save to Pinterest

The Part That Keeps the Pasta Salad from Going Bland

A lot of pasta salads taste fine right after tossing and then flatten out in the fridge. This one holds up because the dressing is built with enough acidity and salt to season the pasta itself, not just coat the outside. The sun-dried tomatoes add concentrated flavor, and the olives and feta bring the briny edge that keeps every bite from tasting soft or one-note.

The other thing that matters is cooling the pasta properly. Warm noodles can melt the feta and wilt the spinach before the salad has a chance to settle. Rinsing under cold water stops that chain reaction, and tossing again after chilling redistributes the dressing that the pasta has absorbed.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Salad

Sun-Dried Tomato Pasta Salad with feta, spinach, olives
  • Rotini or penne — Choose a shape with ridges or curves so the dressing catches instead of sliding off. Rotini gives you the best hold, but penne works well if that’s what you have.
  • Sun-dried tomatoes in oil — These are the backbone of the salad. The oil-packed kind stay tender and flavorful, and the little bit of oil clinging to them helps carry the vinaigrette.
  • Feta — Use a block and crumble it yourself if you can. Pre-crumbled feta is drier and breaks down faster, while fresh crumbles stay in distinct salty bits throughout the salad.
  • Fresh spinach — Chop it before adding it so it disperses evenly. Whole leaves tend to trap dressing and clump, which leaves some bites underdressed.
  • Kalamata olives — They deepen the flavor and add a savory, almost meaty bite. If you need a substitute, use another briny olive rather than a mild one; the salad depends on that salty contrast.
  • Red wine vinegar and olive oil — This is a straightforward vinaigrette, so the quality of the olive oil matters more than people think. You want one with enough flavor to stand on its own, since there isn’t any mayo or cream to soften it.

Building the Salad So the Dressing Disappears Into the Pasta

Cooking and Cooling the Pasta

Cook the pasta just until al dente, then drain it and rinse it under cold water until it’s cool to the touch. If the pasta stays warm, it keeps absorbing dressing unevenly and can soften the spinach before the salad chills. Drain it well after rinsing; extra water is the fastest way to dilute the vinaigrette.

Whisking the Herb Vinaigrette

Whisk the olive oil, red wine vinegar, garlic, oregano, basil, salt, and pepper until the garlic looks evenly suspended and the dressing smells sharp and herbaceous. If the garlic sits in clumps, it’ll hit the bowl in uneven bursts instead of seasoning everything. Letting the dressing sit for a minute or two before tossing takes the edge off the raw garlic just enough to blend better with the feta and tomatoes.

Combining Without Crushing the Feta

Add the pasta, sun-dried tomatoes, spinach, feta, and olives to a large bowl, then pour the dressing over the top and toss with a light hand. The goal is to coat, not mash. If you stir hard, the feta turns pasty and the salad loses the clean pockets of flavor that make it good.

The Chill That Makes It Taste Finished

Refrigerate the salad for at least an hour before serving. That resting time lets the pasta absorb the seasoning and softens the sharp edges of the vinegar. When you bring it back out, toss again and taste it; a small pinch of salt or another splash of vinegar at the end can wake up the whole bowl if it’s been sitting a while.

Three Ways to Make This Pasta Salad Work for Your Table

Gluten-Free Version

Swap in a sturdy gluten-free pasta shape with grooves or curls. The biggest difference is texture after chilling, so cook it just to the lower end of the package time and rinse it well to keep it from getting mushy in the fridge.

Dairy-Free Swap

Leave out the feta and add chopped artichoke hearts or roasted red peppers for another salty, savory layer. You’ll lose the creamy-salty bite of feta, so add a little extra olive oil and a pinch more salt to keep the salad from tasting lean.

Make It More Filling

Add chickpeas, diced grilled chicken, or sliced salami if you want this to eat like a main dish. Chickpeas keep it vegetarian and hold the vinaigrette well, while chicken turns it into a dependable lunch salad that still tastes bright after chilling.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Keeps for 3 to 4 days in a covered container. The spinach will soften a bit, but the flavor holds well.
  • Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this salad. The pasta and feta both change texture in a way that makes the thawed version watery and grainy.
  • Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold or at cool room temperature. If it seems dry after chilling, stir in a spoonful of olive oil or a small splash of vinegar instead of trying to heat it.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make sun-dried tomato pasta salad the day before?+

Yes, and it actually improves after a few hours in the fridge. The pasta absorbs the vinaigrette and the garlic mellows out, which makes the salad taste more balanced the next day. Just toss it again before serving and add a splash of vinegar if it tastes a little muted.

How do I keep the feta from falling apart in pasta salad?+

Use a light hand when tossing and add the feta near the end. If you stir hard, the crumbles break down and turn the dressing cloudy. Block feta crumbled by hand holds up better than the dry pre-crumbled kind.

Can I use regular tomatoes instead of sun-dried tomatoes?+

You can, but the salad won’t taste the same. Fresh tomatoes add water and a softer flavor, while sun-dried tomatoes bring concentrated sweetness and chew. If you use fresh tomatoes, reduce the vinegar slightly and expect a looser, less punchy salad.

How do I stop pasta salad from drying out in the fridge?+

The pasta keeps soaking up dressing as it sits, so this is normal. Save a tablespoon or two of the vinaigrette or just a little olive oil and stir it in right before serving. That freshens the texture without making the salad greasy.

Sun-Dried Tomato Pasta Salad

Sun-dried tomato pasta salad with rotini or penne, chopped spinach, briny Kalamata olives, and crumbled feta tossed in a simple herb vinaigrette. Cooked pasta is rinsed cold so it stays firm, then chilled for at least 1 hour for best flavor melding.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
chilling 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 25 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: Mediterranean
Calories: 450

Ingredients
  

Pasta
  • 1 lb rotini or penne pasta Cooked until al dente.
Sun-dried tomatoes
  • 1 cup sun-dried tomatoes in oil Drain and chop.
Cheese and greens
  • 8 oz feta cheese Crumbled.
  • 2 fresh spinach Chopped.
Olives
  • 0.5 cup Kalamata olives Sliced.
Vinaigrette
  • 0.25 cup olive oil
  • 3 tbsp red wine vinegar
  • 2 garlic Minced.
  • 1 tsp dried oregano
  • 1 tsp dried basil
  • 1 salt and pepper To taste.

Method
 

Cook and chill the pasta base
  1. Cook the rotini or penne pasta according to package directions, then drain and rinse with cold water until cool to the touch to stop further cooking.
Make the herb vinaigrette
  1. Whisk together olive oil, red wine vinegar, minced garlic, dried oregano, dried basil, salt, and pepper until evenly combined and glossy.
Assemble the salad
  1. Combine the cooked pasta, chopped sun-dried tomatoes in oil, crumbled feta, chopped fresh spinach, and sliced Kalamata olives in a large bowl.
  2. Pour the herb vinaigrette over the salad and toss gently to coat without breaking up feta too much.
Chill and finish
  1. Refrigerate the pasta salad for at least 1 hour to let the flavors meld.
  2. Toss again right before serving and adjust seasoning with salt and pepper as needed.

Notes

For cleaner texture, rinse the cooked pasta under cold water and pat off excess water so the vinaigrette coats instead of pooling. Refrigerate in a covered container up to 4 days; freezing is not recommended because the spinach and feta texture can break down. For a lower-fat option, use reduced-fat feta and slightly reduce the olive oil to 2 tablespoons while keeping the vinegar the same.

You might also like these recipes

Leave a Comment

Recipe Rating