Bright green peas, smoky bacon, sharp cheddar, and a tangy creamy dressing make pea salad one of those sides that disappears fast once it hits the table. The peas stay sweet and pop between your teeth, the bacon gives it salt and crunch, and the dressing ties everything together without turning heavy or muddy.
What makes this version work is restraint. The peas stay frozen-thawed instead of cooked, which keeps them firm and vivid. Drying them well matters more than most people think, because extra water thins the dressing and washes out the seasoning. A short chill gives the vinegar and sugar time to mellow into the mayonnaise and sour cream, so the salad tastes balanced instead of just cold.
Below you’ll find the small details that keep pea salad crisp, creamy, and nicely seasoned, plus a few ways to adapt it for different diets and make-ahead planning.
The peas stayed bright and the dressing set up perfectly after chilling. I loved that the bacon stayed crisp enough to add texture instead of getting lost in the mayo.
Creamy pea salad with bacon and cheddar is the kind of chilled side that stays crisp, tangy, and scoopable after an hour in the fridge.
The Trick to Keeping Pea Salad Crisp Instead of Watery
The most common problem with pea salad is moisture. Frozen peas release a surprising amount of water as they thaw, and if that water stays in the bowl, the dressing turns thin and the whole salad tastes flat. Patting the peas dry before they ever meet the mayo mixture keeps the dressing thick enough to cling to every pea.
The second trap is overmixing. Peas are tender, and once they’re thawed they bruise easily. Fold the dressing in gently just until coated, then let the fridge do the work. The chill is not just for temperature; it gives the vinegar time to brighten the mayonnaise and sour cream so the salad tastes balanced instead of heavy.
What Each Ingredient Is Doing in This Bowl

- Frozen peas — Thawed frozen peas hold their shape and stay sweet. Fresh peas work when they’re in season, but frozen peas are reliably tender and bright, which is what this salad needs.
- Bacon — Crisp bacon gives the salad salt, smoke, and crunch. Cook it until it’s properly crisp so it stays noticeable after chilling; floppy bacon disappears into the dressing.
- Sharp cheddar — Sharp cheddar cuts through the creamy dressing and keeps the salad from tasting one-note. Buy a block and cube it yourself if you can, because pre-shredded cheese brings a powdery coating that dulls the texture.
- Red onion — A small dice gives little sharp bites without taking over. If yours is intense, soak it in cold water for 10 minutes, then dry it well so the onion stays crisp but less harsh.
- Mayonnaise and sour cream — Mayo brings body, while sour cream lightens the richness and adds tang. You can swap in plain Greek yogurt for the sour cream, but expect a sharper finish and a slightly tighter dressing.
- Apple cider vinegar and sugar — These two are the balance point. The vinegar wakes up the peas, and the sugar rounds out the tang so the dressing tastes creamy instead of sour.
Building the Bowl So the Dressing Clings
Dry the Peas First
Thaw the peas completely, then spread them on paper towels and pat them dry. If they go into the bowl wet, the dressing loosens as soon as it hits the peas, and you lose that creamy coating that makes the salad worth serving. Cold peas are fine; damp peas are the problem.
Mix the Dressing Until It Looks Smooth and Light
Whisk the mayonnaise, sour cream, vinegar, sugar, salt, and pepper in a small bowl until the dressing is fully blended and no streaks remain. It should look spoonable and glossy, not stiff. If the vinegar tastes sharp at this stage, that’s normal; the chill will soften it.
Fold, Don’t Mash
Add the dressing to the pea mixture and fold gently with a spatula. You want the peas coated, not crushed, and you want the bacon and cheddar distributed without breaking the peas apart. Stirring hard turns the bowl into a pale, broken mess with fewer distinct textures.
Chill for the Flavor to Settle
Cover the bowl and refrigerate for at least an hour. That resting time lets the dressing thicken slightly and gives the bacon, onion, and cheese a chance to season the peas from the outside in. Give it one final stir before serving and taste for salt, because chilled salads always need that last adjustment.
How to Adapt Pea Salad for Different Tables
Make It Vegetarian
Leave out the bacon and add toasted sunflower seeds or chopped roasted almonds for crunch. You lose the smoky note, so a small pinch of smoked paprika in the dressing helps bring back some of that depth without making the salad taste like a substitute.
Dairy-Free Version
Use a good dairy-free mayo and skip the cheddar, or replace it with a firm plant-based cheese that cubes cleanly. The salad will still be creamy and tangy, but it will taste a little cleaner and less rich, so don’t skimp on the vinegar or seasoning.
Lighter Dressing
Swap half the mayonnaise for plain Greek yogurt if you want a sharper, lighter salad. The texture becomes a little tighter and less lush, but the tang works well with the peas and onion, especially after chilling.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Keep covered for up to 3 days. The peas will soften a little and the dressing will tighten, but the salad still holds up well.
- Freezer: Don’t freeze it. The peas and dressing both turn watery and grainy after thawing, and the cheddar loses its clean bite.
- Reheating: This salad is served cold, so no reheating is needed. If it looks dry after chilling, stir in a spoonful of mayo or sour cream rather than trying to warm it.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Pea Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Thaw the frozen peas completely and pat dry with paper towels to remove excess moisture.
- Add the peas, crumbled bacon, cheddar cubes, and red onion to a large bowl.
- Whisk together mayonnaise, sour cream, apple cider vinegar, sugar, salt, and black pepper until smooth.
- Pour the dressing over the pea mixture and fold gently until everything is evenly coated.
- Cover and refrigerate for at least 1 hour (visual cue: peas look glossy as the dressing clings).
- Stir and taste for seasoning right before serving (visual cue: bacon and cheddar distribute evenly).


