Sun-Dried Tomato Pasta Salad

Category: Salads & Side dishes

Sun-dried tomato pasta salad lands on the table with the kind of bold, savory bite that disappears fast. The pasta catches the herb vinaigrette in every curve, the feta turns creamy against the chewy tomatoes, and the spinach stays fresh enough to keep each forkful from feeling heavy. It eats like a side dish, but it has enough character to steal the whole meal.

What makes this version work is balance. The sun-dried tomatoes bring concentrated sweetness and a little tang from the oil they were packed in, while red wine vinegar keeps the dressing sharp enough to wake up the pasta after it chills. Rinsing the pasta under cold water stops the cooking and keeps the salad from turning gummy, which matters here because this dish is best after it has had time to settle in the fridge.

Below you’ll find the small details that make a big difference, including how to keep the feta from breaking down too much and what to change if you want to make it ahead for a cookout or lunch box.

The dressing soaked into the pasta after an hour in the fridge, and the feta stayed creamy without turning mushy. I added this to a picnic table and it was the first bowl gone.

★★★★★— Megan L.

Love the tangy feta, briny olives, and herb vinaigrette in this sun-dried tomato pasta salad? Save it to Pinterest for make-ahead lunches and easy side dishes.

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The Chill Time Is What Keeps the Pasta from Tasting Flat

A lot of pasta salads taste sharp the second they’re tossed, then bland after they sit. This one is the opposite. The pasta absorbs the vinaigrette as it chills, and the salt from the feta and olives wakes everything back up instead of letting the dressing sit on the surface.

The main mistake people make is serving it too soon. Right after mixing, the flavors are separate and the dressing can seem aggressive. After an hour in the fridge, the pasta softens the edges of the vinegar, the garlic mellows, and the whole bowl tastes integrated instead of coated.

  • Cold pasta matters — Rinse it well after draining so it stops cooking. Warm pasta will wilt the spinach and make the feta greasy.
  • Chilling is part of the recipe — That hour in the fridge gives the tomatoes, oregano, and vinegar time to settle into the pasta.
  • Gentle tossing matters — Feta breaks down fast if you stir hard. Fold the salad just until coated.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Salad

Sun-Dried Tomato Pasta Salad with feta spinach and olives
  • Rotini or penne — Both shapes hold dressing well. Rotini catches little bits of feta and chopped tomato in the spirals, while penne gives you a cleaner bite with a little less cling.
  • Sun-dried tomatoes in oil — These bring concentrated tomato flavor you can’t get from fresh tomatoes here. Drain them well, but don’t stress over every drop of oil; a little of that packed oil adds depth.
  • Feta cheese — Use a block if you want larger crumbles and a creamier finish. Pre-crumbled feta works, but it tends to dry out faster and break up more in the bowl.
  • Fresh spinach — Chop it so it blends into the pasta instead of clumping. Baby spinach is easiest here because it softens slightly once dressed without turning limp.
  • Kalamata olives — They bring the salty, briny note that keeps the salad from leaning too sweet. If you swap in black olives, the salad will taste milder and less Mediterranean.
  • Olive oil and red wine vinegar — This is a simple vinaigrette, so the oil matters. A decent olive oil gives the dressing body, and red wine vinegar supplies the brightness that keeps the salad lively after chilling.

How to Toss It So the Feta Stays in Pieces, Not Paste

Whisk the Dressing First

Mix the olive oil, vinegar, garlic, oregano, basil, salt, and pepper in a separate bowl until the garlic is evenly distributed. That keeps the seasoning from clumping in one spot and helps the pasta pick up flavor all over. If the garlic sits in a puddle at the bottom, you’ll get harsh bites instead of a balanced dressing.

Cool the Pasta Completely

Drain the pasta, rinse it under cold water, and let it sit long enough to lose its heat. Warm pasta softens the spinach and starts melting the feta before you’ve even dressed the bowl. When it’s properly cooled, the pasta should feel neutral, not warm, when you touch it.

Fold, Don’t Beat

Add the tomatoes, feta, spinach, and olives, then pour the dressing over the top and toss with a light hand. You want the cheese to stay in crumbles and the spinach to stay visible. If you stir aggressively, the feta turns into streaks and the salad loses the contrast that makes each bite interesting.

Let the Fridge Do the Work

Cover the bowl and chill it for at least an hour. That resting time is when the pasta takes on the dressing and the whole salad starts tasting intentional instead of assembled. Before serving, toss it again and taste for salt and vinegar, because cold food always dulls seasoning a little.

How to Adjust This Salad for the Pantry You Have

Make It Dairy-Free

Leave out the feta and add a handful of chopped artichoke hearts or extra olives for more savory bite. You’ll lose the creamy, salty crumbles, but the salad still works because the dressing and sun-dried tomatoes carry most of the flavor.

Make It Gluten-Free

Use a sturdy gluten-free pasta shape and cook it just until tender, not soft. Gluten-free pasta can turn mushy after chilling, so rinse it well, toss it with the dressing once it’s cool, and keep the rest of the mixing gentle.

Add More Protein

Chopped grilled chicken, chickpeas, or salami all fit here. Chickpeas keep it vegetarian and add a little nuttiness, while chicken makes the salad more dinner-worthy without changing the overall texture much.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Keeps well for 3 to 4 days. The spinach softens a bit, but the flavor gets better by day two.
  • Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this salad. The pasta gets mealy and the feta changes texture after thawing.
  • Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold. If it feels stiff from the fridge, let it sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes and toss in a small splash of olive oil before serving.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make this sun-dried tomato pasta salad a day ahead?+

Yes, and it actually tastes better that way. The pasta has time to absorb the vinaigrette, which gives the whole salad a fuller, more even flavor. If it looks a little dry after chilling, toss in a spoonful of olive oil before serving.

How do I keep the feta from turning mushy in pasta salad?+

Toss the salad gently and add the feta near the end, after the pasta and dressing are already combined. Hard stirring breaks the crumbles down fast, especially if the pasta is still warm. Cold pasta and a light hand keep the cheese in visible pieces.

Can I use a different pasta shape for this recipe?+

Yes. Short shapes with ridges or curves work best because they hold the dressing and bits of feta. Rotini, penne, and fusilli are all good choices; long pasta tends to clump and doesn’t eat as neatly in a chilled salad.

How do I stop the spinach from getting soggy?+

Use fresh spinach and chop it just before mixing so it stays perky. The biggest problem is residual heat from the pasta, which wilts the greens on contact, so cool the pasta completely first. If the salad has already sat overnight, a handful of fresh spinach stirred in right before serving helps it look bright again.

Can I use the oil from the sun-dried tomatoes in the dressing?+

Yes, and that’s a smart way to add extra tomato flavor. Use part of the packed oil in place of some of the olive oil, then taste the dressing before adding more salt because those oils can already be seasoned. It deepens the salad without changing the texture.

Sun-Dried Tomato Pasta Salad

Sun-dried tomato pasta salad with Mediterranean flavors—rotini or penne tossed with chopped spinach, feta, olives, and a red wine vinegar herb vinaigrette. The pasta gets rinsed for a tender, non-sticky bite, then chills for at least 1 hour so the dressing clings.
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: 560

Ingredients
  

pasta
  • 1 lb rotini or penne pasta Use according to package directions; rinse with cold water after draining.
sun-dried tomatoes
  • 1 cup sun-dried tomatoes in oil, drained and chopped Chop into bite-size pieces for even flavor.
cheese
  • 8 oz feta cheese, crumbled Keep crumbled; gentle tossing helps prevent excessive breakdown.
spinach
  • 2 cup fresh spinach, chopped Chop into small pieces so it distributes throughout the pasta.
olives
  • 0.5 cup Kalamata olives, sliced Slice for consistent bites.
vinaigrette
  • 0.25 cup olive oil Use extra-virgin olive oil for the herb vinaigrette base.
  • 3 tbsp red wine vinegar Balances the richness of feta and oil.
  • 2 garlic, minced Minced for even distribution.
  • 1 tsp dried oregano Dried herbs for a concentrated flavor.
  • 1 tsp dried basil Dried herbs for an Italian-Mediterranean profile.
  • 0.1 salt and pepper to taste Add gradually; adjust after chilling.

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Cook and prep
  1. Cook the rotini or penne pasta according to package directions until al dente, then drain and rinse under cold water to stop the cooking and remove excess starch.
  2. Chop the sun-dried tomatoes in oil, crumble the feta, chop the fresh spinach, and slice the Kalamata olives so everything is ready to combine.
Make the herb vinaigrette
  1. Whisk together olive oil, red wine vinegar, minced garlic, dried oregano, dried basil, salt, and pepper until the dressing looks evenly combined.
Assemble and chill
  1. Combine the rinsed pasta with the sun-dried tomatoes, feta, spinach, and olives in a large bowl.
  2. Pour the vinaigrette over the salad and toss gently, pausing as needed to avoid breaking up the feta too much.
  3. Refrigerate the pasta salad for at least 1 hour so the flavors meld and the dressing thickens slightly on the pasta.
  4. Toss again right before serving and adjust salt and pepper to taste for a balanced finish.

Notes

Pro tip: rinse the pasta with cold water immediately after draining so it stays springy instead of sticky. Store covered in the refrigerator up to 3 days. Freezing is not recommended because the spinach and feta can change texture. If you want a lower-fat option, use reduced-fat feta and the salad will still hold together well.

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