Macaroni Salad
A creamy, chilled American-style pasta salad with tender macaroni, crisp vegetables, and a balanced mayonnaise dressing that suits cookouts, picnics, potlucks, and everyday meals.
Quick Recipe Card
What This Recipe Is
Macaroni salad is a cold pasta salad made with cooked elbow macaroni, a creamy dressing, and finely cut vegetables. This version is built for a smooth, cohesive texture, gentle tang, and clean seasoning so it tastes balanced rather than heavy.
Ingredients
- 300 g (10.5 oz) elbow macaroni
- 2 L (8 cups) water
- 10 g (2 tsp) fine salt, divided
- 180 g (3/4 cup) mayonnaise
- 15 mL (1 tbsp) apple cider vinegar
- 10 g (2 tsp) yellow mustard
- 8 g (2 tsp) granulated sugar
- 1 g (1/4 tsp) ground black pepper
- 120 g (1 cup) celery, finely diced
- 80 g (1/2 cup) red onion, very finely diced
- 70 g (1/2 cup) carrot, finely grated or very finely diced
- 45 g (3 tbsp) sweet pickle relish
- 20 g (2 tbsp) parsley, finely chopped
Equipment
- Large pot
- Colander
- Large mixing bowl
- Medium mixing bowl
- Knife
- Cutting board
- Measuring spoons and cups
- Spatula or large spoon
Instructions
Step 1:
Bring the 2 L (8 cups) water to a boil in a large pot. Add 5 g (1 tsp) of the fine salt, then add the 300 g (10.5 oz) elbow macaroni and cook until tender, usually about 8 to 10 minutes.
Step 2:
Drain the macaroni in a colander and rinse briefly under cold running water until no longer hot. Drain well and let it sit for a few minutes so excess water falls away.
Step 3:
In a medium bowl, whisk together the 180 g (3/4 cup) mayonnaise, 15 mL (1 tbsp) apple cider vinegar, 10 g (2 tsp) yellow mustard, 8 g (2 tsp) granulated sugar, the remaining 5 g (1 tsp) fine salt, and the 1 g (1/4 tsp) ground black pepper.
Step 4:
In a large mixing bowl, combine the cooled macaroni, 120 g (1 cup) celery, 80 g (1/2 cup) red onion, 70 g (1/2 cup) carrot, 45 g (3 tbsp) sweet pickle relish, and 20 g (2 tbsp) parsley.
Step 5:
Pour the dressing over the macaroni mixture and fold gently until everything is evenly coated.
Step 6:
Cover and chill for at least 30 minutes so the dressing settles and the flavours blend.
Step 7:
Stir once before serving. Taste and adjust with a small pinch of salt if needed.
Visual Cooking Cues
- The macaroni should look swollen and tender, not chalky in the centre
- The drained pasta should feel cool and dry on the surface, not dripping wet
- The dressing should look smooth and pale, with no streaks of mustard or sugar granules
- The finished salad should look glossy and lightly coated, not soupy and not dry
- After chilling, the salad should hold softly on a spoon without running
Chef Tips
- Salt the cooking water so the pasta has flavour from the inside
- Drain the macaroni well before dressing it to avoid a diluted salad
- Dice the onion very finely for a smoother, more balanced bite
- Chill before serving; the flavour improves after resting
- Stir gently to keep the macaroni intact
Common Mistakes
- Using underseasoned pasta water
- Dressing hot pasta heavily, which can make the texture greasy
- Leaving too much rinse water on the macaroni
- Cutting the vegetables too large
- Serving the salad immediately without chilling
Troubleshooting
- Too dry: Fold in a little more mayonnaise
- Too wet: Chill longer so the dressing firms slightly
- Too bland: Add a pinch of salt and a little more vinegar
- Too sharp: Add a small extra spoonful of mayonnaise
- Pasta breaking apart: The macaroni was overcooked or mixed too aggressively
Ingredient Pairings
- Grilled chicken
- Burgers
- Barbecue ribs
- Fried chicken
- Sandwiches
- Roasted sausages
- Fresh tomato slices
- Pickles
Substitutions
- Elbow macaroni: Use small shells or ditalini
- Apple cider vinegar: Use white wine vinegar
- Yellow mustard: Use Dijon for a slightly sharper flavour
- Red onion: Use shallot or spring onion
- Parsley: Use dill for a fresher, greener profile
- Sweet pickle relish: Use finely chopped pickles with a small pinch of sugar
Recipe Family Variations
- Hawaiian Macaroni Salad: A softer, creamier version with a richer mayonnaise dressing and a more mellow profile.
- Amish Macaroni Salad: A sweeter style that often includes chopped vegetables and a distinctly sweet-tangy dressing.
- Southern Macaroni Salad: A fuller, often more seasoned version that may include extra crunch and a stronger dressing profile.
- Filipino Macaroni Salad: A sweeter celebratory variation that commonly uses a richer, more dessert-leaning flavour balance while staying within the macaroni salad family.
Serving Suggestions
- Serve cold alongside grilled meats
- Use as a picnic or barbecue side
- Spoon into lunch boxes with sandwiches
- Pair with crisp lettuce, sliced tomatoes, or pickles
- Serve in a chilled bowl for the best texture
Dietary Classification
- Vegetarian
- Egg-containing
- Nut-free
- Sesame-free
- Soy-free if using a soy-free mayonnaise
- Not gluten-free unless gluten-free macaroni is used
Nutrition Information
Approximate per serving:
- Calories: 330
- Protein: 6 g
- Fat: 18 g
- Carbohydrates: 35 g
- Fiber: 2 g
- Sodium: 430 mg
Storage / Reheating
Storage
Store covered in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. Keep it cold and avoid leaving it at room temperature for extended periods.
Reheating
This dish is not meant to be reheated. Serve it chilled or cool.
FAQ
Can I make macaroni salad a day ahead?
Yes. It often tastes better after several hours in the refrigerator because the flavours blend more fully.
Why is my macaroni salad bland?
Cold dishes need confident seasoning. Salt the pasta water well and taste the dressing before mixing.
Should I rinse the pasta?
For this salad, a brief rinse is useful because it stops the cooking and cools the macaroni quickly.
Can I use another pasta shape?
Yes. Small shapes such as shells or ditalini work well, but elbow macaroni gives the most classic result.
Why did my salad become watery?
The pasta may not have drained well enough, or the vegetables may have released moisture after mixing.
Why This Recipe Works
The macaroni is cooked just past al dente so it stays tender after chilling and absorbs flavour better than very firm pasta. The dressing is mixed separately so the seasoning is even before it touches the pasta. Finely cut vegetables prevent awkward large bites and help the salad hold together as a true spoonable side dish. Chilling after mixing gives the starch, fat, acid, and seasoning time to settle into a more unified flavour.
Recipe Identity
This is a classic American deli-style macaroni salad. Its identity depends on three things: properly cooked macaroni, a creamy mayonnaise-based dressing with light acidity, and finely chopped vegetables that mix evenly through every spoonful.
Dish Classification
- Dish type: Chilled pasta salad
- Course: Side dish
- Meal type: Lunch, buffet side, picnic side
- Traditional or modern dish: Modern classic
- Street food or home cooking: Home cooking and deli-counter staple
- Festival or everyday food: Everyday food and gathering food
Recipe History
Macaroni salad is strongly associated with American home kitchens, delis, potlucks, and summer gatherings. It belongs to the family of cold mayonnaise-based salads that became popular because they are practical to make ahead, easy to transport, and well suited to group meals.
Cultural Notes
Macaroni salad is especially associated with potluck culture, deli counters, and casual shared meals. The exact flavour balance varies by household, with some versions leaning sweeter and others leaning tangier, but the core identity remains a chilled creamy macaroni-based salad.
Advanced Cooking Knowledge Open detailed cooking science and reference notes
Flavor, Texture, and Aroma Profile
This recipe is creamy, lightly tangy, mildly sweet, and savoury. The texture is soft and spoonable, with gentle crunch from celery and onion. The aroma is clean and familiar, led by mayonnaise, mustard, parsley, and fresh-cut vegetables.
Flavor Balance
The dressing is designed to avoid blandness and avoid excessive sweetness. Mayonnaise gives richness, vinegar brightens the salad, mustard adds depth, sugar rounds out sharp edges, and salt ties the entire bowl together.
Flavor Components
- Sweet: A small amount of sugar and the natural sweetness of carrot
- Salt: Salt seasons both the pasta and the dressing
- Acid: Apple cider vinegar keeps the salad lively
- Bitter: Minimal bitterness; parsley and mustard add a faint edge
- Umami: Mayonnaise and cooked pasta provide a soft savoury base
- Aromatic elements: Red onion, celery, parsley, and mustard
Ingredient Notes
Elbow macaroni is the standard shape because it holds dressing well and gives the familiar structure expected in classic macaroni salad. Mayonnaise should be full-flavoured and stable, because it is the backbone of the dressing. Red onion is best cut very finely so it adds flavour without harsh large bites. Sweet pickle relish is optional in some households, but in this version it supports classic deli-style flavour.
Ingredient Science
Cooked pasta contains surface starch that helps the dressing cling. Mayonnaise is an emulsion, so it creates a smooth coating that distributes seasoning evenly. Vinegar cuts through fat and keeps the salad from tasting flat after chilling. Salt is especially important in cold foods because chilled dishes can taste less seasoned than warm ones.
Ingredient Roles
- Macaroni: Main body and starch base
- Water: Cooking medium for the pasta
- Salt: Seasons the pasta and the dressing
- Mayonnaise: Creamy binder
- Apple cider vinegar: Acid balance
- Yellow mustard: Depth, colour, and mild sharpness
- Sugar: Softens the acidic edge
- Black pepper: Gentle warmth
- Celery: Fresh crunch
- Red onion: Aromatic sharpness
- Carrot: Mild sweetness and colour
- Sweet pickle relish: Sweet-tangy accent
- Parsley: Fresh herbal finish
Ingredient Classification
- Primary starch: Macaroni
- Primary fat: Mayonnaise
- Aromatic vegetables: Celery, red onion, parsley
- Supporting vegetable: Carrot
- Acid source: Apple cider vinegar
- Seasoning agents: Salt, mustard, sugar, black pepper
- Flavour accent: Sweet pickle relish
Preparation Techniques
Cook the macaroni until tender but not falling apart. Dice the vegetables finely so the finished salad feels cohesive rather than chunky. Mix the dressing before combining so the sugar, vinegar, mustard, salt, and pepper are fully dispersed.
Cooking Techniques
The main cooking technique is boiling. The rest of the recipe depends on mixing and chilling. Rinsing the macaroni briefly under cold water stops further cooking and cools it quickly for salad use.
Heat Management
- Low heat stages: None required during dressing assembly
- Medium heat stages: Maintain a steady boil rather than an aggressive boil that can split the pasta
- High heat stages: Bring the water to a full boil before adding the macaroni
- Temperature cues: The pasta should be hot when drained, then cooled before final mixing; the finished salad should be thoroughly chilled before serving
Texture Development
Macaroni salad should be tender, creamy, and spoonable, not dry and not watery. Slightly softer pasta works better than very firm pasta because cold pasta tightens as it chills. Finely cut vegetables keep the texture balanced and prevent the salad from feeling uneven.
Cooking Time Control
Check the macaroni near the end of the packet cooking time. For salad, aim for tender pasta with a soft centre rather than a firm bite. Overcooked pasta can become mushy after mixing, while undercooked pasta can harden unpleasantly once chilled.
Flavor Pairing Logic
Macaroni salad pairs best with foods that are smoky, grilled, salty, or crisp. Its cool creamy profile contrasts well with hot foods and balances char, spice, and crunchy textures on the plate.
Leftover Ideas
Use leftovers in a packed lunch, serve beside cooked chicken or fish, or spoon into lettuce cups for a quick cold meal.
Cooking Safety Notes
Because the dressing is mayonnaise-based, keep the salad refrigerated and return it to the fridge promptly after serving. Use clean utensils when portioning to reduce contamination.
Sustainability Notes
This recipe is a practical make-ahead dish that can reduce food waste by turning small amounts of leftover herbs and vegetables into a complete side. Buying celery, carrots, and parsley in whole form often reduces packaging compared with pre-cut options.
