Skip to main content

You need to try this easy creamy pesto pasta salad recipe

It's time to try a new pasta salad. This one is the best.

Pesto pasta salad
Lindsay Parrill/The Manual

Everyone loves a pasta salad. It’s one of those summertime staples that finds its way into nearly every picnic basket and barbecue buffet. And while we love the classic recipes our beloved grandmothers so graciously handed down to us, sometimes it’s nice to mix it up and try something new.

This creamy pesto pasta salad is one of our favorite things to have in the fridge and enjoy all week. We love a dish that’s versatile, and this one takes the cake. It can be served warm, chilled, or at room temperature. Plus, you can add or subtract anything at all that suits your fancy. Add some protein and make it a complete meal. Or, serve as a side dish to just about anything. Served warm, it’s a mouth-watering accompaniment to a beautifully marbled ribeye or light and healthy grilled piece of fish. Served chilled, it’s a wonderful addition to that picnic basket or backyard potluck your spouse is dragging you to.

But if you’re feeling less social, just make a big batch and keep it all to yourself for the week. We’re not here to judge.

Pesto pasta salad
Lindsay Parrill/The Manual

Creamy pesto pasta salad recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 pound bowtie pasta
  • 1 crown broccoli, chopped
  • 10-12 asparagus spears, chopped
  • 6 ounces marinated artichoke hearts, drained and chopped
  • 1 cup frozen peas
  • 1/2 cup feta cheese, crumbled
  • 1/3 cup pepitas (roasted pumpkin seeds)
  • 1 1/2 cup mayonnaise
  • 4 ounces pesto
  • Juice from 1 lemon
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Method

  1. Cook pasta in salted water according to the box’s directions.
  2. When pasta is about 3 minutes from being done, add peas, broccoli, and asparagus to pasta water. Bring back up to boil and cook until pasta is done and vegetables are tender, but not too soft.
  3. While pasta is cooking, make the sauce by combining mayonnaise, pesto, lemon juice, and salt and pepper in a medium-sized bowl.
  4. Drain pasta and vegetables, then return to pot. Add pepitas, artichoke hearts, and sauce, stirring to thoroughly combine.
  5. Add feta and mix gently, being careful not to crush the cheese crumbles.
Pesto pasta salad
Lindsay Parrill/The Manual

Creamy pesto pasta salad tips and tricks

  • Bowtie pasta works very well for this pasta salad, but so do many pasta shapes. We also love to use shells, penne, or campanelle.
  • To add protein and make this a more complete meal, add shredded chicken or shrimp for a hearty dinner that will make everyone happy.
  • Because this is a time-saving, one-pot meal, we’ve skipped the shocking of the vegetables in this particular dish. But of course, if you’d like to maintain a vibrant green color in your vegetables, a plunge in ice water after cooking will help to do that.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Lindsay Parrill
Lindsay is a graduate of California Culinary Academy, Le Cordon Bleu, San Francisco, from where she holds a degree in…
6 easy camping cocktails to shake your post-hike thirst
Bring all these ingredients to quench your thirst in the wild
Outdoorsman's Hot Toddy

So you're camped out in your best tent for too long? Or wearily panting atop the summit of a fourteener? Perfect! Time for some easy cocktails to make everything better. Yes, that's right, when you've got the 4-1-1 behind these easy-to-make, tasty adult libations, you can enjoy a fine drink on a mountain, at the campsite, or when you're home and don't feel like cutting lemon twists or adding sugar to the rim of your cocktail glass.

The secret to making great camp cocktails is the same trick to achieving military victory: Keep it simple. There's no camp-friendly version of the Long Island iced tea, but that doesn't mean you have to stick with cheap whiskey when roughing it.

Read more
12 amazing types of pasta (and when you should actually be using them)
Swap your spaghetti for bucatini and thank us later.
Various dried pastas

One stroll down your local grocer's pasta aisle, and you'll be quickly, startlingly reminded of just how many pasta shapes there are. According to Italy Magazine, there are an estimated 350 different types of pasta, and about four times that many names for them. Needless to say, we'd love to cover them all, but an article addressing each and every pasta shape might prove a bit excessive.

The world of Italian pasta is an extensive one that would take months to dissect properly. We could spend days on gnocchi alone, and months on the beautiful madness that is stuffed pastas. Ravioli, tortellini, lasagna, and cannelloni are each individually deserving of their own articles. As it is, though, in the American market, there seems to be a bit of confusion around some of the more common dried pasta shapes and how they're best used. We've chosen a dozen of our very favorite, most commonly found pasta shapes to discuss here.
Bucatini

Read more
9 delicious drink recipes for Cinco de Mayo (that aren’t all margaritas)
Want something besides a margarita this May 5? Whip up one of these essential drinks
Diablo Don Papa cocktail

Cinco de Mayo has become a global celebration. From Mexico City to Montreal, people embrace the holiday with festive Cinco de Mayo drinks in hand. And to do it right, you'll need the appropriate cocktail.

While most Cinco de Mayo cocktails hover around tequila and other agave spirits, it doesn't mean you have to be sipping the usual suspects like margaritas and Palomas. No, holidays require creativity and flair, and these nine drinks offer that and more. And if tequila is not your thing, try something new, like Sotol. It's an age-old Mexican spirit that locals love and is just becoming popular north of the border.

Read more