Sun-dried tomato pasta salad hits that sweet spot between bright, briny, and satisfying. The pasta carries the dressing, the feta gives it a salty creamy edge, and the sun-dried tomatoes bring concentrated flavor that stands up even after chilling. It’s the kind of side dish that disappears fast because it tastes like someone put more effort into it than they actually did.
What makes this version work is the balance. The pasta gets rinsed cold so it stops cooking and stays separate instead of turning sticky, then the dressing goes on while the salad still has a little chill left in it so the garlic and herbs can settle into the noodles. A good handful of spinach adds freshness without turning the bowl watery, and the olives keep the whole thing from leaning too rich.
Below, I’ll walk through the little details that keep the feta from getting crushed and the pasta from soaking up every drop of dressing. I’ve also included a few easy ways to adapt it for different diets or whatever you’ve got in the fridge.
The dressing soaked into the pasta after an hour in the fridge, and the feta stayed creamy instead of disappearing. I brought it to a cookout and came home with an empty bowl.
Love the briny feta, spinach, and sun-dried tomato combo? Save this pasta salad for make-ahead lunches and easy potluck sides.
The Dressing Needs to Go on a Little Before Serving
Most pasta salads get bland because the dressing sits on top instead of getting into the noodles. The trick here is to let the salad rest in the fridge for at least an hour, then toss it again right before serving. That resting time gives the garlic, vinegar, and herbs time to mellow and spread, while the pasta absorbs just enough flavor without turning soft.
Rinsing the pasta under cold water matters here. It stops the cooking fast, which keeps rotini or penne from collapsing into a heavy, gummy bowl. The other thing that keeps this salad from going flat is the balance of oil and vinegar: enough olive oil to coat, enough vinegar to wake everything up, and enough salt at the end to make the feta and olives taste more like themselves.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Salad

- Rotini or penne — Both shapes hold dressing well, but rotini catches more of the chopped tomatoes and feta in its spirals. Penne works if that’s what you have; just cook it to true al dente so it doesn’t go soft after chilling.
- Sun-dried tomatoes in oil — These are the big flavor driver. Oil-packed tomatoes have a softer bite and a deeper, richer taste than dry-packed ones, and the leftover oil can be used in other cooking, though it’s not needed for this salad.
- Feta — Buy a block and crumble it yourself if you can. Pre-crumbled feta is usually drier and saltier, while block feta stays creamier and breaks into better-sized pieces that don’t disappear when you toss the salad.
- Spinach — Chop it so it threads through the pasta instead of clumping. Baby spinach is the easiest choice because it’s tender and won’t overpower the herbs or briny ingredients.
- Kalamata olives — They bring the salty, dark, almost wine-like note that keeps the salad from tasting one-dimensional. If you need a swap, use another good-quality briny olive, but avoid mild green olives unless you want a sharper finish.
- Red wine vinegar and olive oil — This is the dressing backbone. The vinegar gives lift, the oil smooths it out, and together they coat the pasta without making the salad heavy.
How to Keep the Pasta Salad Bright, Not Sloppy
Cooking the Pasta to a Firm Bite
Boil the pasta just until it’s al dente, then drain it and rinse it under cold water until it cools all the way through. That rinse stops the carryover cooking, which matters because this salad gets another hour in the fridge. If the pasta starts soft, the finished salad turns mushy after the dressing has time to soak in.
Whisking the Herb Dressing Until It Smells Sharp
Stir the olive oil, red wine vinegar, garlic, oregano, basil, salt, and pepper until the garlic looks suspended instead of sinking in a layer. You want the vinegar to smell bright and punchy and the oil to look fully blended, not separated. If the garlic is chunky, it can hit one bite too hard, so mince it fine.
Tossing Gently So the Feta Stays in Pieces
Add the pasta, tomatoes, spinach, feta, and olives to the bowl before pouring in the dressing. Toss with a light hand, turning from the bottom up instead of stirring aggressively. If you overmix, the feta smears into the noodles and the salad loses the contrast that makes every forkful interesting.
Chilling and Finishing
Cover the bowl and refrigerate for at least an hour, then taste again before serving. Cold salads always need a final seasoning check because chilling softens flavors, especially salt and vinegar. If the pasta looks a little dry after resting, add a small drizzle of olive oil and another splash of vinegar, then toss once more.
Three Ways to Make This Salad Fit What You’ve Got
Make it dairy-free
Leave out the feta and add a handful of chopped artichoke hearts or extra olives for more briny depth. You’ll lose the creamy saltiness that feta brings, so finish with a little extra olive oil and a pinch more salt to keep the salad from tasting flat.
Make it gluten-free
Use a sturdy gluten-free pasta shape that holds up after chilling, like brown rice rotini or lentil penne. Cook it just to tender, then rinse it well and toss with the dressing while it’s still cool, since gluten-free pasta can go from firm to fragile fast.
Add protein for a fuller meal
Stir in chickpeas, grilled chicken, or white beans after the first toss. Chickpeas keep it vegetarian and bring extra texture, while chicken makes this more lunch-friendly. Add protein after the salad is dressed so it doesn’t get overhandled.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Keeps for 3 to 4 days. The spinach softens a little, but the flavor gets better by day two.
- Freezer: Not a good freezer salad. The pasta turns soft and the feta gets crumbly and dry after thawing.
- Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold or cool. If it’s been in the fridge, let it sit out for 10 to 15 minutes, then toss with a small splash of vinegar or olive oil to wake up the dressing before serving.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Sun-Dried Tomato Pasta Salad
Ingredients
Method
- Cook the rotini or penne pasta according to the package directions, then drain it well.
- Rinse the pasta with cold water until cool, then drain again so it won’t dilute the dressing.
- Whisk together the olive oil, red wine vinegar, minced garlic, dried oregano, dried basil, salt, and pepper until combined.
- Combine the cooled pasta, chopped sun-dried tomatoes in oil, crumbled feta, chopped spinach, and sliced Kalamata olives in a large bowl.
- Pour the herb vinaigrette over the salad and toss gently to avoid breaking up the feta too much.
- Refrigerate the salad for at least 1 hour before serving.
- Toss again before serving and adjust seasoning with more salt and pepper if needed.


