Pasta salad gets a lot better when the dressing actually clings to the noodles instead of pooling at the bottom of the bowl. This Mediterranean version does that well: every bite lands with briny olives, creamy feta, sweet tomatoes, and the little chewy edges of sun-dried tomatoes. It’s the kind of side dish that disappears fast at cookouts, but it also holds up for lunches because the flavors settle in as it chills.
The trick is in the balance. Rinsing the pasta stops the cooking and keeps the salad from turning gummy, while the lemon-garlic dressing wakes everything up without drowning the vegetables. I also like using both fresh cherry tomatoes and sun-dried tomatoes here; the fresh ones give juiciness, and the sun-dried ones bring a deeper, sweeter bite that keeps the salad from tasting flat.
Below, I’ll walk through the one step people usually rush, how to keep the feta from disappearing, and a few smart swaps if you need to work with what’s in your fridge.
The dressing soaked into the pasta after chilling and the salad tasted even better the next day. The lemon, feta, and olives were spot on, and the noodles stayed firm instead of turning mushy.
Save this Mediterranean Pasta Salad for the days when you need a chilled side with briny olives, feta, and lemon-herb dressing that gets better after a long rest.
The Dressing Needs Time to Sink In, Not Just Coat the Pasta
The biggest mistake with pasta salad is serving it right after tossing. At that point, the dressing is only on the surface, and the flavors taste separate instead of blended. This salad needs that two-hour chill because the warm pasta absorbs the lemon, garlic, and oregano, which is what gives each bite the seasoned, cohesive taste you want.
Rinsing the pasta under cold water matters here because you want to stop the cooking fast and cool the noodles before they meet the feta and tomatoes. If the pasta is even a little warm, the feta softens too much and the vegetables lose their crisp edges. The goal is a chilled salad with clean texture, not a damp bowl of pasta pieces sitting in dressing.
- Penne pasta — A short, ridged pasta grabs the dressing and holds onto the chopped vegetables. Any sturdy shape works, but something with grooves or curves beats smooth pasta here.
- Kalamata olives — They bring the briny punch that defines the salad. Black olives can work in a pinch, but they’re milder and less complex.
- Feta cheese — Use block feta if you can and crumble it yourself. It stays creamier and tastes sharper than the pre-crumbled kind, which can be dry.
- Sun-dried tomatoes — These add concentrated sweetness and chew. If yours are packed in oil, drain them well so the dressing doesn’t turn greasy.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Salad

- Cherry tomatoes — They bring freshness and juiciness. Halve them so the juices mingle with the dressing instead of rolling around whole in the bowl.
- Artichoke hearts — These add a soft, savory bite that makes the salad feel fuller. Jarred or canned artichokes both work; just drain them well and pat them dry so they don’t water down the dressing.
- Red onion — The sharp bite cuts through the feta and oil. If raw onion feels too aggressive, soak the diced onion in cold water for 10 minutes, then drain it well.
- Lemon juice and olive oil — This is the backbone of the dressing. Use a good olive oil if you can taste the difference, since there isn’t much else in the dressing to hide behind.
- Fresh parsley — Add it at the end for color and a clean, herby finish. Stirring it in too early dulls both the look and the flavor.
The Chilling Step That Pulls Everything Together
Cook the Pasta Past Al Dente by a Minute
Boil the penne until it’s just a touch softer than you’d normally eat it. Pasta salad holds up best when the noodles can absorb some dressing without turning chalky in the fridge. Drain it well, rinse it under cold water, and let it sit for a minute so the excess water doesn’t thin the dressing later.
Whisk a Sharp, Simple Dressing
Combine the olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, oregano, salt, and pepper until the mixture looks evenly blended and a little glossy. If the garlic sits in a clump, you’ll get one harsh bite instead of a balanced dressing. Taste it before you add the pasta; it should taste a little bolder than you want the finished salad to taste, because the noodles will soften it.
Toss Gently So the Feta Stays Intact
Add the pasta, olives, tomatoes, artichokes, sun-dried tomatoes, red onion, and feta to a large bowl, then pour the dressing over the top. Fold it together with a big spoon or spatula instead of stirring hard, or the feta will smear and the tomatoes will break down. You want distinct pieces in the bowl, not a pinkish, overmixed mess.
Chill Before You Garnish
Cover the bowl and refrigerate it for at least two hours. That resting time softens the onion’s edge, seasons the pasta from within, and helps the olive oil coat everything evenly. Add the parsley right before serving so it stays bright and doesn’t sink into the salad.
How to Adjust This Salad for a Different Table
Make It Gluten-Free
Use a gluten-free penne that holds its shape after chilling. Cook it just to tender, then rinse well and toss it with the dressing while it’s still slightly warm so it absorbs flavor instead of tasting separate from everything else.
Make It Dairy-Free
Skip the feta and add extra olives plus a handful of chopped cucumber or roasted red peppers for more body. You’ll lose the creamy, salty bites from the cheese, but the salad still tastes complete if the dressing is seasoned well and the vegetables are well drained.
Add Protein for a Main Dish
Toss in diced grilled chicken, chickpeas, or tuna. Chickpeas keep the Mediterranean feel and work especially well if you want a vegetarian lunch that eats more like a full meal.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The pasta will absorb more dressing as it sits, so the salad may need a small splash of olive oil or lemon juice before serving.
- Freezer: Don’t freeze this salad. The tomatoes, feta, and dressing all change texture after thawing, and the pasta turns soft.
- Reheating: Serve it cold or let it sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes. Heating it warms the feta and softens the vegetables in a way that works against the whole dish.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Mediterranean Pasta Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Cook penne pasta according to package directions until al dente, then drain and rinse with cold water to stop cooking.
- Let the pasta cool briefly so it doesn’t melt the feta when the dressing is added.
- Whisk olive oil, lemon juice, garlic, dried oregano, salt, and pepper until evenly combined and glossy.
- Combine penne pasta, Kalamata olives, cherry tomatoes, artichoke hearts, sun-dried tomatoes, and red onion in a large bowl.
- Add crumbled feta and gently fold to distribute without breaking the cheese.
- Pour the dressing over the salad and toss gently until everything is lightly coated.
- Refrigerate the salad for at least 2 hours so the pasta absorbs flavor.
- Garnish with fresh parsley before serving for a bright, fresh finish.


