Greek Tzatziki Pasta Salad

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Servings 4–6 people

Pasta salad gets a lot better when the dressing isn’t just mayo and seasoning. The creamy tzatziki in this bowl clings to every ridge of the pasta, stays cool and tangy after chilling, and gives the cucumbers, tomatoes, and dill a clean, sharp finish that keeps you going back for another forkful.

What makes this version work is the balance: Greek yogurt for body, sour cream for a little extra richness, lemon for lift, and grated cucumber for that classic tzatziki texture without watering everything down. The pasta gets rinsed cold so it stops cooking and stays firm, which matters here because a soft noodle turns the whole salad heavy once the dressing goes on.

Below, I’ve laid out the one step that keeps the sauce from going thin, plus a few smart swaps if you need to adjust for what’s in the fridge.

The dressing stayed creamy after chilling, and the grated cucumber made it taste like real tzatziki instead of just a yogurt pasta salad. I also liked that the pasta didn’t get mushy by the next day.

★★★★★— Melissa T.

Save this Greek Tzatziki Pasta Salad for a chilled side dish with creamy cucumber dressing and bright dill.

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The Trick to Keeping the Tzatziki Creamy After Chilling

The biggest mistake with yogurt-based pasta salad is treating the dressing like it can handle extra moisture from the cucumber, pasta, and tomatoes all at once. It can’t. Grating half the cucumber and squeezing it dry keeps the tzatziki thick enough to coat the pasta instead of pooling at the bottom of the bowl an hour later.

Rinsing the cooked pasta under cold water also matters more here than it would in a warm pasta dish. You’re not just cooling it down; you’re stopping the carryover cooking so the noodles keep their shape after they sit in the dressing. If the pasta is hot when it meets the yogurt mixture, the sauce loosens too fast and the feta starts to break down before serving.

What the Yogurt, Sour Cream, and Cucumber Are Each Doing

Greek Tzatziki Pasta Salad creamy cucumber dill
  • Greek yogurt — This is the base of the dressing, and it needs the thickness you get from full-fat or at least 2% yogurt. Thin yogurt turns watery once it sits with the pasta. Plain Greek yogurt gives you the tang and body that make the salad taste like tzatziki instead of just a cold creamy sauce.
  • Sour cream — This softens the yogurt’s sharpness and gives the dressing a rounder finish. If you want to swap it, use plain full-fat yogurt or labneh for a similar effect. Low-fat sour cream works in a pinch, but it won’t cling quite as well.
  • Cucumber — Half goes into the dressing, half stays diced in the salad. That split is what gives you both flavor and texture. If you skip the squeeze step on the grated cucumber, the whole bowl will loosen as it chills.
  • Fresh dill — Dried dill doesn’t bring the same clean, grassy lift. Fresh dill is one of the ingredients you can actually taste in the final bowl, so it’s worth using here.
  • Feta — Add it at the end so it stays in crumbles instead of disappearing into the dressing. A block of feta you crumble yourself has better texture than pre-crumbled cheese, which is often drier and saltier.

Building the Salad So It Stays Fresh in the Fridge

Cooking and Cooling the Pasta

Boil the pasta just until it’s al dente, then drain and rinse it under cold water until it no longer feels hot. That rinse stops the cooking and also washes off excess starch, which helps the tzatziki coat instead of turn gummy. If the pasta is even a little overcooked at this stage, it will soften more as it sits in the dressing.

Mixing the Tzatziki Base

Stir the Greek yogurt, sour cream, grated squeezed cucumber, garlic, lemon juice, dill, salt, and pepper together in a bowl until the mixture looks thick and speckled with cucumber. The dressing should mound on a spoon before you toss it with the pasta. If it looks loose right away, the cucumber probably wasn’t squeezed enough.

Tossing and Chilling

Combine the cooled pasta with the diced cucumber, tomatoes, red onion, and olives before adding the dressing so everything gets evenly distributed. Fold in the tzatziki gently, then add the feta last so it keeps some shape. Chill for at least an hour; that resting time lets the pasta absorb the seasoning and takes the edge off the raw onion.

Make It Vegetarian and Gluten-Free Without Losing the Point

The recipe is already vegetarian, so the main dietary swap here is gluten-free pasta. Use a sturdy rice- or chickpea-based pasta and cook it one minute shy of the package time so it holds up after chilling. Chickpea pasta brings a little more bite and protein, while rice pasta stays closer to the texture of classic wheat pasta.

Skip the Sour Cream for a Lighter Bowl

Use extra Greek yogurt in place of the sour cream if you want a sharper, lighter dressing. The salad will taste a little tangier and less rich, but the texture still works as long as the yogurt is thick. Add the lemon juice gradually so the dressing doesn’t become too aggressively tart.

Turn It Into a Heartier Lunch Salad

Add diced grilled chicken or chickpeas if you want this to stand on its own. Chickpeas keep the Mediterranean feel and absorb the dressing nicely, while chicken makes the salad more filling without changing the flavor balance much. If you add either one, season lightly with salt and lemon so the whole bowl still tastes bright.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Keeps well for up to 3 days. The pasta absorbs some of the dressing as it sits, so stir in a spoonful of yogurt or a squeeze of lemon before serving if it looks tight.
  • Freezer: This one doesn’t freeze well. The yogurt sauce separates and the cucumber turns watery after thawing.
  • Reheating: Serve it cold or let it sit at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes. Heat breaks the creamy dressing and softens the vegetables, which is the fastest way to ruin the texture.

The Questions That Come Up Before the Bowl Hits the Table

Can I make Greek tzatziki pasta salad the day before?+

Yes, and it actually benefits from a little time in the fridge. The flavor settles in after a few hours, but if you make it a full day ahead, hold back a little feta and add it right before serving so it stays crumbly. Give the salad a stir and refresh it with a small spoonful of yogurt if it looks dry.

How do I keep the tzatziki sauce from getting watery?+

Squeeze the grated cucumber until it stops dripping and cool the pasta completely before mixing. Those two steps do most of the work. If the salad still loosens after chilling, the yogurt may have been too thin, so use a thicker Greek yogurt next time.

Can I use plain yogurt instead of Greek yogurt?+

You can, but the dressing will be thinner and less stable. Greek yogurt gives the salad the body it needs to coat the pasta without pooling. If plain yogurt is all you have, strain it through a cheesecloth or coffee filter for 30 to 60 minutes first.

How do I stop the red onion from taking over the salad?+

Dice it finely and keep the amount modest, because a little raw onion goes a long way in a chilled salad. If yours is especially sharp, soak it in cold water for 10 minutes, then drain well before adding it. That takes off the harsh bite without muting the flavor completely.

Can I leave out the olives and feta?+

Yes, but the salad will taste milder and less briny. If you skip both, add a pinch more salt and a little extra lemon so the dressing still has enough contrast. You can also swap in chopped roasted red peppers for a different kind of sweetness and color.

Greek Tzatziki Pasta Salad

Greek tzatziki pasta salad with penne coated in creamy yogurt tzatziki and crunchy cucumber, tomatoes, and dill. Chilled for at least 1 hour so the pasta soaks up the tangy, garlicky dressing.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
chilling 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 30 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: Greek
Calories: 520

Ingredients
  

penne or rotini pasta
  • 1 lb penne or rotini pasta
Greek yogurt
  • 1 cup Greek yogurt
sour cream
  • 0.5 cup sour cream
cucumber
  • 1 cucumber 1 large cucumber, diced (divided); grate half and dice the rest
garlic
  • 2 clove garlic minced
lemon juice
  • 2 tbsp lemon juice
fresh dill
  • 2 tbsp fresh dill chopped
cherry tomatoes
  • 1 cup cherry tomatoes halved
red onion
  • 0.5 cup red onion diced
Kalamata olives
  • 0.5 cup Kalamata olives sliced
feta cheese
  • 4 oz feta cheese crumbled
salt and pepper
  • 0.25 salt and pepper to taste

Method
 

Cook and rinse the pasta
  1. Cook the penne or rotini pasta according to package directions until al dente, then drain and rinse with cold water to stop cooking and cool it down.
Make the tzatziki sauce
  1. Grate half the cucumber and squeeze out excess moisture, then mix it with Greek yogurt, sour cream, garlic, lemon juice, dill, salt, and pepper until smooth and thick.
Assemble the salad
  1. Combine the pasta with the remaining diced cucumber, cherry tomatoes, red onion, and Kalamata olives in a large bowl for even distribution.
  2. Add the tzatziki sauce and toss to coat, leaving a creamy layer on the pasta and visible cucumber and tomato pieces.
  3. Gently fold in the feta cheese so it stays in small crumbles and doesn’t fully melt into the dressing.
Chill and serve
  1. Refrigerate the Greek tzatziki pasta salad for at least 1 hour before serving so the flavors meld and the dressing thickens.

Notes

Pro tip: squeeze the grated cucumber very well before mixing into the tzatziki to prevent watery dressing. Store covered in the refrigerator up to 3 days; flavors deepen after chilling. Freezing is not recommended because cucumbers and creamy dairy can break down. For a lighter option, replace sour cream with more Greek yogurt or use reduced-fat Greek yogurt.

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