Mexican Street Corn Pasta Salad brings all the best parts of elote into a bowl that actually holds up for a crowd: creamy dressing, smoky corn, a sharp lime bite, and enough pasta to make it feel like a full side instead of an afterthought. The chilled rest matters here. It gives the dressing time to soak into the pasta and lets the chili, lime, and cotija settle into each bite instead of tasting separate.
The trick is getting enough color on the corn before it goes into the bowl. Lightly charred kernels taste sweeter and deeper, and that little bit of bitterness keeps the creamy dressing from feeling flat. I also keep the lime-forward dressing a touch looser than you might expect, because the pasta absorbs it as it chills and the salad tightens up in the fridge.
Below, I’ll walk through the step that keeps the pasta from turning muddy, the ingredient swaps that still keep the elote feel, and what to do if you want to make it a little milder or a little spicier.
The dressing coated every piece of pasta and the charred corn made it taste like real elote, not just another creamy pasta salad. I made it the night before and it was even better the next day.
Love the smoky char and creamy lime dressing in this Mexican Street Corn Pasta Salad? Save it to Pinterest for potlucks, cookouts, and make-ahead lunches.
Why Chilling This Salad Changes Everything
Warm pasta salad is where this dish starts to go sideways. If you mix everything and serve it right away, the dressing stays loose on the surface and the flavors taste disconnected. Once it chills, the pasta drinks in the limey dressing and the whole bowl tastes more like one finished dish instead of separate ingredients tossed together.
The other mistake is under-charred corn. You want the kernels to pick up brown and black spots in a hot skillet, not just soften. That little bit of sear gives the salad its street-corn backbone and keeps the mayonnaise and sour cream from taking over.
- Cold rinse on the pasta — stops the cooking fast and washes off surface starch so the salad doesn’t turn gummy as it sits.
- Charred corn — adds sweetness, smoke, and texture. Frozen corn works fine if it gets enough heat to blister.
- Cotija — gives the salty, crumbly finish that makes this taste like elote. Feta can stand in, but it’s tangier and a little softer.
- Lime juice — keeps the dressing bright and cuts through the richness. Bottled lime juice won’t give the same fresh edge here.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing In This Salad

- Rotini or shells — both shapes catch the dressing in their curves. Rotini gives the most cling; shells trap little pockets of corn and cheese.
- Corn kernels — this is the heart of the dish. Fresh, frozen, or thawed corn all work as long as you cook it hard enough to get color on the edges.
- Mayonnaise and sour cream — mayo gives body, sour cream brings tang. Using only mayo makes the salad heavier, while only sour cream makes the dressing thinner and sharper.
- Jalapeño and red onion — both add bite and freshness. Dice them small so they spread through the salad instead of clumping in one spicy pocket.
- Cotija and cilantro — add salt, freshness, and that final street-corn finish. Stir some cheese in early and save the rest for the top so you get both creamy and crumbly texture.
Getting the Pasta, Corn, and Dressing to Work Together
Cooking the Pasta Past Al Dente
Cook the pasta until it’s just tender with a little bite left at the center, then rinse it under cold water until it feels cool through the bowl. That stops the cooking and keeps the salad from turning soft after chilling. If the pasta is overcooked now, it will go mushy once the dressing soaks in. Drain it well too; extra water is the fastest way to dilute the lime dressing.
Blistering the Corn in a Hot Pan
Spread the corn in a hot skillet and let it sit long enough to pick up dark spots before stirring. You’re looking for a mix of golden kernels and a few charred bits, not steam-soft corn. If the pan is crowded, the corn will sweat instead of brown, so work in batches if needed. Let it cool a bit before mixing so it doesn’t melt the dressing or wilt the vegetables.
Coating Everything Without Drowning the Salad
Whisk the dressing until it looks smooth and lightly thick, then toss it with the pasta and vegetables before adding the cotija and cilantro. The salad should look generously coated, not soupy. If it seems dry after chilling, stir in a spoonful of mayo or a squeeze of lime rather than adding a splash of water. The flavors get stronger after the rest, so the first taste right after mixing should seem a little bold.
How to Adapt This for Different Tables and Different Tastes
Gluten-Free Version
Use a sturdy gluten-free rotini or shell and cook it a minute less than the package suggests so it stays intact after chilling. Some gluten-free pastas drink up dressing fast, so dress the salad just before serving if it starts to tighten too much.
Dairy-Free Swap
Use a dairy-free mayo and a plain unsweetened dairy-free yogurt or sour cream alternative. You’ll lose a little of the classic tang from cotija, so add a small pinch more salt and an extra squeeze of lime to keep the salad lively.
Make It Milder for a Crowd
Leave out the jalapeño and use just a pinch of chili powder. The salad still tastes like street corn, but the lime, corn, and cheese become the main story instead of the heat.
Add More Heat Without Changing the Texture
Keep the jalapeño seeds or add a pinch of cayenne to the dressing. That gives the salad a sharper finish without making the vegetables watery or changing the creamy base.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Keep covered for up to 3 days. The pasta softens a little and the dressing thickens as it chills, which is normal.
- Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this salad. The creamy dressing separates and the vegetables lose their fresh crunch after thawing.
- Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold. If it tightens up in the fridge, let it sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes and stir in a small spoonful of mayo or a squeeze of lime instead of heating it.
The Questions Worth Asking Before You Make It

Mexican Street Corn Pasta Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Cook rotini or shells pasta according to package directions, then drain and rinse with cold water to stop the cooking. The pasta should look tender with no hard center.
- Char corn kernels in a hot skillet, stirring occasionally, for 5 to 10 minutes until lightly blackened. Look for browned spots and a toasted aroma.
- Whisk together mayonnaise, sour cream, lime juice, chili powder, cumin, garlic powder, salt, and pepper until smooth. The dressing should be thick and evenly speckled with spices.
- Combine pasta, charred corn, red bell pepper, jalapeño, and red onion in a large bowl. Mix until the vegetables and corn are evenly distributed.
- Pour the dressing over the salad and toss to coat. The pasta should look glossy and speckled, with charred corn visible throughout.
- Refrigerate for at least 2 hours, covered, to let flavors meld and the texture firm up. It should look set but still creamy.
- Top with cotija and cilantro right before serving. The cotija should melt slightly from the chill and create salty crumbles on top.


