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Mediterranean Quinoa Salad

Mediterranean Quinoa Salad

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Nutty, protein-rich quinoa tossed with the honest flavors of the Mediterranean: briny olives, creamy feta, crisp cucumber, and sweet tomatoes bound by a properly emulsified lemon vinaigrette that coats every grain.

Salads
Mediterranean
Meal Prep
25 min
Active Time
20 min cook45 min total
Yield6 servings

The Mediterranean has been teaching the world to eat well for three thousand years. This salad borrows freely from that tradition: the salty punch of kalamata olives, the grassy brightness of good olive oil, the sharp tang of feta made from sheep's milk, and herbs picked that morning from a hillside garden. What it adds is quinoa, that ancient Andean grain that happens to play beautifully with these flavors.

I've served this salad at summer gatherings where it sat on a buffet table for three hours and only improved. The quinoa holds its texture where couscous would turn to paste. The vegetables stay crisp. The feta softens just enough at the edges while keeping its shape. This is food designed for the way people actually eat: standing in a kitchen with a fork, sitting on a blanket at a picnic, spooned onto plates at a dinner party where the hostess refuses to fuss.

The technique here is straightforward, but two steps separate a good quinoa salad from a great one. First, toast your quinoa before adding liquid. This builds a nutty depth that raw quinoa simply doesn't have. Second, build your vinaigrette properly. The Dijon mustard isn't there for flavor alone. It's an emulsifier that binds oil and acid into a creamy dressing that clings to each grain rather than pooling at the bottom of the bowl.

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Ingredients

white quinoa

Quantity

1 1/2 cups

water

Quantity

2 1/2 cups

kosher salt

Quantity

1 teaspoon, plus more to taste

English cucumber

Quantity

1

diced

cherry tomatoes

Quantity

1 pint

halved

kalamata olives

Quantity

1 cup

pitted and halved

red onion

Quantity

1/2 medium

finely diced

feta cheese

Quantity

1 cup

crumbled

fresh flat-leaf parsley

Quantity

1/2 cup

roughly chopped

fresh mint leaves

Quantity

1/4 cup

torn

extra-virgin olive oil

Quantity

1/4 cup

fresh lemon juice

Quantity

3 tablespoons (about 1 1/2 lemons)

red wine vinegar

Quantity

1 tablespoon

garlic

Quantity

1 small clove

minced to a paste

Dijon mustard

Quantity

1 teaspoon

dried oregano

Quantity

1/2 teaspoon

black pepper

Quantity

1/4 teaspoon

freshly ground

honey

Quantity

1/4 teaspoon

Equipment Needed

  • Fine-mesh strainer
  • Medium saucepan with tight-fitting lid
  • Rimmed baking sheet
  • Glass jar with lid for vinaigrette
  • Large serving bowl

Instructions

  1. 1

    Rinse the quinoa

    Place quinoa in a fine-mesh strainer and rinse under cold running water for a full minute, agitating with your fingers. Quinoa has a natural coating called saponin that tastes bitter and soapy if left unwashed. You'll see the water run cloudy at first, then clear. That's your signal.

    Some quinoa comes pre-rinsed, but rinse it anyway. The thirty seconds of effort removes any residual bitterness and costs you nothing.
  2. 2

    Toast and cook quinoa

    Transfer rinsed quinoa to a medium saucepan and set over medium heat. Stir constantly for two minutes until the grains dry and begin to smell nutty, almost like popcorn. This step is not optional. Toasting builds flavor and helps the grains cook up fluffy rather than waterlogged. Add the water and one teaspoon of salt. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to low, cover, and simmer for fifteen minutes without lifting the lid.

  3. 3

    Rest and fluff

    Remove the pot from heat and let it sit, covered, for five minutes. The residual steam finishes cooking the grains while the bottom layer absorbs any remaining moisture. Uncover and fluff with a fork, scraping from the bottom to separate the grains. You should see the tiny spiral germ separated from each seed. Spread the quinoa on a rimmed baking sheet in a single layer and let it cool completely, about twenty minutes.

    Never dress warm quinoa. It will absorb the vinaigrette and turn mushy. Patience here rewards you with distinct, fluffy grains that hold their shape.
  4. 4

    Prepare vegetables while quinoa cools

    While quinoa cools, dice your cucumber into half-inch pieces. Halve the cherry tomatoes through their equators so they release their juice into the salad. Pit and halve your olives. Finely dice the red onion, then soak it in ice water for ten minutes to tame its bite. Drain well and pat dry. Crumble the feta into rough half-inch chunks, not dust.

  5. 5

    Build the vinaigrette

    In a small jar with a tight-fitting lid, combine the olive oil, lemon juice, red wine vinegar, garlic paste, Dijon mustard, oregano, pepper, and honey. The mustard is your emulsifier. It contains compounds that grab onto both oil and water molecules, binding them together. Seal the jar and shake vigorously for thirty seconds until the dressing looks creamy and unified, not separated.

    A proper emulsion should coat a spoon evenly. If it slides off in sheets, keep shaking. If it breaks after sitting, another thirty seconds of shaking will bring it back together.
  6. 6

    Assemble the salad

    Transfer cooled quinoa to a large serving bowl. Add cucumber, tomatoes, drained red onion, and olives. Pour three-quarters of the vinaigrette over the salad and toss gently with two large spoons, lifting from the bottom to distribute everything evenly. Taste and add more dressing or salt as needed. The quinoa should be seasoned through, not bland in the center.

  7. 7

    Add herbs and feta

    Fold in the parsley and torn mint leaves. Scatter feta chunks over the top rather than mixing them in. The feta stays in beautiful pieces this way, providing pockets of briny richness rather than disappearing into the salad. Give it one final gentle toss. Serve immediately, or refrigerate up to three days.

    This salad actually improves after resting in the refrigerator for at least two hours. The flavors meld and the quinoa absorbs just enough dressing to taste seasoned throughout.

Chef Tips

  • English cucumbers have thinner skin and fewer seeds than standard varieties. Leave the skin on for color and texture. If using regular cucumbers, peel them and scoop out the watery seeds with a spoon.
  • Buy feta packed in brine, never the pre-crumbled kind sold in plastic tubs. The brine-packed cheese has better flavor and a creamier texture that crumbles into proper chunks rather than dry dust.
  • For meal prep, store the vinaigrette separately and add it the morning you plan to serve. The salad keeps five days this way. Already dressed, it's good for three.
  • This salad welcomes additions: chickpeas for more protein, artichoke hearts, roasted red peppers, or a handful of toasted pine nuts. Let the season and your refrigerator guide you.
  • A drizzle of good olive oil just before serving wakes everything up. The oil you cook with and the oil you finish with need not be the same. Save the expensive bottle for the end.

Advance Preparation

  • Quinoa can be cooked, cooled, and refrigerated up to four days ahead. Spread on a baking sheet to cool completely before transferring to an airtight container.
  • Vinaigrette keeps refrigerated for one week. Shake vigorously before using to re-emulsify.
  • Vegetables can be prepped and stored separately up to two days ahead. Keep tomatoes at room temperature; refrigerate cucumber and onion.
  • Fully assembled salad improves after two hours of refrigeration and keeps well for three days. The flavors marry and the quinoa absorbs seasoning throughout.

Frequently Asked Questions

Nutrition Information

1 serving (about 335g)

Calories
440 calories
Total Fat
25 g
Saturated Fat
9 g
Trans Fat
0 g
Unsaturated Fat
16 g
Cholesterol
24 mg
Sodium
270 mg
Total Carbohydrates
32 g
Dietary Fiber
4 g
Sugars
3 g
Protein
12 g

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