Pesto Pasta Salad (Rotini, Basil Pesto, Cherry Tomatoes, Mozzarella, Olives, Pine Nuts, 25 Min)
4.9 (51 reviews)
25 min Serves 8 as a side.
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Pesto pasta salad in a large white bowl, twirly rotini pasta coated in vibrant green basil pesto, halved cherry tomatoes, fresh mozzarella balls, black olives, toasted pine nuts, fresh basil leaves on top
Dinner

Pesto Pasta Salad (Rotini, Basil Pesto, Cherry Tomatoes, Mozzarella, Olives, Pine Nuts, 25 Min)

4.9 (51 reviews)
· 25 min
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Published May 28, 2026
Category Dinner
By Sara

This is the picnic, potluck, and packed-lunch salad that’s saved me from boring desk lunches more times than I can count. Pesto pasta salad takes twirly rotini pasta and tosses it with vibrant homemade basil pesto, juicy halved cherry tomatoes, fresh mozzarella pearls, kalamata olives, and toasted pine nuts for an Italian summer salad that’s as gorgeous as it is delicious.

Fun fact: pesto Genovese (the classic basil + pine nut + parmesan + garlic + olive oil sauce) was invented in Genoa, Italy in the 16th century. The name comes from “pestare” — Italian for “to pound” — referring to the traditional mortar-and-pestle method. Modern blenders cheat the technique but produce inferior pesto due to bruising; true Italians still pound their pesto by hand for the best texture.

Why this recipe works

  • UNDERCOOK pasta by 1 min. Pasta keeps absorbing sauce and softening as it sits in pesto. Al dente at boil = mushy after 30 min.
  • Rinse pasta in COLD water after cooking to stop the cooking process. Drain WELL — wet pasta dilutes pesto.
  • Make pesto FRESH if possible. Jar pesto works but homemade tastes 10x better. 5 min in a food processor.

Nutrition information

  • Calories: 410 kcal per serving (1/8)
  • Protein: 13 g
  • Carbohydrates: 38 g
  • Fat: 24 g
  • Calcium: 25% DV
  • Vitamin K: 60% DV

Pro tips for the best pesto pasta salad

  • Rinse pasta in COLD water to stop cooking — otherwise it overcooks in the bowl.
  • Drain pasta VERY well. Water dilutes pesto and makes the salad bland. Pat with paper towels if needed.
  • Save 1/4 cup pesto separately for refreshing the salad on day 2 — pesto gets absorbed into pasta as it sits.
  • Use FRESH mozzarella pearls (boccoccini), not pre-shredded. Pre-shredded has anti-caking agents that taste chalky.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use jarred pesto?

Yes — works in a pinch. Buy quality refrigerated pesto (not shelf-stable). Add 2 tbsp olive oil to thin it out.

How long does it keep?

3 days in the fridge. The pesto darkens slightly (oxidation) — still tastes great. Refresh with a drizzle of fresh pesto or olive oil on day 2.

Can I add protein?

Yes — grilled chicken, prosciutto, salami, or chickpeas all work great. Or cubed mozzarella for vegetarian protein boost.

Why is my pesto bitter?

Over-pulverizing basil in a food processor bruises it and releases bitter compounds. Pulse briefly, don’t blend on high.

What other pasta shapes work?

Penne, farfalle (bowties), orecchiette, or shells. Anything with ridges/curves to trap pesto. Avoid spaghetti (sauce slides off).

Pesto pasta salad in a large white bowl, twirly rotini pasta coated in vibrant green basil pesto, halved cherry tomatoes, fresh mozzarella balls, black olives, toasted pine nuts, fresh basil leaves on top
Pesto Pasta Salad (Rotini, Basil Pesto, Cherry Tomatoes, Mozzarella, Olives, Pine Nuts, 25 Min)

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