Pea Salad

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Servings 4–6 people

Bright green peas, crisp bacon, and sharp cheddar turn pea salad into a side that disappears fast from potlucks and backyard plates. The best versions hit a balance that keeps each bite cold, creamy, salty, and a little tangy without turning heavy. When it’s done right, the peas stay sweet and distinct instead of getting lost in the dressing.

What makes this version work is restraint. The peas are thawed, not cooked, so they keep their pop. A little sour cream softens the mayonnaise and apple cider vinegar wakes everything up, while a small amount of sugar smooths out the sharp edges without making the salad taste sweet. Patting the peas dry matters more than most people think; extra water is what turns the dressing thin and the whole bowl muddy.

Below, I’ll show you the one step that keeps pea salad from getting watery, plus a few smart swaps for making it fit what you have on hand.

I followed the chilling time exactly and the dressing thickened up instead of sliding off the peas. The bacon stayed crisp enough to give every bite a little crunch, and the red onion was just sharp enough without taking over.

★★★★★— Megan L.

Save this creamy pea salad for potlucks when you want cold peas, crisp bacon, and tangy dressing in every bite.

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The Step Most People Skip That Makes Pea Salad Watery

Frozen peas carry more surface moisture than people expect, and that extra water is what thins the dressing after it sits. Thawing them completely and patting them dry sounds fussy, but it’s the difference between a salad that clings and one that puddles at the bottom of the bowl. If you’ve ever had pea salad go limp after an hour, this is usually why.

The second thing that helps is chilling time. The dressing needs that hour in the fridge to settle onto the peas and let the vinegar mellow into the mayonnaise and sour cream. Right after mixing, the salad tastes a little sharp and loose. After resting, it turns creamy and balanced.

What Each Part Is Doing in the Bowl

Pea Salad creamy tangy bacon
  • Frozen peas — Use frozen peas here, not canned. They keep their shape and sweet bite after thawing, which is what makes the salad feel fresh instead of mushy.
  • Bacon — Cook it until crisp enough to crumble cleanly. Soft bacon gets chewy fast once it meets the dressing.
  • Sharp cheddar — Sharp cheddar gives the salad its salty backbone. Mild cheese disappears into the dressing; sharp cheese stays noticeable in every bite.
  • Red onion — Dice it finely so it spreads through the bowl instead of landing in harsh pockets. If raw onion feels too strong, soak the diced onion in cold water for 10 minutes, then drain well.
  • Mayonnaise and sour cream — Mayo gives the dressing its body, while sour cream keeps it from tasting heavy. If you substitute all mayo, the salad turns thicker and richer; if you replace too much with yogurt, the dressing can get loose and tangy in a way that doesn’t suit this dish as well.
  • Apple cider vinegar and sugar — The vinegar sharpens the dressing and the sugar rounds it out. That tiny bit of sugar isn’t there to make the salad sweet; it keeps the peas and onion from tasting harsh.

How to Keep the Dressing Creamy From the First Bite to the Last

Thawing and Drying the Peas

Thaw the peas completely before anything else, then spread them on paper towels and blot them dry. You want them cold and dry, not wet and broken. If they still feel icy in the center, the dressing won’t coat evenly and the final salad will leak water as it chills.

Mixing the Creamy Base

Whisk the mayonnaise, sour cream, vinegar, sugar, salt, and pepper until the dressing looks smooth and glossy. The vinegar should disappear into the base, not sit in sharp streaks at the bottom of the bowl. If the dressing tastes flat now, it will taste flat later, so season it before it meets the peas.

Folding Without Crushing

Add the peas, bacon, cheddar, and onion, then fold gently with a spatula until everything is coated. Stirring too hard breaks the peas and smears the cheese, which makes the salad look heavy instead of chunky. You want the bowl to feel evenly dressed, not whipped.

The Chill That Sets the Texture

Cover the bowl and refrigerate it for at least an hour. During that time the dressing thickens slightly and the onion softens just enough to blend in. Stir once before serving and taste again, because cold salads often need one last pinch of salt after resting.

Three Ways to Shift the Salad Without Losing What Makes It Work

Make It Bacon-Free

Leave out the bacon and add a little extra salt plus a pinch of smoked paprika if you want some of that savory depth back. The salad will lose the crisp, salty contrast, so lean harder on the cheddar and let the onion stay in the mix for bite.

Dairy-Free Version

Use a good dairy-free mayo and skip the sour cream, then add a little extra vinegar a half teaspoon at a time until the dressing tastes balanced. You’ll lose some of the mellow tang that sour cream brings, so taste after chilling and adjust the salt again before serving.

Swap the Cheddar for Something Milder

Monterey Jack or Colby works if you want a softer, less sharp salad. The texture stays the same, but you’ll lose the punch that sharp cheddar gives, so don’t be shy with black pepper and a little extra onion.

Turn It Into a Potluck Make-Ahead Dish

Mix it a few hours ahead for the best texture, but hold back a spoonful of bacon to scatter on top right before serving. That keeps the top from softening and gives the bowl a fresher look after it’s been sitting in the fridge.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 3 days. The peas stay pleasant, but the dressing loosens a little as it sits.
  • Freezer: Don’t freeze this salad. The mayonnaise base splits and the peas turn soft after thawing.
  • Reheating: This salad is served cold, so don’t reheat it. If it has been chilled overnight, stir well and let it sit at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes so the dressing loosens slightly before serving.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use canned peas for pea salad?+

You can, but the texture won’t be the same. Canned peas are softer and wetter, so the salad loses that sweet pop and can turn a little mushy after chilling. Frozen peas, thawed and dried, hold their shape much better.

How do I keep pea salad from getting watery?+

Dry the peas well after thawing and don’t skip the chill time. Any extra water on the peas ends up in the dressing, and the salad loosens as it sits. If it still looks a little loose after chilling, stir in a handful of extra cheddar to help absorb some moisture.

Can I make pea salad the day before?+

Yes, and it actually benefits from sitting overnight. The flavors settle in and the dressing thickens a bit, but hold back a little bacon if you want the top to stay crisp. Stir before serving and taste for salt, since cold food often needs a small adjustment.

How do I keep the red onion from tasting too strong?+

Dice it finely and soak it in cold water for about 10 minutes if you want a softer bite. That step pulls off some of the harsh edge without removing the onion completely. Drain it well before adding it to the bowl so you don’t add more moisture.

Can I leave out the sugar in pea salad?+

You can, but the dressing may taste sharper and a little flatter. The sugar doesn’t make the salad sweet; it rounds out the vinegar and helps the creamy base taste balanced. If you leave it out, taste after chilling and add a tiny pinch more salt or a splash more mayo if the dressing feels too sharp.

Pea Salad

Pea salad with bright green peas coated in a creamy tangy dressing, then chilled so the flavors mingle. Studded with crispy bacon crumbles, sharp cheddar cubes, and red onion for a classic southern-style potluck salad.
Prep Time 10 minutes
chilling 1 hour
Total Time 1 hour 10 minutes
Servings: 8 servings
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 420

Ingredients
  

  • 4 cup frozen peas thawed (do not cook)
  • 6 strip bacon cooked and crumbled
  • 1 cup sharp cheddar cheese cubed small
  • 0.5 cup red onion finely diced
  • 0.5 cup mayonnaise
  • 0.5 cup sour cream
  • 1 tbsp apple cider vinegar
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 0.25 salt to taste
  • 0.25 black pepper to taste

Method
 

Prepare the peas
  1. Thaw the frozen peas completely, then pat them dry with paper towels to remove excess moisture.
Mix the salad
  1. Combine the peas, crumbled bacon, cheddar cubes, and red onion in a large bowl.
Make the dressing
  1. Whisk together mayonnaise, sour cream, apple cider vinegar, sugar, salt, and black pepper in a small bowl until smooth.
Combine and chill
  1. Pour the dressing over the pea mixture and fold gently until everything is evenly coated.
  2. Cover the bowl and refrigerate for at least 1 hour to allow flavors to develop.
  3. After chilling, stir and taste, then adjust with more salt and black pepper if needed.

Notes

For the creamiest texture, fully thaw the peas and pat them very dry before mixing—extra moisture can make the dressing runny. Refrigerate leftovers in a covered container for up to 3 days; freeze is not recommended since the peas can get soft. If you want a lighter version, replace half the mayonnaise with plain Greek yogurt while whisking the dressing.

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