Ruby Tuesday Pasta Salad

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Creamy, chilled pasta salad gets its appeal from contrast: tender rotini, crisp-tender broccoli and cauliflower, salty bacon, and a sweet-tangy dressing that clings to every bite. This Ruby Tuesday pasta salad copycat lands in that sweet spot where it tastes familiar right away, but still feels worth making at home because the dressing is balanced instead of heavy and the vegetables keep their bite.

The trick is keeping the pasta cold and the vegetables only briefly blanched. Overcooked broccoli turns mushy once it sits in dressing, and warm pasta will thin the mayonnaise base and dull the seasoning. A short chill gives the sugar time to dissolve and the vinegar time to mellow, which is what turns the dressing from sharp and loose into something creamy and round.

Below, you’ll find the small details that matter most: how to keep the broccoli and cauliflower bright, why the salad tastes better after resting, and a few easy swaps if you need to work with what you already have in the fridge.

The dressing coated everything evenly and the salad stayed crisp after chilling. I was worried the broccoli would get soggy, but it kept a perfect bite and tasted just like the restaurant version.

★★★★★— Melissa T.

Save this Ruby Tuesday pasta salad for the chilled, creamy side dish that holds up beautifully at cookouts and potlucks.

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The Part That Keeps This Pasta Salad Creamy Instead of Watery

The biggest mistake with this kind of salad is letting warm pasta and wet vegetables dilute the dressing. Rinsing the rotini under cold water stops the cooking fast and keeps the noodles from steaming themselves soft while they sit. The broccoli and cauliflower need only a brief blanch, then an ice bath, so they stay bright and crisp-tender instead of tasting boiled.

The other detail that matters is the chill time. The dressing tastes a little sharp and loose at first, but after a couple of hours in the fridge the sugar dissolves fully, the vinegar settles down, and the pasta absorbs just enough of the dressing to taste seasoned all the way through. If you serve it too soon, it will taste flatter and the texture won’t have that restaurant-style finish.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Salad

Ruby Tuesday Pasta Salad creamy broccoli cauliflower bacon
  • Tri-color rotini — The spirals catch the dressing in every curve, which is why this pasta works better than straight noodles. Any short pasta with ridges will do in a pinch, but rotini gives the best coating and the most familiar texture.
  • Broccoli and cauliflower — These are the backbone of the salad’s crunch. Fresh is best here; frozen vegetables turn soft after thawing and won’t hold up in the creamy dressing.
  • Bacon — It brings salt, smoke, and a little crispness against the creamy base. Cook it until it’s properly crisp, then drain it well so the fat doesn’t thin the dressing.
  • Mayonnaise, sugar, and red wine vinegar — This is the dressing’s balance point. The mayo makes it creamy, the sugar softens the vinegar, and the vinegar keeps the salad from tasting heavy; swapping in a sweeter vinegar will change the flavor, but white wine vinegar or apple cider vinegar both work if that’s what you have.
  • Parmesan — It adds a savory edge that keeps the dressing from tasting one-note. Use finely grated Parmesan so it blends smoothly instead of leaving little salty clumps.
  • Red onion — It sharpens the whole bowl and keeps the salad from leaning too sweet. Dice it small so it disappears into the mix instead of punching through every bite.

Building the Salad So It Tastes Like the Restaurant Version

Cooking the Pasta All the Way, Then Stopping It Cold

Cook the rotini just to al dente, then drain it and rinse it under cold water until it feels cool all the way through. That rinse matters here because the pasta keeps cooking from its own heat, and if you skip it the salad turns soft once it chills. Drain it well before adding the dressing, or extra water will thin the sauce and leave the pasta under-seasoned.

Blanching the Vegetables for Bite, Not Softness

Drop the broccoli and cauliflower into boiling water for only 2 minutes, then move them straight into ice water. You want them bright green and pale white with a crisp-tender bite, not fully cooked. If the florets are even slightly soft going in, they’ll get mushy after the salad rests, so pull them as soon as they lose that raw edge.

Whisking the Dressing Until It Turns Smooth

Stir the mayonnaise, sugar, vinegar, Parmesan, salt, and pepper together until the mixture looks glossy and even. The sugar won’t disappear instantly, so give it a minute of whisking before you decide it’s ready. If the dressing tastes too sharp at first, let it sit a few minutes; the flavor settles fast once the sugar starts dissolving.

Letting the Chill Time Do the Last Bit of Work

Toss everything together, cover the bowl, and refrigerate it for at least 2 hours before serving. That resting period isn’t optional if you want the best texture, because it gives the dressing time to cling to the pasta and vegetables instead of sitting loosely in the bowl. Stir once before serving so the dressing that settled at the bottom gets redistributed.

Three Ways to Make This Copycat Salad Work for Your Kitchen

For a lighter dressing

Swap half the mayonnaise for plain Greek yogurt if you want a tangier, lighter salad. The texture will be a little less lush and the flavor a touch sharper, but it still clings well if you whisk it until smooth.

For a vegetarian version

Leave out the bacon and add a little extra Parmesan plus a pinch more salt. You’ll lose the smoky note, so the salad tastes cleaner and a bit milder, but the broccoli, cauliflower, and dressing still carry the whole dish.

For a more tangy salad

Increase the red wine vinegar by 1 teaspoon at a time if you want a brighter finish. That extra acid cuts through the mayo more aggressively, which works well if you’re serving this alongside grilled meat or anything rich.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 4 days. The pasta will absorb more dressing as it sits, so expect it to look a little drier on day two.
  • Freezer: Don’t freeze this salad. The mayonnaise base separates and the vegetables turn watery when thawed.
  • Reheating: This salad is meant to be served cold. If it has been chilled hard, let it sit at room temperature for 15 to 20 minutes and stir before serving so the dressing loosens up again.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make Ruby Tuesday pasta salad the day before?+

Yes, and it actually tastes better after sitting overnight. The dressing has time to soak into the pasta and the flavors settle together, but give it a stir before serving and add a spoonful of mayo if it looks a little dry.

How do I keep the pasta salad from getting watery?+

Cool the pasta completely and drain the vegetables well after blanching. Watery salad usually comes from trapped heat or extra rinse water, both of which thin the mayo dressing and keep it from coating properly.

Can I use frozen broccoli and cauliflower instead of fresh?+

I don’t recommend it for this salad. Frozen florets release too much moisture as they thaw, and that soft texture stands out fast in a cold creamy salad like this one.

How do I stop the dressing from tasting too sweet?+

Add the vinegar a little at a time and taste after the salad chills, not right away. Chilling softens the sweetness, so a dressing that seems sweet at first often lands in the right place once the pasta absorbs it.

Can I leave out the bacon and still get good flavor?+

Yes, but the salad will taste a little cleaner and less savory. If you skip it, add a pinch more Parmesan and salt so the dressing still has enough backbone to stand up to the pasta and vegetables.

Ruby Tuesday Pasta Salad (Creamy Copycat)

Ruby Tuesday pasta salad is a classic creamy pasta salad with rotini, broccoli, cauliflower, and crumbled bacon in a sweet-tangy dressing. After a quick boil/blanch and a long chill, the flavors meld for a restaurant-style chilled side.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
chilling 2 hours
Total Time 2 hours 30 minutes
Servings: 10 servings
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 620

Ingredients
  

Tri-color rotini pasta
  • 1 lb tri-color rotini pasta
Vegetables
  • 2 cup broccoli florets, blanched
  • 1 cup cauliflower florets, blanched
Bacon
  • 6 bacon slices, cooked and crumbled
Red onion
  • 0.5 cup red onion, diced
Dressing base
  • 1 cup mayonnaise
  • 0.25 cup sugar
  • 2 tbsp red wine vinegar
  • 0.25 cup Parmesan cheese, grated
Seasoning
  • salt and pepper to taste

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan
  • 1 Dutch oven

Method
 

Cook and chill the pasta and vegetables
  1. Cook tri-color rotini pasta according to package directions, then drain and rinse with cold water until cool to the touch.
  2. Blanch broccoli florets and cauliflower florets in boiling water for 2 minutes, then plunge into ice water and drain.
Make the sweet-tangy dressing
  1. Whisk mayonnaise, sugar, red wine vinegar, Parmesan cheese, salt, and pepper until smooth and evenly combined.
Assemble and marinate
  1. Combine pasta, broccoli, cauliflower, bacon, and red onion in a large bowl, spreading ingredients evenly.
  2. Pour the dressing over the salad and toss until every pasta piece and floret looks coated.
  3. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours to let the flavors meld, then serve cold.

Notes

For best texture, rinse the hot pasta thoroughly with cold water so it doesn’t keep cooking and turn mushy. Store covered in the refrigerator for up to 4 days; freezing isn’t recommended. For a lighter option, use light mayonnaise (or a mayo blend) while keeping the same sugar and vinegar amounts to preserve the sweet-tangy balance.

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