Jenna Ewing

Super Chef & Mom

I’m Jenna, a busy mom who finds joy in the kitchen and loves sharing simple, family-friendly recipes made for real life. My goal is to make everyday meals feel approachable, enjoyable, and stress-free.

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High-Protein Macaroni Salad

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high protein macaroni salad

The Macaroni Salad That Actually Keeps You Full

Macaroni salad is one of those foods that shows up at every BBQ, every potluck, every summer gathering. And most of the time it is fine. Creamy, a little tangy, goes with everything. But it is also mostly pasta and mayo, which means you eat a scoop, it tastes good, and then two hours later you are hungry again and wondering why you bothered.

This version fixes that. The dressing is made from blended cottage cheese instead of straight mayo, which means you get the same creamy texture with a serious protein boost built right into the base. Pickle juice and rice wine vinegar bring the tang. Olives, pickles, hard-boiled eggs, and red onion give it the bold, briny flavor profile that makes a great macaroni salad actually great.

It tastes like the classic. It just works harder for you nutritionally. Twenty-two grams of protein per serving from a pasta salad is not something you see very often, and this one earns that number without tasting like a diet food at all.

It takes 25 minutes, holds up in the fridge for days, and works as a side dish, a meal prep lunch, or the thing you bring to a cookout when you want people to actually ask for the recipe.

Why This Recipe Works

The dressing is where everything starts. Blending cottage cheese smooth turns it into a creamy, protein-dense base that behaves a lot like mayo but has a lighter texture and a slight tang of its own. You add pickle juice and rice wine vinegar to build on that tang, and suddenly you have a dressing that tastes bold and bright rather than heavy and flat the way all-mayo dressings can sometimes get.

The pickle juice is doing more than just adding flavor. The acidity in it keeps the salad tasting fresh even after it has been sitting in the fridge. It also penetrates the pasta slightly as it chills, which means the whole salad gets more flavorful over time rather than less. This is one of those dishes that is actually better the next day.

The mix-ins are chosen deliberately. Olives bring a briny, savory depth. Pickles add crunch and more of that tangy punch. Hard-boiled eggs add richness, substance, and extra protein. Red onion adds sharpness and a little bite that keeps the salad from being one-note. Fresh dill on top ties everything together with an herby brightness that is very specifically macaroni salad energy.

Rinsing the pasta with cold water after cooking is not optional here. Hot pasta will melt the dressing and the eggs and turn everything into a warm, greasy mess. Cold pasta keeps the dressing thick, the eggs intact, and the whole salad fresh and cohesive.

Let’s Talk Ingredients

2 cups macaroni noodles (dry)

Classic elbow macaroni is the right call. It holds dressing well because of the curved shape, it is easy to eat, and it is what people expect in a macaroni salad. Cook it according to package directions, but pull it when it is just al dente. It will soften slightly as it absorbs the dressing in the fridge. Overcooked pasta going in means mushy pasta by day two.

1 cup cottage cheese

The base of the dressing and the main protein source. It gets blended completely smooth, so the texture of the cottage cheese before blending does not matter much. Full-fat gives you a richer, creamier dressing. Low-fat works and keeps the calorie count lower. Do not use fat-free. It tends to be watery and the dressing will not have enough body. Drain off any liquid sitting on top before blending.

2 to 3 tbsp pickle juice

This is the secret ingredient. Pickle juice adds acidity, salt, and that distinctly tangy, briny flavor that makes a great macaroni salad taste like a great macaroni salad. Start with 2 tablespoons and taste the dressing. If you want more tang, add the third. Use the juice from a jar of dill pickles for the best flavor match with the fresh dill that goes on top.

1 to 2 tbsp rice wine vinegar

Works alongside the pickle juice to brighten the dressing. Rice wine vinegar is milder and slightly sweeter than white wine vinegar or apple cider vinegar, which makes it easier to control the acidity. Start with one tablespoon and taste. You can always add more but you cannot take it back once it is in.

1/2 cup olives, sliced

Kalamata olives are the best choice here because they have a deeper, more savory flavor than plain green olives. They add a briny richness that works really well with the pickle and dill flavors already in the salad. Black olives from a can work if that is what you have. Slice them into rounds rather than halves so they distribute more evenly through the salad.

1/2 cup pickles, chopped

Dill pickles. Chopped into small pieces so you get a little bite of pickle in most forkfuls. Bread and butter pickles are sweeter and change the flavor profile significantly. Stick with dill to stay consistent with the rest of the seasoning. If you are a pickle person, you can push this up to 3/4 cup without it being too much.

2 hard-boiled eggs, chopped

Adds protein, richness, and that classic deviled egg adjacent flavor that belongs in a macaroni salad. Chop them into small chunks rather than slices so they distribute evenly. If you are hard-boiling them fresh for this recipe, cook them the day before and refrigerate overnight. Cold eggs chop more cleanly than warm ones and they will not melt into the dressing the way warm eggs can.

1/4 cup red onion, finely chopped

Adds sharpness and bite that cuts through the creaminess of the dressing. Finely chopped is important here. Large chunks of raw red onion are too aggressive. Fine dice means you get the flavor without any one bite being overwhelming. If raw onion is too sharp for your taste, soak the chopped onion in cold water for 10 minutes before adding it. It mellows the bite significantly.

Fresh dill, for topping

Goes on at the end and adds a herby freshness that ties the whole salad together. Dill and pickle are a natural pairing and the fresh herb on top makes the salad look and taste finished. Do not substitute dried dill here if you can avoid it. The flavor of fresh dill is brighter and more fragrant, and in a cold salad where everything else is sharp and briny, that freshness matters.

Salt and pepper, to taste

Season the dressing well before you combine everything. The cottage cheese base needs salt to taste right. Taste the finished salad before serving and adjust. The pickle juice and olives add saltiness, so go carefully at first and add more if needed.

This Is a Meal Prep Recipe Worth Actually Making

A lot of recipes claim to be meal prep friendly and then fall apart by day two. This one genuinely holds up. The acid in the dressing keeps everything tasting fresh, the pasta absorbs flavor rather than getting waterlogged, and the mix-ins do not wilt or go soft. By day two it is actually better than it was on day one.

Make a full batch on Sunday and portion it into containers. It covers four solid servings that work as a lunch side, a standalone light meal, or something to grab quickly when you need food and do not want to think about it. Pair it with grilled chicken or a hard-boiled egg on the side and you have a complete lunch.

One thing worth doing for meal prep: hold the fresh dill and add it fresh each time you serve a portion. Dill that has been sitting in a dressed salad for three days gets a little dull. Keeping it separate takes five seconds and makes each serving taste fresh.

If you want to make it for a cookout or gathering, this is one of the better things you can bring because it travels well, does not need to be heated, and looks like a real dish rather than something thrown together. Make it the morning of and let it chill in the fridge for a few hours. The flavor will be significantly better than if you make it and serve it immediately.

For storage, keep it in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. Give it a stir before serving since the dressing can settle slightly. If it looks a little dry after a day or two, add a small splash of pickle juice and stir it through. It will come right back.

High-Protein Macaroni Salad

high protein macaroni salad

Prep Time

15

Cooking Time

10

Servings

4

Nutrition

Calories: 360 | Protein: 22g | Fat: 11g | Carbs: 42g | Fiber: 3g | Net Carbs: 39g

Values are approximate based on 4 servings. They will vary depending on the pasta brand, cottage cheese fat content, and how much dressing you use. The protein number comes primarily from the cottage cheese and eggs, so do not reduce those if the macros are important to you.

Equipment

  • Medium pot
  • Blender or food processor
  • Large mixing bowl
  • Knife and cutting board
  • Colander

Ingridients

  • 2 cups macaroni noodles, dry
  • 1 cup cottage cheese
  • 2 to 3 tbsp pickle juice
  • 1 to 2 tbsp rice wine vinegar
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • 1/2 cup olives, sliced
  • 1/2 cup dill pickles, chopped
  • 2 hard-boiled eggs, chopped
  • 1/4 cup red onion, finely chopped
  • Fresh dill, for topping

Steps

Step 1: Boil macaroni according to package directions until just al dente. Drain and rinse thoroughly with cold water until the pasta is completely cool. Set aside.

Step 2: In a blender or food processor, combine cottage cheese, pickle juice, rice wine vinegar, salt, and pepper. Blend until completely smooth and creamy. Taste and adjust seasoning.

Step 3: Chop the olives, pickles, hard-boiled eggs, and red onion into small, even pieces.

Step 4: In a large mixing bowl, combine the cooled macaroni, chopped mix-ins, and blended dressing. Stir until everything is evenly coated.

Step 5: Taste and adjust salt, pepper, or pickle juice as needed. Top with fresh dill and serve immediately, or refrigerate for 30 minutes for best flavor.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use mayo instead of cottage cheese?

You can, but you will lose the protein that makes this version stand out. If you want a middle ground, use half cottage cheese blended smooth and half mayo. You get some of the creaminess and richness of mayo while keeping more protein in the dressing. The flavor will be slightly different but still very good.

Does this taste like cottage cheese?

No. Once blended smooth and combined with the pickle juice, vinegar, and seasoning, the cottage cheese flavor disappears completely. The dressing tastes tangy and creamy, not like cottage cheese. This is the most common concern people have before making it and it is almost always resolved after the first bite.

Can I make this gluten-free?

Yes. Swap the macaroni for your favorite gluten-free pasta. Chickpea pasta or lentil pasta also work here and add even more protein. Cook according to package directions and rinse with cold water before assembling. The dressing and mix-ins are all naturally gluten-free.

How long does this keep in the fridge?

Up to 4 days in an airtight container. The flavor actually improves after the first day as everything marinates together. Give it a stir before serving and add a small splash of pickle juice if it seems dry. Keep the fresh dill separate and add it right before eating.

Can I add more protein?

Yes. Diced grilled chicken is the easiest addition. Shredded rotisserie chicken also works. Canned tuna or chickpeas are good options if you want to keep it meat-free. Extra hard-boiled eggs are always an option too. Any of these can be stirred in at assembly or added on top when serving.

What if I do not have rice wine vinegar?

White wine vinegar is the closest substitute. Apple cider vinegar also works but has a slightly more distinct flavor. Regular white vinegar is sharper, so use a little less if that is all you have. In a pinch, extra pickle juice can replace the vinegar entirely since it is already acidic.

Can I make this without olives?

Yes. The salad will be less briny but still good. Capers are a great substitute if you want that salty, briny quality without the olives. Diced celery is another option that adds crunch and a mild flavor without changing the profile of the dressing.

Should I serve this warm or cold?

Cold. This is a cold pasta salad and it is designed to be eaten chilled. The dressing thickens slightly in the fridge and clings better to the pasta when it is cold. If you assemble it and serve immediately it is fine, but after 30 minutes in the fridge the texture and flavor are noticeably better.

Can I use a different pasta shape?

Yes. Rotini, small shells, and ditalini all work well because they trap the dressing in their curves and holes. Larger shapes like penne or rigatoni work but change the eating experience. Whatever you use, cook it al dente and rinse with cold water before combining with the dressing.

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