Creamy Street Corn Pasta Salad

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Cold pasta salad usually gets dismissed as the thing you bring because someone needs a side dish, but this one earns its spot. The charred corn gives it that sweet, smoky bite you expect from elote, the dressing clings to every curve of the pasta, and the cotija brings the salty finish that keeps each forkful moving. It comes out creamy without feeling heavy, bright without tasting sharp, and sturdy enough to sit on a picnic table without collapsing into a soggy bowl.

The small decisions matter here. Rinsing the pasta stops the cooking fast and keeps the dressing from disappearing into hot noodles. Charring the corn before it goes in adds depth you can’t get from plain boiled kernels, and letting the salad chill for a couple of hours gives the lime, chili powder, and cumin time to settle into the pasta instead of sitting on top of it. If you’ve ever had pasta salad taste flat right after mixing, this is the kind of recipe that fixes that problem.

Below you’ll find the part that matters most: how to get the corn properly browned, how to keep the dressing creamy after chilling, and what to change if you want it less spicy or a little lighter.

The corn had those little charred edges I was hoping for, and after chilling the dressing got even better. I added extra lime at the end and the pasta was still creamy the next day.

★★★★★— Megan R.

Save this creamy street corn pasta salad for the next cookout when you want smoky charred corn, lime, and cotija in one chilled side dish.

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The Charred Corn Is What Keeps This Pasta Salad from Tasting Flat

Most pasta salads lean on the dressing alone, and that’s where they fall short. The trick here is giving the corn a real sear before it ever hits the bowl. Those browned bits bring sweetness, smoke, and a little bitterness that balances the creamy dressing, so the salad tastes layered instead of just rich.

Let the corn cool before mixing it in. Hot corn softens the dressing too fast and can make the salad look greasy before it chills. The other thing that helps is salting the pasta water well enough that the noodles taste seasoned on their own; otherwise, the dressing has to do all the work.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Salad

Creamy Street Corn Pasta Salad with charred corn, cotija, and cilantro
  • Pasta shells or rotini — Both shapes hold the dressing in little ridges and curves. Shells catch corn and cheese in the cup of the noodle, while rotini gives you more surface area. Use a sturdy shape here; thin pasta turns limp after chilling.
  • Charred corn — This is the center of the dish. Fresh corn gives the best sweet flavor and browning, but frozen corn works if you cook it in a hot skillet until the moisture cooks off and the kernels start to spot. Canned corn won’t give you the same texture or flavor.
  • Mayonnaise and sour cream — Mayo gives the dressing body and helps it cling to the pasta, while sour cream adds tang and keeps it from tasting heavy. You can swap in Mexican crema for the sour cream if you want a looser, silkier finish.
  • Lime juice — Fresh lime matters here. Bottled juice can taste dull and one-note, and this salad depends on that bright edge to balance the cotija and mayo. Add a little extra after chilling if the salad tastes muted.
  • Cotija cheese — Cotija brings the salty, crumbly finish that makes this taste like street corn instead of plain creamy pasta salad. Feta can stand in, but it brings a sharper tang and a softer crumble.
  • Jalapeños and red onion — These keep the salad from going soft and bland. Dice them small so they distribute through the bowl instead of hitting in sharp chunks. If you want less heat, remove the jalapeño seeds and membranes.

Building the Dressing So It Stays Creamy After Chilling

Whisk the Base Until It Looks Smooth

Start with the mayo, sour cream, lime juice, chili powder, cumin, salt, and pepper in a bowl large enough to whisk comfortably. You’re looking for a dressing that turns fully uniform, with no streaks of sour cream left behind. If the lime makes it look too loose at first, keep whisking; it settles as the seasonings dissolve and the dressing thickens slightly.

Cool the Pasta Before It Meets the Dressing

Drain the pasta and rinse it under cold water until it feels cool to the touch. If you skip the rinse, the residual heat keeps cooking the pasta and the dressing can slide right off instead of coating it. Shake off as much water as you can so the salad doesn’t dilute as it sits.

Toss, Then Chill for the Texture to Set

Mix the pasta, corn, jalapeños, red onion, and half the cotija before adding the dressing. That gives every ingredient a chance to get evenly coated. After the first toss, cover the bowl and chill it for at least 2 hours. The salad gets noticeably better as it rests because the pasta absorbs some of the dressing and the lime mellows just enough to taste rounded instead of sharp.

How to Adapt This for a Crowd, a Lighter Bowl, or No Dairy

Make it dairy-free without losing the creamy texture

Use a good dairy-free mayo and swap the sour cream for unsweetened cashew cream or a thick oat-based sour cream. The salad will still coat well, but it loses a little of the tang that makes cotija and lime pop, so add an extra squeeze of lime and a pinch more salt at the end.

Make it milder for mixed spice levels

Use just one jalapeño or leave out the seeds and membranes from both. You can also cut the chili powder back slightly and finish the bowl with extra cotija instead of extra heat. The corn and lime still carry the flavor, so the salad doesn’t taste flat without the spice.

Make it ahead for a party

Mix the dressing and cook the pasta up to a day ahead, then char the corn and chop the herbs close to serving time. Hold back the final cotija and cilantro until the end so the top stays fresh and the cheese doesn’t disappear into the bowl. If the pasta tightens up in the fridge, stir in a spoonful of mayo or a splash of lime juice before serving.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Keeps well for 3 to 4 days in a covered container. The pasta absorbs some dressing as it sits, so the texture gets a little tighter after day one.
  • Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing this salad. The dairy dressing separates and the pasta turns soft after thawing.
  • Reheating: Serve it cold or let it sit out for 15 to 20 minutes to take the chill off. Don’t microwave it; that breaks the dressing and ruins the crisp bite of the vegetables.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I use frozen corn instead of fresh corn?+

Yes. Thaw it first, then cook it in a hot skillet until the excess moisture cooks off and you get some browned spots. If you add it straight from frozen, it steams instead of charring, and the flavor stays one-dimensional.

How do I keep the pasta salad from drying out in the fridge?+

Give it a good stir before serving and add a spoonful of mayo or a squeeze of lime if it looks tight. Pasta keeps soaking up dressing as it rests, so the fix is to refresh the bowl gently instead of adding more cheese, which won’t bring back the creamy texture.

Can I make creamy street corn pasta salad the day before?+

Yes, and it actually tastes better after a few hours in the fridge. For the best texture, hold back the final cilantro and cotija until just before serving so they stay fresh and the top doesn’t look muted.

How do I make it less spicy without losing the elote flavor?+

Use fewer jalapeños and remove the seeds and membranes. The smoke from the charred corn and the tang from the lime carry most of the flavor, so you don’t need a lot of heat for the salad to still taste like street corn.

Can I use feta instead of cotija?+

You can. Feta is a little tangier and softer, so the salad will taste slightly brighter and less dry-salty than it does with cotija. If you use feta, go a little lighter with the extra salt until you’ve tasted the finished bowl.

Creamy Street Corn Pasta Salad

Creamy street corn pasta salad with charred corn, cotija cheese, and cilantro folded into a spicy mayo sour cream dressing. Bright lime juice and chili powder give it that classic elote-style flavor in a chilled summer salad.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
chilling 2 hours
Total Time 2 hours 30 minutes
Servings: 10 servings
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: Mexican-American
Calories: 610

Ingredients
  

Pasta
  • 1 lb pasta shells or rotini Use small shells or rotini so the creamy elote-style dressing clings.
Street corn
  • 4 cup corn kernels, charred Char in a hot skillet until lightly blackened for smoky flavor.
Spicy creamy dressing
  • 1 cup mayonnaise Provides the creamy base.
  • 0.5 cup sour cream Keeps the dressing tangy and smooth.
  • 0.25 cup lime juice Fresh lime juice brightens the salad.
  • 2 tsp chili powder Adds smoky heat.
  • 1 tsp cumin Rounds out the chili flavor.
  • 0.25 salt and pepper to taste Season the dressing and balance sweetness from corn.
Toppings and mix-ins
  • 1 cup cotija cheese, crumbled Fold in half, then finish with the rest right before serving.
  • 0.25 cup cilantro, chopped Add fresh cilantro after chilling for best flavor.
  • 2 jalapeños, diced Dice finely for even heat.
  • 0.25 cup red onion, diced Adds crunch and sharp bite.

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Cook and prep
  1. Cook the pasta according to package directions, then drain and rinse with cold water until cool to the touch; this helps prevent clumping. Aim for a firm texture (about 8–12 minutes depending on brand).
  2. Char the corn kernels in a hot skillet until lightly blackened, stirring occasionally for even char. Spread onto a sheet pan and let cool completely, about 5–10 minutes.
Make dressing and assemble
  1. Whisk together mayonnaise, sour cream, lime juice, chili powder, cumin, salt, and pepper until smooth and fully combined. The mixture should look thick and glossy.
  2. Combine pasta, charred corn, jalapeños, red onion, and half the cotija cheese in a large bowl. Toss just until everything is evenly distributed.
  3. Pour the dressing over the salad and toss thoroughly to coat all pasta and corn. Stop when the pasta looks evenly creamy with no dry spots.
Chill and finish
  1. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours so the flavors meld and the dressing thickens slightly. Cover well to prevent drying.
  2. Right before serving, top with the remaining cotija cheese and cilantro. The surface should look speckled with cheese and bright green herb flecks.

Notes

For best texture, rinse the pasta well with cold water and drain thoroughly so the dressing doesn’t get watery. Refrigerate in a covered container for 3–4 days; the salad does not freeze well due to dairy texture. Dietary swap: use a plant-based mayonnaise and dairy-free sour cream to make it dairy-free while keeping the creamy dressing.

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