Merken Summer arrived the year I discovered that corn doesn't need to hide in creamy salads—it wants to be charred, celebrated, celebrated, almost caramelized. My neighbor brought over fresh elote from her garden, and instead of the usual street-food treatment, I tossed it with pasta and discovered something unexpectedly perfect: a dish that tastes like vacation but comes together in your kitchen on a Tuesday night.
I made this for a potluck where everyone expected the same tired green salads, and watching people go back for thirds was quietly satisfying. One friend asked for the recipe mid-bite, mayo still on her fork, and that's when I knew this wasn't just another pasta salad.
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Ingredients
- Short pasta (12 oz): Rotini or fusilli traps the dressing in all those little curves, but honestly, whatever shape you love works—the key is cooking it just to al dente so it doesn't turn mushy when it sits.
- Fresh corn kernels (2 cups): Summer corn is ideal, but frozen thawed corn works beautifully; the char is what matters, not whether it came straight from the farmer's market.
- Cherry tomatoes (1 cup, halved): They burst slightly as the salad sits, releasing juice that flavors everything around them.
- Red onion (1/2 small, finely diced): The sharpness softens over time in the dressing, mellowing into something almost sweet.
- Fresh cilantro (1/4 cup, chopped): Add it at the end or some of the flavor disappears; I learned this the hard way.
- Jalapeño (1, optional): Seed it if you want gentle warmth, leave the seeds if you like heat that announces itself.
- Mayonnaise (1/3 cup): Use good quality if you can—it's the base of everything, and it shows.
- Sour cream (1/4 cup): This adds tang and keeps the whole thing from feeling heavy, which is the whole point.
- Lime juice (3 tbsp, fresh): Bottled won't give you the brightness; I've tried, and it just doesn't land the same way.
- Chili powder, smoked paprika, cumin (1/2 tsp each, 1/4 tsp): These three together create a depth that feels Mexican-inspired without overpowering the corn.
- Garlic (1 clove, minced): One clove is enough; I made the mistake of doubling it once and the dish became about the garlic instead of the corn.
- Cotija cheese (3/4 cup, crumbled): It's salty and doesn't melt, which is exactly what this salad needs; feta works if you can't find it, but Cotija's texture is irreplaceable.
- Chili flakes or Tajín (1/2 tsp, for garnish): A finishing touch that looks intentional and tastes like you know what you're doing.
- Lime wedges: For serving, because someone will want more brightness.
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Instructions
- Cook the pasta until it's just barely tender:
- Boil your water, salt it generously, and time it carefully—al dente matters here because this salad will sit in dressing and soften everything slightly. Drain and rinse under cold water until it stops steaming, then let it dry on a clean towel for a minute.
- Char the corn until it's almost asking for mercy:
- Heat your skillet until it's genuinely hot, add the corn with no oil at all, and let it sit undisturbed for a minute so the kernels actually make contact with the pan. Stir occasionally for about 4 minutes total, watching for golden-brown spots and even a few blackened bits.
- Build the dressing in a bowl, tasting as you go:
- Whisk mayonnaise, sour cream, lime juice, chili powder, paprika, cumin, and garlic together until it's smooth and smells like something you want to eat. The lime juice might seem like a lot, but it's what keeps this from tasting like ranch with delusions.
- Combine everything gently, like you're tucking people into bed:
- Toss the pasta, charred corn, tomatoes, onion, cilantro, jalapeño if you're using it, and Cotija together with the dressing. Some crumbles of Cotija will resist the dressing—that's correct, leave them be.
- Chill it for at least 30 minutes so flavors stop being strangers:
- Cover the bowl and let it sit in the refrigerator; the flavors genuinely change as they mingle, and eating it cold straight from the fridge is half the appeal.
- Finish with garnish right before serving:
- Sprinkle extra Cotija, chili flakes or Tajín, and fresh lime wedges on top so everything looks like it was worth the effort.
Merken My daughter declared this her favorite thing I make, which shifted something in how I think about cooking. It's not fancy, it's not difficult, but it tastes like someone paid attention, and apparently that's what matters.
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The Science Behind the Char
Charring corn kernels isn't just about looks—it's chemistry. The dry heat creates something called the Maillard reaction, which develops flavors that simple boiling never touches. The first time I left the corn alone in the hot pan instead of constantly stirring it, I understood what was happening: the kernels were caramelizing, turning their natural sugars into something deeper and more interesting.
Making Ahead and Storing
This salad is genuinely better the next day, which is rare and wonderful for a side dish. The pasta continues to absorb flavor, and everything softens into a cohesive whole rather than a collection of separate ingredients. If you're making it more than a few hours ahead, hold the cilantro and Cotija garnish until just before serving—they stay bright and distinct that way, rather than becoming soggy memories of themselves.
Variations Worth Trying
Once you understand the bones of this recipe, it becomes a canvas. I've added black beans for protein, thrown in diced avocado for creaminess, even roasted poblano peppers instead of jalapeños. The constant that always works is the charred corn and the lime-forward dressing—everything else is negotiable.
- Grill corn on the cob before kerneling it for even smokier depth.
- Crumble queso fresco or feta if Cotija disappears from your store shelves.
- Stir in a can of black beans drained and rinsed for a heartier version that becomes an actual main dish.
Merken This recipe is proof that the best meals aren't the ones that demand your entire afternoon—they're the ones that taste like summer caught on a plate and somehow made shareable.
Rezept-Fragen und Antworten
- → Wie wird der Mais für den Salat zubereitet?
Der Mais wird in einer heißen Pfanne ohne Öl 4–5 Minuten geröstet, bis er leicht angebrannt und aromatisch ist.
- → Kann der Cotija Käse ersetzt werden?
Ja, Feta eignet sich gut als Alternative, falls kein Cotija verfügbar ist.
- → Sollte die Pasta vor dem Mischen abgekühlt werden?
Ja, die Pasta wird nach dem Garen abgespült und abgekühlt, um die Textur zu erhalten und das Vermischen zu erleichtern.
- → Welche Schärfe bringt der Jalapeño in den Salat?
Der Jalapeño sorgt für eine milde bis moderate Schärfe, die den Geschmack des Salats unterstreicht, ohne zu dominieren.
- → Wie lange sollte der Salat vor dem Servieren kühlen?
Mindestens 30 Minuten im Kühlschrank, damit sich die Aromen gut verbinden und intensiver werden.
- → Kann man zusätzliche Zutaten hinzufügen?
Ja, Avocado für Cremigkeit oder schwarze Bohnen für mehr Protein können den Salat ergänzen.