Deviled Egg Pasta Salad
Deviled egg pasta salad hits that sweet spot between nostalgic and satisfying: creamy, tangy, a little salty, and full of the kind of texture that keeps people circling back for…
Tip: save now, cook later.Deviled egg pasta salad hits that sweet spot between nostalgic and satisfying: creamy, tangy, a little salty, and full of the kind of texture that keeps people circling back for another scoop. The pasta carries the dressing, the eggs bring that unmistakable deviled-egg richness, and the celery and onion keep the whole bowl from turning heavy. It tastes familiar at first bite, then the mustard and relish wake everything up.
The trick is treating it like two salads that happen to meet in one bowl. The pasta needs to be cooled before it goes into the dressing, or the mayo loosens and the whole thing turns slick instead of creamy. The eggs also matter more than people think: some get chopped into the salad for body, while a few halves go on top for that classic deviled-egg look and a little extra richness in each serving.
Below, I’ll walk through the part that matters most — how to keep the dressing balanced so it tastes bright instead of flat — plus a few smart swaps if you need to work with what’s already in your fridge.
The dressing clung to the macaroni instead of sliding off, and the smoked paprika on top made it taste just like deviled eggs. I added it to our cookout table and it was gone before the burgers were done.
Save this deviled egg pasta salad for the next cookout when you want the creamy, tangy flavor of deviled eggs in a cold pasta salad that disappears fast.
The Dressing Needs to Taste Sharper Than You Think
Cold pasta dulls flavor. Eggs do too. That means the dressing for deviled egg pasta salad has to taste a little louder in the bowl than you want it to taste on its own. The mustard, vinegar, and relish are what keep this from reading like plain macaroni salad, and that balance matters more than the exact brand of mayo you use.
The other place people go wrong is underseasoning after the pasta goes in. Pasta absorbs salt and acidity as it sits, so a dressing that tastes perfect before mixing can land flat after an hour in the fridge. Taste again after everything is combined. If it needs more bite, add a splash of vinegar or another spoonful of mustard, not just more mayo.
- Mayonnaise — This is the base of the dressing, so use one you actually like eating straight. A full-fat mayo gives the best body and keeps the salad from turning greasy. Light mayo works in a pinch, but the texture is thinner and less stable after chilling.
- Yellow mustard and Dijon mustard — Yellow mustard gives the classic deviled-egg flavor, while Dijon adds depth and a little edge. Don’t swap both for one or the other unless you have to; the two together are what make the dressing taste like deviled eggs instead of plain tangy mayo.
- Apple cider vinegar — This sharpens the dressing and keeps the richness in check. If you use white vinegar instead, start with a little less because it lands harsher. The vinegar also helps the flavors stay bright after the pasta chills.
- Dill pickle relish — Relish gives you tang, sweetness, and texture in one spoonful. Finely chopped dill pickles can stand in if that’s what you have, but drain them well so the salad doesn’t turn watery.
- Hard-boiled eggs — Use eggs that are fully cooled before chopping so the whites stay neat instead of crumbling. Half go into the salad for richness, and the reserved halves on top give you that deviled-egg look without making the whole bowl heavy.
- Celery and red onion — These are the crunch that keeps the salad from feeling one-note. Dice them fine so every bite gets a little snap without overwhelming the eggs. If raw onion is too sharp for you, soak it in cold water for 5 minutes and drain well.
How to Keep the Pasta, Eggs, and Dressing from Fighting Each Other
Cook the Pasta Past the Point of Firm
Elbow macaroni should be al dente, but just barely. You want it tender enough to hold dressing without staying chalky in the center. Rinse it under cold water until it’s fully cooled, then drain it well so the salad doesn’t get diluted. If the pasta is still warm, it will thin the mayo and the dressing won’t cling the same way.
Build the Dressing Before Anything Else Goes In
Whisk the mayo, mustards, vinegar, sugar, garlic powder, onion powder, salt, and pepper until the bowl looks smooth and glossy. The sugar isn’t there to make it sweet; it just softens the vinegar and mustard so the salad tastes rounded instead of sharp. If the dressing tastes a touch too intense at this stage, that’s correct — the pasta and eggs will mellow it.
Fold, Don’t Smash
Add the cooled pasta first and coat it thoroughly before folding in the eggs, celery, onion, relish, and chives. Stir gently so the eggs stay in small pieces instead of disappearing into the dressing. The salad should look chunky and creamy, not mashed. Finish with paprika and the egg halves on top, then chill it for at least an hour so the flavors settle together.
How to Adapt This for Different Tables and Different Fridges
Dairy-Free Without Losing the Creamy Finish
This recipe is already dairy-free as written, which is part of why it works so well for a crowd. Just check the mayo you buy if you’re serving someone with specific dietary needs, since a few brands use add-ins that change the texture. Keep the dressing ratios the same and you’ll still get that rich, clingy coating.
Gluten-Free With One Easy Swap
Use a gluten-free elbow pasta that holds its shape after chilling. Some gluten-free pastas get soft fast, so pull them from the water when they still have a little firmness in the center and cool them quickly. The dressing and egg mixture don’t need any other changes.
More Tang, Less Sweet
If you like a sharper deviled-egg flavor, cut the sugar in half and add another teaspoon of vinegar. That pushes the salad toward the classic picnic-style bite instead of a softer mayonnaise salad. I’d do this if the pasta is serving alongside smoky or rich mains.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store covered for up to 3 days. The pasta will absorb some dressing, so it may look a little thicker on day two.
- Freezer: Don’t freeze this one. The mayo breaks and the eggs turn rubbery after thawing, so the texture won’t recover.
- Reheating: Serve it cold, straight from the fridge. If it’s been sitting overnight and looks dry, stir in a spoonful of mayo or a splash of vinegar to bring it back before serving.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Deviled Egg Pasta Salad
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Bring a large pot of salted boiling water to a boil and cook the elbow macaroni according to package directions until al dente. Drain, rinse under cold water until fully cooled, and set aside.
- Place the eggs in a saucepan, cover with cold water, bring to a boil, then turn off the heat and let sit covered for 10–12 minutes. Transfer to an ice bath and peel once cooled.
- In a large mixing bowl, whisk together mayonnaise, yellow mustard, Dijon mustard, apple cider vinegar, granulated sugar, garlic powder, onion powder, salt, and black pepper until smooth and creamy.
- Add the cooled pasta to the dressing bowl and toss until every piece is well coated.
- Slice 2 eggs in half and set aside for topping, then roughly chop the remaining 6 eggs into small bite-sized pieces and fold them into the pasta along with diced celery, diced red onion, dill pickle relish, and chopped fresh chives. Stir gently to combine without breaking up the eggs too much.
- Taste and adjust seasoning by adding more salt, vinegar, or mustard to your preference.
- Transfer to a serving dish, arrange the reserved egg halves on top, and dust generously with smoked paprika, then garnish with extra chives.
- Cover and refrigerate for at least 1 hour before serving to let the flavors meld. Serve cold.