Macaroni salads are staples of summer. In Amish kitchens, there are few things that say summer more than a macaroni salad with a hint of crunch from some freshly grown celery or onion chopped in.

As the name of End Of Summer Macaroni Salad implies, you can use anything from your garden to mix in with this salad and the amounts listed below are approximations. If you like carrots, you can increase the amount, or if you are like me and don't care for them much, you can reduce the amounts. My wife's Aunt Sharon made this salad and really combine the crunch and color to come up with a salad that is perfect for the end of summer when your garden is overflowing with goodies.
One thing I like about this End Of Summer Macaroni Salad is the recipe isn't a sweet one. So many Amish macaroni salads are laden with sugar, this one isn't.
I had a red pepper on hand and added some. These everything-but-the-kitchen sink salads are popular in Amish kitchens because the recipes are very versatile. I mean, the only thing I might not add to this if it is going to sit in your refrigerator for a few days is tomatoes just because they'll get mushy and, yeah, in general refrigerating tomatoes degrades flavor.
These are my veggies: broccoli, carrots, cauliflower, you can get them from your garden, or buy them. SIGH, note the blackness on the cauliflower, this is not mold, it's generally oxidation, not pretty, but harmless.
In most cases, the answer is no. Refrigerating degrades the flavor.
This, as an aside, is frustrating to me because I love a cold, sliced tomato. But, my wife is always telling me not to refrigerate them because it degrades the flavor (which again buttresses my belief that any food that tastes good, there will be some reason why you aren't supposed to do it). Anyway, many websites, journals, etc talk about how you shouldn't refrigerate tomatoes. So, you can read more here.
Anyway, back to this recipe, you can definitely throw anything you want from your garden into it. I mean, the recipe below says nothing about onion but don't know why you couldn't add some onion, artichoke, cucumber, radish, peas or whatever else you have. Still, I used the recipe as is below (with the addition of some chopped red pepper mainly for color) and it was great. It's the combination of mayo, sour cream, and ranch that makes it. And, yes, these dry mixes are popular among Amish homemakers, largely because they'll keep for a long time and they can just deploy when needed.
My verdict on this salad is a good one. If you are looking for a savory salad that is colorful, flavorful, and easy, this is is a great bet. You can make it lower cal by cutting the amount of shredded cheese and cutting back on mayo.
This salad is loaded with enough veggies that you could really make a meal out of it. I suppose if you really wanted some protein that you could add some shredded ham to it to really make it well-balanced.
🥗 End-Of-Summer Macaroni Salad
- 1 pound of macaroni noodles, uncooked
- ¾ cup mayo
- ¼ cup sour cream.
- 1 packet of dry ranch dressing
- ½ cup shredded carrots
- ½ cup of diced celery
- 1 large tomato, diced
- ½ cup of diced broccoli
- ½ cup of diced cauliflower
- ½ cup of shredded Cheddar cheese
📋 Instructions
- Cook macaroni noodles.
- While the noodles are cooking, mix mayo and sour cream and then add the packet of dry ranch dressing.
- Put the noodles in a large bowl and then add all the veggies and shredded cheese.
- Then add in mayo mixture.
- Combine well, chill, and serve.
🖨️ Full Recipe
End-Of-Summer Macaroni Salad
Ingredients
- 1 pound elbow macaroni
- ¾ cup mayo
- ¼ cup sour cream
- 1 packet of dry ranch dressing
- ½ cup shredded carrots
- ½ cup diced celery
- 1 large tomato diced
- ½ cup of diced broccoli
- ½ cup diced cauliflower
- ½ cup shredded Cheddar cheese
Instructions
- Cook macaroni noodles.
- While the noodles are cooking, mix mayo and sour cream and then add the packet of dry ranch dressing.
- Put the noodles in a large bowl and then add all the veggies and shredded cheese.
- Then add in mayo mixture.
- Combine well, chill, and serve.
Gert
Kevin,
Shouldn't that be one pound macaroni, cooked, drained and rinsed with cold water?
Still dislike the 'captcha' requirement!!