Easy 20-Minute Greek Chickpea Orzo Salad (No Mayo!)

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This Chickpea Orzo Salad is for when you want to feel like you’re dining on a balcony in Santorini, but in reality, you’re just standing over your kitchen sink in your pajamas.

It’s loaded with chickpeas for protein and has enough feta to make life worth living. It’s naturally mayonnaise-free like this Ranch Chicken Salad, which makes it perfect for potlucks, picnics, or any situation where the food might sit out a little longer than it should.

I love this salad because it can stand alone as a complete meal one day, and the next day, serve it as a side on dishes like my Easy Mediterranean Pork Chops.

A large white serving bowl filled with the completed Chickpea Orzo Salad. Two large serving spoons rest in the bowl. Surrounding the bowl are garnishes including a lemon half, extra feta cheese, sliced red onions, and fresh tomatoes on a wooden cutting board.

🌟 Ingredient Notes For Orzo Pasta Salad

A top-down flat lay of raw ingredients for an orzo salad arranged on a white surface. The ingredients include cooked orzo pasta, canned chickpeas, cherry tomatoes, a long cucumber, Kalamata olives, cubed feta cheese, a red onion half, fresh parsley, a lemon, olive oil, red wine vinegar, dijon mustard, salt, pepper, and dried oregano.

✅ Orzo Pasta – It looks like rice but acts like pasta. It’s the ultimate culinary bait-and-switch.
✅ English Cucumber – The long, skinny kind. We’re scraping the seeds out because watery salad is a crime.
✅ Red Onion – Slice it paper-thin unless you want your breath to be a lethal weapon for the rest of the day.
✅ Kalamata Olives – Salty, purple, and briny. Don’t even think about using those rubbery canned black olives.
✅Cherry Tomatoes – Halve them so they actually stay on your fork.
✅ Feta Cheese – Salty, tangy, and essential. You can crumble it or go for the 1/4″ cubes if you’re feeling precise.
✅ Cooked Chickpeas – Our plant-based protein that makes this feel like a real meal and not just a side thought.

For the dressing:
✅ Fresh Parsley – For that “I just walked through a garden” freshness.
✅ Olive Oil & Red Wine Vinegar – The backbone of the dressing.
✅ Lemon Juice – Fresh is best to provide that bright, citrusy punch.
✅ Dried Oregano & Dijon Mustard – One for the herby aroma, the other to keep the dressing from separating like a bad relationship.
✅ Salt & Black Pepper – To season everything to perfection.

How to Make Chickpea Orzo Salad

  1. Boil the orzo until it’s al dente, then give it a cold shower to stop the starch from turning it into a giant blob.
  2. Chop your cucumbers, tomatoes, and onions. 
  3. Throw all your dressing ingredients into your biggest bowl and whisk until they actually look like they like each other.
  4. Toss in the pasta, the veggies, the chickpeas, and the olives.
  5. Fold in the feta gently so you don’t turn it into paste.
  6. Let it sit for a bit so the flavors can actually merge into something delicious.

Serving and Variations for Chickpea Orzo Salad

  • If the chickpeas aren’t enough for you, toss in some leftover cooked chicken from Chicken Caprese Pasta Salad.
  • This works perfectly well with rotini or bow-tie pasta if your pantry is lacking orzo.
  • If you’re out of red wine vinegar, balsamic works, but be warned: it will turn your beautiful white feta a very un-chic shade of brown.
  • You can’t go wrong with bread. Use the pita chips to scoop up the stray chickpeas and feta at the bottom of your bowl. 
  • While it’s not traditional, using some pickled pink onions instead of the red ones add a mini punch of tang.
A close-up, top-down shot of a single serving of the Chickpea Orzo Salad on a white plate with a silver fork. The salad clearly shows the textures of the orzo, chickpeas, feta, cucumbers, and tomatoes coated in herb dressing.

Storage and Reheating

This salad is a rare gem that actually tastes better the next day. Store it in an airtight container for up to 2 days. If it looks a little dry after sitting in the fridge, hit it with a tiny splash of olive oil or lemon juice to wake it back up.

I really appreciate you stopping by to check out this recipe! If you love it  I hope it makes your meal prep a little less miserable and a lot more delicious. See you next time!

~ Joanne

Chickpea orzo salad on a fork above the plate.
Chickpea orzo salad with feta in a bowl feature image.

Greek Chickpea Orzo Salad

Yield: 6-8
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 20 minutes

A refreshing, zesty, and protein-packed pasta salad loaded with fresh Mediterranean vegetables and a tangy herb vinaigrette.

Instructions

  1. Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Add the orzo and cook until al dente (check about 1 minute before the package directions suggest). Drain and immediately rinse under cool running water to remove excess starch; this keeps the salad from getting gummy.
  2. Slice the cucumber in half lengthwise and use a small spoon to scrape out the seeds. Slice into 1/4” thick semi-circles. Cut the cherry tomatoes in half and slice the red onion into paper-thin quarter-moons.
  3. In a large mixing bowl, combine the chopped fresh parsley, olive oil, red wine vinegar, lemon juice, dried oregano, Dijon mustard, salt, and pepper. Whisk vigorously until the oil and vinegar are fully emulsified.
  4. Add the rinsed orzo, chickpeas, cucumbers, cherry tomatoes, olives, and red onions to the bowl with the dressing.
  5. Gently fold all the ingredients together to ensure everything is evenly coated. Finally, add the crumbled feta cheese and give it one last light toss so the cheese stays in chunks.
  6. For the best flavor, let the salad sit at room temperature or in the fridge for 30 minutes before serving. This allows the pasta to absorb the herb dressing.

Notes

  • If you use regular "slicing" cucumbers instead of English ones, peel them completely. Their skin is tougher than my last breakup.
  • This is the perfect meal prep dish. It holds up beautifully in the fridge, just give it a quick stir before serving.
  • Don't overcook the orzo! It will continue to absorb the dressing as it sits, so keep it firm.

Did you make this recipe?

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