This pasta salad with ham and a creamy yogurt dressing is one of those simple, filling meals you can throw together for lunch or an easy weeknight dinner. Tender pasta, silky ham, and crisp veggies give you that nice mix of soft and crunchy in every bite.
The yogurt dressing keeps it lighter than the classic mayo-heavy versions. Lemon juice, a little mustard, and fresh herbs brighten everything up, so it tastes fresh and clean—not heavy.
Pasta salads are basically made for picnics, potlucks, and packed lunches—anything where you want something that still tastes good after it’s been chilled. In places like Italy and France you’ll see similar cold pasta dishes built on short pasta plus meat, cheese, and whatever vegetables are in season. This version sticks to that same practical idea: one pot, one bowl, and you’ve got a proper meal. The yogurt dressing might sound “modern”, but it’s really just common sense—tangy dairy keeps things creamy without that greasy mayo aftertaste. The trick is balancing the saltiness of the ham with the yogurt’s tang, then leaning on dill and just a touch of Dijon. Give it a short rest in the fridge and it gets even better: the pasta takes on the dressing, but stays pleasantly springy.
In this recipe you’ll find
- Why you’ll love this recipe
- Tips before you start
- What to look for when choosing ingredients
- Secrets to the perfect pasta salad with ham and yogurt dressing
- How to serve pasta salad with ham and yogurt dressing
- Nutrition highlights
- Recipe variations
- Questions & answers
- Common mistakes

Pasta Salad with Ham and a Creamy Yogurt Dressing
Ingredients
- 250 g Short pasta (fusilli/penne) durum wheat
- 200 g Ham cut into ~1 cm cubes
- 1 pcs Cucumber medium, deseeded if needed
- 120 g Cherry tomatoes halved or quartered
- 10 g Dill finely chopped
- 180 g Thick plain natural yogurt unsweetened
- 1 tsp Dijon mustard level teaspoon
- 2 tsp Lemon juice to taste
- 1 tbsp Olive oil + 1 ч. л. for the pasta
- 0.5 tsp Salt approx., depending on the ham
- 0.25 tsp Ground black pepper to taste
Method
- Bring 2.5–3 l water to a boil and salt it well (about 1 tbsp per pot). Add 250 g short pasta and cook at a steady simmer for 8–10 minutes until al dente, stirring for the first 30 seconds so it doesn’t stick.
- Drain in a colander, rinse under cold water for 2 minutes, then let it drain for another 3 minutes, shaking the colander now and then. Tip into a large bowl, add 1 tsp oil, and toss until lightly glossy with no sticky clumps.
- Cut 200 g ham into roughly 1 cm cubes—big enough to notice, not so big it takes over. Chop the cucumber and 120 g cherry tomatoes similarly; if the cucumber is very juicy, spread the cubes on a towel for 5 minutes to dry a bit.
- Make the dressing: mix 180 g thick yogurt, 1 tsp Dijon mustard, 1–2 tsp lemon juice, 1 tbsp olive oil, and a pinch of black pepper. Whisk with a fork for 40–60 seconds until smooth and creamy.If the dressing tastes a little sharp, add 1/2 tsp honey or a pinch of sugar.
- Add the ham, cucumber, cherry tomatoes, and 2–3 tbsp chopped dill to the pasta. Pour in half the dressing and fold for 30–45 seconds with a spatula from the bottom up, checking the consistency; then add the rest so everything is coated, but there are no puddles in the bowl.
- Taste and adjust: go easy on the salt—ham is already salty; you can be more generous with pepper. Cover and chill for 20–30 minutes at 4 °C (39 °F) so the dressing “sets” on the pasta and thickens up.
Right before serving, give it a quick mix for 20–30 seconds and, if needed, add 1–2 tbsp yogurt for extra freshness. Serve cool and keep it away from heat; at room temperature the dressing loosens within about 30 minutes.Add croutons or cheese at the last second so they don’t go soggy.
Notes
Private Notes
Tried this recipe?
Let us know how it was!
Why you’ll love this pasta salad with ham and yogurt dressing
I honestly didn’t expect yogurt to “hold” pasta this well without turning watery. In just 15 minutes you’ve got a lunch that travels nicely—and the dressing doesn’t split on you. The flavour is really balanced: a gentle tang, salty ham, and that clean crunch from cucumber.
- Springy pasta (no stickiness)
- Light dressing, not heavy
- Easy to pack for on-the-go
- Keeps its shape well
- Fresh dill really makes it

Tips before making pasta salad
Want to avoid that gluey, clumpy situation? The pasta needs proper bite. Cook it al dente, then chill it right away—literally 2 minutes under cold running water to stop it cooking. Toss with 1 tsp oil so it doesn’t stick while you chop the ham and veg. And for the dressing: whisk it with a fork until smooth and slightly elastic, so it coats everything evenly instead of sliding off.
- Use short pasta: fusilli, penne
- Cool the pasta under cold water
- Add the dressing in stages, not all at once
- Cut the ham into ~1 cm cubes
- Pat the cucumber dry with paper towel

What to look for when choosing ingredients
Ham tastes best when it’s fresh and cut a little thicker—then the cubes stay juicy instead of dry. Cucumbers are at their crunchiest in summer and early autumn; in winter, go for smaller greenhouse cucumbers and scoop out the watery seedy centre. For the dressing, pick a thick, plain natural yogurt with no sugar—the kind where a spoon can stand up, not one that runs off the spoon.

Short pasta
Fusilli or penne grab the dressing in their grooves; choose durum wheat pasta so it stays firm after chilling.
Ham
A whole piece or good-quality sliced ham without excess moisture works best; smoked-cooked ham gives a more pronounced flavour.
Plain natural yogurt
Thick, 2–5% fat; if yours is a bit runny, strain it through cheesecloth for 20 minutes.
Cucumber
In season, go for outdoor-grown cucumbers; out of season, remove the seeds so the salad doesn’t get watery.
Dill
Most fragrant in summer; add it at the end so the herbs stay bright and fresh.
Secrets to the perfect pasta salad with ham and yogurt dressing
The key is control—especially temperature. If you decide to toast ham cubes or make croutons to go with it, keep it at 180 °C (356 °F) and not a degree higher. The pasta should be firm, with the faintest “core” in the middle. Keep the dressing cold and add it in two rounds; it’s the easiest way to nail the thickness.
- Cook the pasta 1 minute less than usual
- Cool it and drain it really well
- Add the dressing gradually
- Go easy on the mustard
- Adjust salt after adding the ham

How to serve pasta salad with ham and yogurt dressing
Serve it chilled after about 20 minutes so the dressing clings to the pasta. I wouldn’t leave it sitting out for hours—yogurt dressing thins as it warms up, and cucumbers start releasing water.
- In deep bowls with extra dill on top
- Portioned into small glasses for a buffet table
- In a lunchbox with the dressing packed separately
- Scooped onto romaine leaves
- With croutons added right before serving

Nutrition highlights of pasta salad with ham and yogurt dressing
Yogurt contains live cultures formed during fermentation—a well-studied process where lactose is converted into lactic acid. Paired with pasta and ham, you get a satisfying salad without relying on a high-fat mayonnaise dressing.
- Protein from ham and yogurt
- Carbs from pasta for energy
- Fibre from vegetables and herbs
- Less fat than a mayo-based dressing

Recipe variations for pasta salad with ham and yogurt dressing
For a slightly more “party” version, toss in a handful of rocket (arugula), add a pinch of lemon zest, and finish with thin shavings of a hard cheese—suddenly it looks restaurant-y with basically no extra work.
- Add sweetcorn and bell pepper
- Stir in peas and spring onion
- Add 30–40 g grated hard cheese
- Make it spicy: horseradish or chilli
- Add a diced apple for extra freshness

Questions & answers
When a friend made this for a picnic the first time, most of the questions were about keeping the pasta springy and the yogurt dressing thick.
Як зберегти салат густим до подачі?
Охолодіть макарони повністю, огірок підсушіть, а заправку додайте за 30 minutes до подачі або везіть окремо в баночці.
Чому краще брати короткі макарони?
Фузілі, пенне чи ріжки рівномірно змішуються з кубиками шинки й овочами та «ловлять» соус у формі, тому салат виходить однорідний.
Що робити якщо пересолив?
Додайте ще 2–3 ст. л. йогурту та жменю нарізаного огірка або листя салату; кисломолочна основа й додатковий об’єм вирівняють солоність.
Скільки зберігається салат у холодильнику?
У закритому контейнері — до 24 hours; перед подачею перемішайте й за потреби додайте 1–2 ст. л. йогурту.
If you’re into easy pasta-based meals like this, it’s worth browsing a few more pasta salad combos. You can swap in different veg, cheeses, meats, or even fish and it never really gets boring. Have a look at these pasta salad recipes with ham for more quick lunch and weeknight dinner ideas.

Common mistakes when making pasta salad with ham and yogurt dressing
I’ve seen even confident home cooks mix warm pasta straight into yogurt—and the dressing instantly turns thin. It’s a temperature thing: heat breaks down the creamy structure, and the starch comes out more aggressively. Another classic issue is watery cucumbers; they dump liquid fast and the salad loses that neat, “held together” look. And then there’s the simplest one: salting before tasting, forgetting the ham and mustard already bring a lot of salt on their own.
Why did the dressing turn runny?
The pasta was still warm or the yogurt was too thin. Cool the pasta for 10 minutes and use thick yogurt (strain it if needed).
Why did the pasta clump together?
It was overcooked or not rinsed after boiling. Cook to al dente and rinse under cold water for 2 minutes, then toss with 1 tsp oil.
Why did the salad get watery so quickly?
The cucumber was too watery. Scoop out the seedy centre, add a pinch of salt, leave it in a sieve for 10 minutes, then pat dry.
Why does it taste a bit flat?
It needs more acidity and aroma. Add 1–2 tsp lemon juice and more dill; keep mustard to about 1/2 tsp.

Responses