A tomato and cucumber salad is one of the fastest ways to get a crisp, cooling side on the table without turning on the stove. This version leans on ripe tomatoes, seedless cucumbers, and a short lemon-olive oil dressing so the vegetables stay snappy. You get a prep-light dish that works next to grilled meat, grain bowls, or a Mediterranean pasta salad for a larger spread.
The texture contrast is the point: tomatoes bring juicy sweetness, cucumbers add a clean crunch, and the dressing ties them with acidity rather than heaviness. Because there’s no cooking, the quality of the produce decides the result. Shop for firm cucumbers and tomatoes that smell fruity at the stem end. Making this tomato and cucumber salad at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.
Why You’ll Love These Tomato And Cucumber Salad
- Ready in about 10 minutes with no heat, so it’s a calm option on hot days.
- Uses four main vegetables plus pantry oil and lemon, keeping the cost low.
- Holds its crunch for hours if you salt the cucumbers first and drain them.
- Easy to scale up for a potluck or down for a single lunch bowl.
- Pairs with almost any protein because the flavor is neutral-bright, not spicy.
Ingredients You’ll Need
- 4 medium Roma tomatoes (about 500 g), cored and cut into 1.5 cm wedges
- 2 large seedless cucumbers (about 400 g), sliced into 5 mm rounds
- 1 small red onion (about 80 g), thinly sliced
- 2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
- 1 tbsp fresh lemon juice (from about half a lemon)
- 1 tsp fine sea salt, divided
- 1/4 tsp cracked black pepper
- 2 tbsp chopped fresh parsley
Ingredient Substitutions
Seedless cucumbers: Replace with 2 regular cucumbers, peeled and seeded, using the same weight. Regular cucumbers hold more water in the center, so after slicing, salt them and rest 10 minutes before draining to avoid a watery bowl. The peel adds a slightly tougher bite, but the flavor stays close. The tomato and cucumber salad works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.
Red onion: Swap for 1 small shallot, minced, for a milder, sweeter sharpness. Shallots break down faster in acid, so add them at the end so they don’t turn mushy. You lose the purple color but keep the onion contrast. Storing leftover tomato and cucumber salad correctly keeps it tasting good for days.
Extra-virgin olive oil: Use a light neutral oil like grapeseed at a 1:1 ratio if you want less grassy taste. The salad becomes cleaner and less peppery, though it also loses some body. Keep the lemon, since the oil was carrying part of the aroma. For the best results with this tomato and cucumber salad, read through all the steps before starting.
Fresh parsley: Substitute 2 tbsp fresh dill for a more classic Eastern Mediterranean note. Dill pairs strongly with cucumber and gives a softer, anise-like finish. Avoid dried parsley here; it adds papery bits without flavor.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Place cucumber slices in a colander, toss with 1/2 tsp salt, and rest 10 minutes at room temperature to draw out water.
- While cucumbers drain, cut tomatoes into wedges and put them in a wide mixing bowl with the red onion.
- Pat cucumbers dry with a clean towel, then add them to the tomatoes so the bowl stays crisp, not pooled.
- Whisk olive oil, lemon juice, remaining 1/2 tsp salt, and pepper in a small cup until it looks slightly thickened.
- Pour dressing over the vegetables and turn gently with a spoon until every piece is lightly coated.
- Scatter parsley on top and serve within 30 minutes for the firmest texture, or chill 20 minutes first if you prefer cold.
Pro Tips
Salting cucumbers before mixing is the single step that keeps the salad from turning soggy by the second hour. The salt pulls free water out of the cells so they stay snap-able.
Use a serrated knife for tomatoes; it cuts the skin without crushing the flesh and leaking juice onto the board. A plain chef’s knife tends to squash wedges.
Chill the mixing bowl for 15 minutes before assembling if your kitchen is warm, since cold surfaces slow wilting. This small move helps the dish stay bright at a buffet.
For balanced acidity, add lemon juice a teaspoon at a time and taste, because tomato sweetness varies by season. You can read more on balancing salad dressings from a trusted source.
Cut tomatoes and cucumbers in similar sizes so each bite gets both, rather than a mouthful of one. Even rounds and wedges around 1.5 cm read as intentional, not chopped.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Skipping the cucumber salt step leads to a watery pool at the bottom of the bowl within 20 minutes. Always drain and pat dry before combining with tomatoes.
Using under-ripe hard tomatoes makes the salad taste blank and acidic, since there’s little sugar to meet the lemon. Choose tomatoes that give slightly under gentle pressure.
Dressing the salad too early, more than an hour before serving, softens the cucumbers past crisp. If you must prep ahead, keep vegetables and dressing separate until 10 minutes before the meal.
Over-pouring oil hides the vegetable flavor under a greasy coat, so measure the 2 tbsp rather than free-pouring. The lemon should stay audible in the background.
Serving Suggestions
Set the bowl beside grilled chicken or lamb skewers, where the cool crunch cuts the char. The Shirazi salad follows a similar logic if you want a tomato-onion cousin.
Spoon leftovers over three bean salad greens to add moisture and a fresh note to a heavier lunch.
For a light dinner, serve it with warm pita and a slab of feta, letting the tomatoes and cucumbers act as the main plate. A Caesar dressing on the side turns the same veggies into a different salad.
Storage and Reheating
Keep the undressed vegetables in an airtight container for up to 3 days, and store dressing separately in a small jar. Once dressed, the salad holds in the fridge for about up to 2 days, though it softens.
There is no reheating step because this is a cold dish; bring it to cool room temperature for 10 minutes before eating if it tastes flat straight from the fridge. Don’t leave it out longer than 2 hours total.
If you freeze it, the cucumbers go mushy and the tomatoes break, so skip the freezer entirely. A summer berry salad also fails freezing for the same cell-wall reason.
Recipe Variations
Feta Version
Crumble 60 g feta over the bowl after dressing for a salty, creamy counterpoint to the lemon. The cheese softens slightly from the oil but keeps distinct grains, making each bite more savory. Skip extra salt if your feta is brined.
Mint Version
Replace parsley with 2 tbsp chopped fresh mint for a cooler, sweeter herbal note that suits lamb. Mint wilts faster than parsley, so add it right before serving to keep the leaves perked. The radicchio salad uses a similar fresh-herb swap idea.
Spiced Oil Version
Warm the olive oil with 1/2 tsp cumin seeds for 1 minute on medium-low heat, then cool before dressing. The toasted seeds add a nutty warmth that changes the salad from raw-bright to gently spiced. Let the oil return to room temperature so it doesn’t cook the cucumbers.
Tomato And Cucumber Salad
Description
A tomato and cucumber salad is a fast, cooling side that needs no stove and leans on ripe tomatoes, seedless cucumbers, and a short lemon-olive oil dressing. The result is snappy, juicy, and bright, pairing easily with grilled meats, grain bowls, or pasta salads.
Ingredients
Instructions
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Salt and drain cucumbers
Place the cucumber slices in a colander and toss them with 1/2 tsp salt. Let them rest at room temperature for 10 minutes so the salt draws out free water from the cells. You will see beads of liquid on the slices and the colander bottom will pool slightly, which keeps the salad from turning soggy later.
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Prep tomatoes and onion
While the cucumbers drain, cut the cored Roma tomatoes into 1.5 cm wedges using a serrated knife to avoid crushing the flesh. Put the wedges into a wide mixing bowl with the thinly sliced red onion. The bowl should look roomy so the vegetables stay uncrowded and crisp when dressed.
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Dry and combine vegetables
Pat the rested cucumber slices dry with a clean kitchen towel to remove surface moisture. Add the dried cucumbers to the tomatoes and onion in the wide bowl so the mix stays crisp rather than pooled with water. The cucumbers should feel firm and snap slightly when bent, not limp.
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Whisk the dressing
In a small cup, whisk together the 2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil, 1 tbsp fresh lemon juice, remaining 1/2 tsp salt, and 1/4 tsp cracked black pepper. Whisk until the mixture looks slightly thickened and emulsified, about 20 seconds. Taste and add lemon a teaspoon at a time if your tomatoes are less sweet this season.
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Dress the salad
Pour the dressing over the vegetables in the bowl and turn gently with a spoon until every piece is lightly coated. Use a folding motion rather than stirring so the tomato wedges do not break apart. The vegetables should glisten but not sit in a pool of dressing.
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Add parsley and serve
Scatter the 2 tbsp chopped fresh parsley on top of the dressed salad. Serve within 30 minutes for the firmest texture, or chill the bowl for 20 minutes first if you prefer it cold. The cucumbers should still crunch when bitten and the herbs should look perked, not wilted.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 4
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 120kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 7g11%
- Saturated Fat 1g5%
- Sodium 300mg13%
- Total Carbohydrate 14g5%
- Dietary Fiber 3g12%
- Sugars 8g
- Protein 2g4%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
- Storage: Keep undressed vegetables in an airtight container for up to 3 days and dressing separate; once dressed, refrigerate up to 2 days though it softens, and discard if left out longer than 2 hours total.
- Make ahead: Chill the mixing bowl 15 minutes before assembling on warm days to slow wilting, and pair this with a Mediterranean pasta salad for a larger spread.
- Pro tip: Salting cucumbers before mixing is the single step that keeps the salad from turning soggy by the second hour, so never skip the drain and pat-dry.
- Serving: Spoon leftovers over three bean salad greens to add moisture and a fresh note to a heavier lunch.
