Avocado Salad With Tomato Cucumber Mozzarella

Servings: 2 Total Time: 15 mins Difficulty: Beginner
No-Cook Creamy Crisp Summer Bowl
Avocado Salad With Tomato Cucumber Mozzarella pinit

The avocado salad with tomato cucumber mozzarella is a no-cook plate that brings creamy, juicy, and milky textures into one bowl. It takes about 15 minutes from washing the produce to sitting down with a fork. You get a balanced bite that works as a side, a light lunch, or a starter before something heavier.

This version keeps the cuts uniform so every forkful hits avocado, tomato, cucumber, and mozzarella together. The dressing is a lean olive oil and lemon mix that keeps the vegetables crisp instead of soggy. It scales easily for two people or a small table without changing the method. If you enjoyed this, our cucumber bread step is worth trying next. Making this avocado salad with tomato cucumber mozzarella at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.

Why You’ll Love These Avocado Salad With Tomato Cucumber Mozzarella

  • Ready in 15 minutes with zero stove or oven time.
  • Cool and crisp from cucumber against creamy ripe avocado.
  • Mozzarella adds a soft, milky bite that fills the plate.
  • Lemon dressing keeps tomatoes bright without drowning them.
  • Works as a side, lunch, or appetizer without rework.

Ingredients You’ll Need

  • 2 ripe avocados (firm-ripe, about 300 g total), peeled and cubed
  • 3 medium tomatoes (about 350 g), cored and cut into wedges
  • 1 large cucumber (about 250 g), sliced into half-moons
  • 200 g fresh mozzarella balls (ciliegine), drained
  • 2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice (from about half a lemon)
  • 1/4 tsp fine salt
  • 1/8 tsp black pepper
  • 6 fresh basil leaves, torn

Ingredient Substitutions

Fresh mozzarella balls: Replace with 200 g diced block mozzarella if ciliegine are unavailable. Block mozzarella is firmer and less milky, so the salad loses some of its soft center but holds shape better when tossed. Cut it into 1 cm cubes so the size stays close to the original balls. The avocado salad with tomato cucumber mozzarella works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.

Cucumber: Swap the large cucumber for 2 small Persian cucumbers with thinner skin. Persian types carry fewer seeds and a tighter crunch, which keeps the bowl from turning watery after dressing. You can leave the skin on since it is thin and tender. Storing leftover avocado salad with tomato cucumber mozzarella correctly keeps it tasting good for days.

Lemon juice: Use 1 tbsp red wine vinegar instead of lemon for a sharper, less fruity acid. The vinegar tightens the tomato juices and gives a more savory edge that pairs well with basil. Cut the salt to 1/8 tsp because vinegar carries its own bite. For the best results with this avocado salad with tomato cucumber mozzarella, read through all the steps before starting.

Basil: Replace torn basil with 1 tbsp chopped fresh mint if basil is out of season. Mint cools the palate and pushes the salad toward a Mediterranean style without changing the method. Avoid dried mint here because it turns dusty and misses the fresh leaf texture. For another easy option, check out our jalapeno margarita cucumber.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Wash the tomatoes, cucumber, and basil. Pat them dry with a towel so the dressing sticks instead of sliding off.
  2. Cut the avocados in half, remove the pits, scoop the flesh, and cube into 2 cm pieces. Work gently to keep the cubes from smashing.
  3. Core the tomatoes and cut into 8 wedges each. Slice the cucumber into 1 cm half-moons.
  4. Drain the mozzarella balls and pat dry. Halve them if they are larger than a cherry tomato.
  5. In a small bowl, whisk the olive oil, lemon juice, salt, and pepper until the mix looks slightly thick.
  6. Place avocado, tomato, cucumber, and mozzarella in a wide bowl. Pour the dressing over the top.
  7. Add torn basil and toss twice with a spoon, just until the leaves spread. serve immediately for the crispest result.

Pro Tips

Pick avocados that yield slightly under gentle thumb pressure; rock-hard ones won’t soften the texture the salad needs. If they are too soft, the cubes collapse when tossed and turn the bowl mushy.

Salting tomato wedges and letting them sit for 5 minutes before dressing pulls out excess water and concentrates the flavor. Dump that liquid out so the bowl stays dry.

Chill the mozzarella balls in the fridge until just before mixing so they stay firm against the room-temperature vegetables. Warm cheese weeps and loosens the dressing.

Learn more about simple no-cook dressings from simple dressings if you want to build your own acid-and-oil ratios. Their ratio method helps you scale lemon without losing balance.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Cutting the avocado too early leaves the cubes brown at the edges before the bowl is served. Cube them last, right before the dressing goes on, to keep the green color.

Over-tossing breaks the mozzarella and mashes the avocado into the dressing. Two gentle turns with a wide spoon are enough to coat without crushing.

Pouring all the dressing at once on a tall pile compresses the vegetables instead of coating them. Spread the pieces in a wide bowl first so the oil reaches every surface. You might also like our avocado smoothie.

Serving Suggestions

Set the bowl next to pasta salad for a wider summer table without extra cooking. The creamy avocado balances the acid in tomato-based sides.

Spoon the salad over toasted sourdough for a open-faced lunch that holds the juices. The bread absorbs the olive oil and lemon so nothing is wasted.

Add a cucumber salad on the side if you want more crunch without repeating the mozzarella. Keep the second plate dressed lightly so the two don’t compete.

Storage and Reheating

Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 2 days because the avocado browns and the mozzarella sits in dairy. Press plastic wrap against the surface to slow oxidation.

This salad is not reheated; serve it cold or at cool room temperature straight from the fridge. Discard any portion left out for more than 2 hours to stay food-safe.

If you prep ahead, keep the cut vegetables and cheese separate from the dressing and combine at salad dressing time. The prepped parts hold for a day without turning soft.

Recipe Variations

Spicy Version

Add 1/4 tsp red chili flakes to the olive oil and lemon mix before pouring. The heat sits in the oil and coats the cucumber without burning the avocado. Expect a warm finish that still reads fresh.

Greek Swap

Replace mozzarella with 150 g crumbled feta and add 10 pitted kalamata olives. Feta brings a saltier, drier crumble and the olives add a briny note that shifts the salad toward Greek plates. Skip extra salt because feta carries enough.

Protein Add-On

Top the finished bowl with 150 g drained canned chickpeas for a fuller lunch. The beans add a nutty bite and lift the plate to a main without changing the cutting method. Warm them first if you dislike cold legumes.

Herb Change

Use 1 tbsp chopped fresh dill instead of basil for a cooler, sharper leaf. Dill pairs strongly with cucumber and gives the bowl a different aromatic line. Keep the lemon because dill leans on acid to stay bright.

Avocado Salad With Tomato Cucumber Mozzarella pinit
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Avocado Salad With Tomato Cucumber Mozzarella

Difficulty: Beginner Prep Time 15 mins Total Time 15 mins
Servings: 2 Estimated Cost: $ 10 Calories: 350 kcal

Description

This avocado salad with tomato, cucumber, and mozzarella is a no-cook plate that brings creamy, juicy, and milky textures into one bowl in about 15 minutes. It works as a side, light lunch, or starter with a lean olive oil and lemon dressing that keeps the vegetables crisp.

Ingredients

Cooking Mode Disabled

Instructions

  1. Wash and dry produce

    Wash the tomatoes, cucumber, and basil under cool running water to remove dirt and residue. Pat them dry with a clean towel so the dressing sticks instead of sliding off the surfaces when added later.

  2. Cube the avocados

    Cut the avocados in half, remove the pits, and scoop the flesh out with a spoon. Cube the flesh into 2 cm pieces and work gently with the knife to keep the cubes from smashing and turning mushy.

  3. Cut tomatoes and cucumber

    Core the tomatoes and cut each one into 8 wedges so the size stays even with the other items. Slice the cucumber into 1 cm half-moons using a steady downward motion to keep the rounds uniform.

  4. Drain mozzarella balls

    Drain the mozzarella balls in a colander and pat them dry with a towel to remove excess liquid. Halve them with a small knife if they are larger than a cherry tomato so every bite stays balanced.

  5. Whisk the dressing

    In a small bowl, combine the olive oil, lemon juice, salt, and pepper with a whisk. Whisk until the mix looks slightly thick and emulsified rather than separated, about 20 seconds of steady stirring.

  6. Combine salad ingredients

    Place the avocado, tomato, cucumber, and mozzarella in a wide bowl, spreading the pieces out so they form a single layer. This wide layout helps the dressing reach every surface instead of compressing the vegetables into a tall pile.

  7. Dress and add basil

    Pour the dressing over the top of the spread-out ingredients in the bowl. Add the torn basil leaves and toss twice with a spoon, just until the leaves spread and the oil coats the pieces without crushing them.

  8. Serve immediately

    Serve the salad immediately for the crispest result and brightest avocado color. The bowl should look fresh and cool at room temperature or chilled, with distinct cubes and wedges visible before anyone digs in.

Nutrition Facts

Servings 2


Amount Per Serving
Calories 350kcal
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 28g44%
Saturated Fat 9g45%
Cholesterol 30mg10%
Sodium 380mg16%
Total Carbohydrate 16g6%
Dietary Fiber 7g29%
Sugars 6g
Protein 13g26%

* 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: Store leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 2 days because the avocado browns and the mozzarella sits in dairy; press plastic wrap against the surface to slow oxidation.
  • Make ahead: Keep cut vegetables and cheese separate from the dressing and combine at salad time; the prepped parts hold for a day without turning soft.
  • Pro tip: Salt tomato wedges and let them sit 5 minutes, then dump the liquid so the bowl stays dry, and learn more from caesar dressing guide for acid-oil ratios.
  • Serving: Do not reheat this salad; serve cold or at cool room temperature straight from the fridge and discard any portion left out over 2 hours.
Keywords: avocado salad, tomato, cucumber, mozzarella, no-cook, lemon dressing, basil, summer side
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Frequently Asked Questions

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Can I make this ahead of time?

Yes, you can prep the cut vegetables and cheese separately from the dressing and combine at salad time, holding the prepped parts in the fridge for up to a day without turning soft. Cube the avocado last, right before dressing, to avoid browning at the edges.

Can I freeze this recipe?

No, freezing is not recommended because the avocado turns brown and mushy and the fresh mozzarella weeps when thawed. Keep leftovers refrigerated in an airtight container for up to 2 days instead.

What can I substitute for fresh mozzarella balls?

Replace the ciliegine with 200 g diced block mozzarella cut into 1 cm cubes if unavailable; the salad loses some soft center but holds shape better when tossed. For a Greek-style swap, use 150 g crumbled feta and skip extra salt, as shown in our simple shirazi salad ideas.

How do I know when it's ready to serve?

The salad is ready once dressed and tossed twice, with every piece coated and basil leaves spread through the bowl. Serve right away while the cucumber is still crisp and the avocado cubes show a bright green cut surface with no brown edges.

Anna Food and Lifestyle Blogger

Hi, I’m Anna — a wellness enthusiast, recipe creator, and founder of Cook Recipe. I love making healthy, easy, and feel-good meals that inspire others to live happier, more balanced lives. When I’m not in the kitchen, you’ll find me exploring new places or flowing through a yoga session! 🌿

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