Summer Salad Recipe That Keeps Giving All Season Long

Peak-season fruit, farmers market vegetables, fresh greens, burrata, prosciutto — or anything else you love — all arranged on a tray and called a summer salad. This is the simple blueprint that keeps giving all season long.

Same concept, a different salad each time. Think of it as a choose-your-own-summer-salad-adventure.

When produce is at its peak, sweet and juicy fruits and vegetables barely need a recipe. Arrange them, dress them simply, and don’t overcomplicate things.

Summer salad with corn, asparagus, cheese, figs, avocado, tomatoes, basil and a vinaigrette.

This post is a celebration of summer in salad form: vibrant fruits and vegetables so good they hardly need anything else. Sweet strawberries, ripe tomatoes, crunchy watermelon, creamy burrata, crispy chickpeas, pickled radishes — anything that sings of summer is welcome.

If it belongs in a salad, it belongs in our salad.

Summer salad board filled with seasonal summer fruit and veggies, overhead shot on a black background.

I aim for salads that balance texture and flavor, and they change depending on what looks best at the market and how I’m feeling. Want a light, refreshing watermelon-and-feta vibe? Or a creamy peach-and-burrata moment? Maybe caramelized figs with prosciutto, or a colorful rainbow salad? I often riff on classics — a strawberry-Burrata panzanella or a plum-and-cucumber salad with roasted ginger vinaigrette are fun twists.

Summer salad with tomatoes, peaches, figs, prosciutto and burrata.

The Summer Salad Blueprint

Pick Your Fruits: peaches, figs, strawberries, tomatoes, watermelon — if it’s delicious on its own, it will shine in a salad.

Pick Your Veggies: summer squash, corn, green beans — let the farmers market guide you. Try different preparations: raw, roasted, blanched, or charred.

Pick Your Greens: little gems, peppery arugula, butter lettuce — or skip greens entirely if you prefer a fruit-and-cheese board.

Pick Your Add-Ons: aim for contrast — crispy chickpeas, toasted nuts, seeds, pickled radishes, creamy burrata or fresh mozzarella, and crispy prosciutto. If you’re unsure about a combination, taste a bite and experiment.

Pick Your Dressing: let the produce be the star and keep the dressing simple. A classic oil-and-vinegar is always good. Choose a vinegar that complements your ingredients — red wine for brightness, sherry for roundness, balsamic for sweetness, or white wine for subtlety. Add lemon for lift, shallots for bite, a touch of honey or maple for sweetness, and mustard for depth and emulsification. Whisk or shake and you’re done.

Serve it as a main or a side. Add baked feta, roasted sweet potato, or a roasted meat and the salad becomes a full meal.

Summer fruit and veggie salad! There's berries, stone fruit, radishes, summer squash, greens and more arranged on a tray. Overhead shot.

Summer Salads Worth Making

Summer salads are my go-to: peak produce, minimal fuss, maximum color. Here are eight salad ideas inspired by that ethos — vibrant, simple, and crowd-pleasing.

Use the blueprint to build your own version and make it yours. Play in the kitchen and lean into what’s fresh and flavorful.

Recipe

Summer salad with corn, asparagus, cheese, figs, avocado, tomatoes, basil and a vinaigrette.

Summer Salad Ideas

Choose your favorite summer fruits and vegetables, arrange them on a tray, and serve with a bowl of dressed greens for a fun, build-your-own-salad experience.
Prep Time25
Cook Time20
Course: Appetizer, Entree, Salad
Cuisine: Californian
Servings: 10
Author: Daniela Gerson

Ingredients

  • 1 sweet potato, thinly sliced
  • 1 bunch asparagus blanched
  • 2 ears fresh corn shucked and kernels removed
  • 1 pint cherry tomatoes halved
  • 4 heirloom tomatoes sliced
  • 1 pint figs halved
  • 8 oz fresh mozzarella thinly sliced
  • 6 heads little gem lettuce washed and dried
  • 2 avocados, diced
  • handful basil leaves
  • flaky sea salt to taste
  • black pepper to taste

For the Vinaigrette

  • 1 shallot, minced
  • 1 lemon, juiced
  • 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard
  • 3 tablespoons vinegar balsamic, sherry, red, or white
  • 1 teaspoon honey
  • 3/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
  • kosher salt to taste
  • black pepper

Instructions

  • Prep ingredients you’ll cook first: sweet potato, asparagus, and corn. For the sweet potato, preheat the oven to 400°F. Thinly slice the sweet potato (peeling optional). Toss with 1 tablespoon olive oil, salt, and pepper, and roast until tender, about 15–20 minutes, flipping once.
  • To blanch asparagus, prepare a large bowl of ice water. Trim the ends and bring a pot of salted water to a boil. Add asparagus and cook until just tender, about 3–5 minutes depending on thickness.
  • Drain the asparagus and immediately plunge into the ice water for about a minute to stop the cooking. Drain and set aside.
  • Shuck the corn and remove the kernels with a knife. Heat a sauté pan with 1 tablespoon olive oil, add the corn with a pinch of salt and pepper. Cook on high for some char or on medium-low for 8–10 minutes until the corn loses its raw starchiness. Set aside.
  • Prep the remaining ingredients: slice tomatoes, halve figs, slice mozzarella, wash and dry the lettuce, and dice the avocado.
  • Make the vinaigrette: combine everything except the olive oil, then slowly whisk in the oil until emulsified. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
  • Arrange all salad ingredients except the lettuce on a tray and serve with a bowl of dressed greens. Optionally drizzle a little dressing or high-quality olive oil on the board and finish with flaky sea salt and freshly cracked pepper.

Notes

  • Buy local and organic produce when possible.
  • Choose a variety of textures and flavors for a more interesting salad.
  • Serving size can be adjusted to suit your crowd.
  • If taking this to a potluck, assemble on a rimmed baking sheet and cover until serving.
  • The vinaigrette can be made up to 3 days ahead and refrigerated. Bring to room temperature before serving.

If you make this recipe, feel free to share and tag @DanielaGerson — it’s always nice to see how you build your summer salads.

summer farmers market bounty made into a salad board! summer fruits, veggies, greens and cheese arranged on a tray on a black background.
Finished summer salad farmers market bounty board! with raw and cooked veggies, greens, fresh fruit and cheese.
a summer green salad with berries, radishes, and cheese, overhead shot.

Summer-licious salad featuring cherry tomatoes, cucumbers, purple cabbage, pickled red onion, roasted lemons, basil, and a simple vinaigrette.

roasted lemon summer salad flatlay with cherry tomatoes, cucumbers, purple cabbage, pickled red onion and basil.

You can also make a smaller plated version instead of a board — a rainbow tomato, cucamelon, and grape salad plated simply looks beautiful.

a summer salad with cherry tomatoes, cucuamelons, grapes, basil and cheese arranged on a plate.

Or try a savory cherry salad with cherry tomatoes, baked feta, little gems, purple cabbage, basil, and an herb-forward vinaigrette.

Cherry & Cherry Tomato Summer Salad with purple cabbage, greens and baked feta.
Summer cherry and fresh herb salad! with croutons, little gems, burrata and pesto vinaigrette on a black plate. Overhead shot on a black background.

Another variation pairs sourdough croutons, fresh herbs, little gems, burrata, and a pesto vinaigrette.

Or simply plate the best summer fruit with cheese, nuts, and a drizzle of honey — it counts as a salad, and it’s delicious.

Summer fruit with fresh cheese, almonds and honey on a black plate; overhead shot on a black background.
Single angle shot of Summer fruit with fresh cheese, almonds and honey on a black plate and background.
Early summer farmers market bounty haul of purple cauliflower, artichokes, radishes, beets, rhubarb and rosemary.

Here’s an early summer farmers market haul. I turned that bounty into a salad with a rhubarb vinaigrette — proof that whatever you find at the market can become something special.