
This Costco Mediterranean Orzo Salad is the cold pasta salad I make when I want something more interesting than plain noodles with dressing. The orzo is small, the add-ins are salty and tangy, and the artichoke marinade does a lot of the work.
I stick with the scaled ingredient amounts from the pack: 1/2 cup uncooked orzo, 1 cup spinach, a 1/2 jar of marinated artichoke hearts, 3/8 cup feta, and small but important amounts of onion, olives, sun-dried tomatoes, salt, and pepper.
My biggest lesson with orzo salad is to rinse the cooked orzo cold and drain it well. If I leave it hot, the spinach wilts too much and the feta melts into paste. Cold, well-drained orzo keeps the salad clean and separate.
Before I start Costco Mediterranean Orzo Salad, I take a minute to think about what the recipe is really asking for. Some of these Costco-style recipes are more about careful heating, chilling, or assembly than complicated cooking.
Why I keep coming back to this
- It works chilled or at room temperature.
- The artichoke marinade acts like a built-in dressing.
- Feta and olives make a small amount of pasta taste bold.
- It is easy to pack for lunch because it does not need reheating.
- The ingredient list is flexible without losing the Mediterranean feel.
- It gets better after a short rest in the fridge.
What I use and why it matters
- 1/2 cup uncooked orzo.Orzo is the pasta base, small enough to catch bits of feta and olive in every forkful.
- 1 1/2 tablespoons chopped red onion.Red onion gives a crisp bite, and I chop it small so it does not dominate.
- 1/4 cup oil-packed sun-dried tomato halves, drained and chopped.Sun-dried tomatoes bring concentrated sweetness and a little chew.
- 1 1/2 tablespoons chopped pitted Kalamata olives.Olives add briny depth that makes the salad taste Mediterranean.
- 1/2 6-ounce jar marinated artichoke hearts, undrained.Artichokes bring tang, and the marinade helps dress the orzo.
- 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper.Pepper gives a warm finish without extra heat.
- 1 cup bagged prewashed baby spinach.Spinach adds freshness and makes the salad feel less pasta-heavy.
- 3/8 cup crumbled feta cheese, divided.Feta adds salt and creaminess; I save a little for the top. 1.5 ounces
- 1/8 teaspoon salt.A small pinch sharpens the pasta after rinsing.
I do not treat the ingredient list as a place to casually rewrite the recipe. The quantities are here for a reason, even when the original source was a little awkwardly parsed. When I want a different result, I change the handling first: I cut pieces smaller, drain something better, warm a sauce more gently, or give the food a few extra minutes to settle before I change the amount of an ingredient.
How I make it
Step 1 — Cook the orzo
I bring a pot of salted water to a boil, add the 1/2 cup uncooked orzo, and cook until al dente. Regular orzo usually takes about 8 minutes, while whole wheat can take about 10 minutes. I taste a piece instead of trusting the clock alone.
Step 2 — Rinse and drain
I drain the orzo in a colander and rinse it with cold water. Then I shake the colander well. Extra water is the fastest way to make this salad taste dull.
Step 3 — Build the salad
In a large bowl, I combine the cold orzo with spinach, drained and chopped sun-dried tomatoes, red onion, Kalamata olives, marinated artichoke hearts with their marinade, salt, and pepper. I fold until the pasta is coated and the spinach is spread through.
Step 4 — Add feta gently
I fold in most of the feta and save a little for the top. Feta can break down if I stir hard, so I use a spatula and lift from the bottom.
Step 5 — Serve chilled or room temperature
I taste before serving and adjust salt only if needed because olives and feta already bring plenty. The salad is good right away, but I like it even more after a short chill.
Timing and texture cues I watch
The times in this Costco Mediterranean Orzo Salad method are the frame, but I still pay attention while I cook. I look for the cue that matches the food: fruit should look glossy but not bruised, sauce should thicken enough to coat a spoon, chicken should reach its safe temperature, pasta should stay al dente, and baked desserts should set before I slice them. That habit keeps me from overcorrecting a simple recipe.
I also set up the serving pieces before the final step whenever I can. A hot skillet dish loses its best texture if it waits around, while a chilled salad or pie needs enough cold time to taste settled. Having the plates, bowl, knife, sauce, or side dish ready makes the last few minutes calmer, and the food gets to the table the way I intended.
Tips from my kitchen
- Rinse the orzo cold.It stops the cooking and keeps the feta from melting.
- Drain artichokes over the bowl.I want some marinade in the salad, not all of it lost down the sink.
- Chop add-ins small.Small pieces make every forkful balanced.
- Salt carefully.Olives, feta, and artichokes already bring salt.
Mistakes I avoid
- Changing the quantities too soon.I make the recipe once close to the listed amounts before deciding what needs adjusting.
- Crowding the pan or bowl.When food needs browning, folding, or chilling, extra space usually gives me a better texture.
- Skipping the final check.I taste sauces, check the center of hot dishes, and look for set edges on desserts before I call anything done.
- Serving without a pause.A short rest, chill, or gentle toss often fixes texture in a way more seasoning cannot.
The other mistake I try to avoid is making the dish harder than it needs to be. If the recipe is a shortcut, I let it be a shortcut and focus on the details that matter most: even pieces, clean heat, enough salt, a dry surface when browning is the goal, and a serving plan that keeps the texture from fading before anyone eats. I would rather do a simple thing carefully than add noise that does not improve the plate.
Variations I have actually tried
- Cucumber version:I add chopped cucumber right before serving for crunch.
- Chicken version:I fold in grilled chicken to turn it into lunch.
- Herby version:I add parsley, dill, or basil when I have it.
- Vegan version:I leave out feta or use a dairy-free feta-style crumble.
- More tomato:I add halved cherry tomatoes for a juicier salad.
When I make a variation, I keep the main method steady. I swap one flavor at a time, then pay attention to whether the texture changes. That keeps the recipe dependable, and it also tells me which change actually helped instead of turning dinner into a guessing game.
Storing and make-ahead notes
I store the salad covered in the refrigerator. The orzo absorbs dressing as it sits, so I refresh leftovers with a spoonful of artichoke marinade or olive oil and a squeeze of lemon. Spinach softens by the next day but still tastes good.
What I serve with it
I serve this with grilled chicken, salmon, turkey sandwiches, soup, or a mezze-style plate with hummus and pita. It is also good straight from the fridge for lunch.
Frequently asked questions
Can I make it ahead?
Yes. I make it a few hours ahead and chill it. If it sits overnight, I refresh it with a little oil or artichoke marinade before serving.
Can I serve it warm?
I prefer chilled or room temperature. Warm orzo wilts the spinach and softens the feta more than I like.
Is it vegan?
Not with feta, but it is easy to make vegan by leaving feta out or using a dairy-free feta-style crumble.
Can I use another pasta?
Yes. Small shells or ditalini work, but orzo gives the closest texture to the Costco-style salad.
Why does my salad taste bland?
It probably has extra rinse water or not enough salt. I drain the orzo well and taste after the olives, feta, and artichokes are mixed.
If you pack this for lunch, tell me what protein you add, because I rotate that part constantly.

Costco Mediterranean Orzo Salad
Description
A chilled Mediterranean orzo salad with spinach, sun-dried tomatoes, red onion, Kalamata olives, artichoke hearts, feta, salt, and pepper. I rinse the orzo cold and fold the feta in gently.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Instructions
- Bring salted water to a boil, add 1/2 cup uncooked orzo, and cook until al dente, about 8 minutes for regular orzo or 10 minutes for whole wheat.
- Drain the orzo in a colander and rinse with cold water, then drain well.
- In a large bowl, combine the cooked orzo with baby spinach, sun-dried tomatoes, red onion, Kalamata olives, marinated artichoke hearts, salt, and pepper.
- Fold in most of the feta cheese gently, reserving a little for the top.
- Serve at room temperature or chilled.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 2
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 5kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Sodium 120mg5%
- Potassium 19mg1%
- Total Carbohydrate 1g1%
- Calcium 5 mg
- Iron 0.1 mg
* 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
Rinse orzo cold so the salad stays fresh.
Use some artichoke marinade as the dressing.
Fold feta gently to avoid smearing.
Refresh leftovers with a little oil or lemon.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. I make it a few hours ahead and chill it. If it sits overnight, I refresh it with a little oil or artichoke marinade before serving.
I prefer chilled or room temperature. Warm orzo wilts the spinach and softens the feta more than I like.
Not with feta, but it is easy to make vegan by leaving feta out or using a dairy-free feta-style crumble.
Yes. Small shells or ditalini work, but orzo gives the closest texture to the Costco-style salad.
It probably has extra rinse water or not enough salt. I drain the orzo well and taste after the olives, feta, and artichokes are mixed in.