Risoni /orzo salad, filled with an unapologetically generous amount of your new favourite garnish – crispy salami bits! There’s a good stack of bright fresh vegetables in here too, all tossed up in a tasty Italian Dressing. A new big, bold, statement pasta salad to fall in love with!
The crispy salami bits!
Meet the star player in today’s line up – crispy salami. Literally just chopped up salami, fried in a pan until crisp. Think, bacon. With even more flavour!
Wait – what do you mean you’ve never fried up salami before??!!
OK, truthfully, I hadn’t either until I started down this “I want to make an interesting pasta salad!” warpath. A familiar state I find myself in pursuit of this (delicious!) life I have chosen sharing recipes with the world. 🙂
I had a vision of a pasta salad version of my Mega Italian Salad. I wanted big, I wanted statement, and I wanted something different to the usual “just add an Italian dressing and then you can call it an Italian pasta salad”.
Multiple iterations later – “mm, I mean, it’s fine but it’s just pretty ordinary, ya know?” – I arrived at today’s version. The crispy salami bits was the clincher!
Just briefly – orzo vs risoni
The little rice shaped pasta bits of pasta are a firm favourite. My pantry is never without multiple boxes! Called risoni here in Australia and orzo in most of the rest of the world (UK, US, Canada). But risoni is actually the correct name used in Italy because orzo means barley in Italian. And risoni is not made from barley, it’s made from flour like normal pasta!
So there you have it. Here in Australia, it’s labelled risoni in the mainstream grocery stores but in speciality grocers and Italian stores, I’ve also seen it labelled as orzo.
What you need for risoni / orzo salad
This is a big orzo / risoni salad filled with a medley of fresh vegetables, a handful of cheese, then tossed with an Italian dressing and the crispy salami bits.
1. Risoni / orzo
Find risoni /orzo in the pasta aisle, usually sold in small boxes. It costs around the same as spaghetti. Suggestions for alternatives below.
Substitute with cooked rice of choice (use 1 1/2 cups uncooked rice) – white, brown, basmati, jasmine – or quinoa (directions here). Other little pasta will work too – like ditalini, the really small macaroni or the novelty shapes for kids (dinosaurs! alphabet!).
2. The add-ins
The add-ins for this recipe are inspired by everybody’s favourite Mega Italian Salad. But there’s lots of alternatives – go wild with salad add-ins of your choice! Even the crispy salami bits, as much as I harp on and on about them, can be substituted with bacon, ham, prosciutto, or anything else that’s crispy/salty. Or nuts!
Salami – I use the deli pre-sliced rounds because I’m lazy and it means less chopping for me because the job is half done. Else, slice your own salami stick!
Substitutes – As noted above, anything fryable that goes crispy will work great as a substitute. And if you prefer no meat, add a handful of roughly chopped pistachios, pine nuts, or sunflower or pepitas.
Tomato – I like using cherry tomatoes because they hold up better if keeping this for a few days. However, you can use 3 large tomatoes instead. Scoop out watery middle then dice the flesh.
Rocket/arugula – My leafy greens of choice for ease of use (grab handfuls and rip into smaller pieces) and also because it holds up best in leftovers. But other leafy greens will work fine, chop into small(ish) pieces.
Capsicum/bell peppers – For crunch! Cucumbers would make a great sub. Oh, and you don’t HAVE to use green capsicum! 🙂 Yellow or red will be fine too….
Red onion – Substitute with something similar for oniony freshness. 1 large green onion stem finely chopped, or 1 eschallot (US: shallot ie the baby onions), or 1/2 a white onion.
Olives – I like using sliced olives here for better dispersion, though I was tempted to use whole ones so you can big meaty bites of olives. You choose!
Substitute with other briny things. I’m thinking: pickles, artichokes, fire roasted capsicum, other pickled veg. Just want something with tang to balance out everything else going on in this salad!
Cheese – What, you’ve never added a handful of shredded cheese into “rubble” type salads before? It’s so good! Instant flavour uplift. I used colby – a great all-rounder that works for melting in cheesy sauces (Mac & Cheese), on things (pasta bakes), on tacos, in burritos, in salads!
Substitute with cheddar, monteray jack, pepper jack, gruyere, swiss etc. Not mozzarella (not enough flavour) and not parmesan (too much flavour!).
3. Italian dressing
This is the same dressing from my Mega Italian Salad, minus the parmesan cheese – because we’re using a big handful of shredded cheese instead.
Extra virgin olive oil – The better the quality, the better your salad!
Red wine vinegar – Substitute with white wine vinegar or apple cider vinegar.
Dried basil and oregano – Substitute with an Italian herb mix or dried parsley.
Chilli flakes – Optional, for the tiniest hint of warmth.
Sugar – Just 1/2 teaspoon. Cuts through the vinegar so you can get away with using less oil.
Garlic – Fresh please! Jarred stuff barely resembles the real deal, and is also weirdly sour. So wrong!
How to make risoni/orzo salad
Dressing – Shake the dressing ingredients in a jar. Always my preferred method to make dressings because it really combines the ingredients well. Plus, useful storage!
Risoni / orzo – Cook the pasta in a large pot of salted water per packet directions. Drain, rinse then toss in a little oil (to keep it from clumping) then cool.
Crispy salami – Chop the salami into small pieces. Then cook it in a non-stick pan like you do bacon until it’s crispy. No oil needed, it will fry up in its own fat!
Drain on paper towels. It will get crispier as it cools. To preserve crispiness, keep it separate until just before serving.
Toss 1 – Toss all the salad ingredients together first without the dressing.
Dress then toss again – Then pour the dressing over and toss again. Why I do this: because otherwise if you pour straight onto certain ingredients, like leafy greens, they tend to hog more than their fair share of the dressing. I’m looking at YOU, rocket!
Tumble everything into a large serving bowl. Sprinkle with reserved salami then eat!
Practical matters of Italian risoni/orzo salad
Some final words on this pasta salad!
Making ahead – If I’m making ahead intentionally (eg taking to a gathering), I’ll keep the components separate so it’s fresh and perky for serving. Especially the crispy salami! It does soften once it’s mixed through so keep it separate to preserve crispiness.
Shelf life once dressed – Still very good after 2 hours, good after 3 days. If I know I’m keeping it, I usually dial up the dressing slightly, and hold a little back so I can freshen it up with a little extra dressing.
Gluten free – As suggested above in the ingredients chatter section, switch the pasta for rice to make this gluten free. It’s literally perfect – similar size and shape.
Serve at room temp – If you made ahead or have leftovers, bring to room temp before eating. You’ll taste everything better than when fridge cold.
Eat with a spoon – Perhaps a strange point to finish on but this is a characteristic of this pasta salad that really appeals to me!! For some reason, I find it really satisfying that I can eat this pasta salad with a spoon. Convenience (eg multi-tasking: eat without taking your eyes off the TV, or in my case, moving around the kitchen while cooking something else) and the ability to scoop up and eat big mouthfuls of it.
Are you judging me? 😂
Love to know what you think if you try this recipe. Especially, of course, the crispy salami bits!! – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Italian Orzo Salad (Risoni) with Crispy Salami Bits
Ingredients
- 250g / 8oz risoni / orzo pasta – 1 1/4 cups (Note 1)
- 2 tsp salt , for cooking pasta
- 2 tsp extra virgin olive oil
Salad add-ins (Note 2):
- 250g/ 8 oz salami slices , chopped into 1.25 cm / 1/2" squares (Note 2)
- 1 cup sliced kalamata olives (1 x 220g/7oz jar) – or other olives or briny things (Note 4)
- 2 tightly packed cups baby rocket / arugula , torn by hand
- 400g/ 14oz cherry tomatoes , quartered (2 1/2 cups)
- 1 large green capsicum , cut into 1.25cm / 1/2″ squares
- 1/2 red onion , finely diced
- 1 1/2 cups (tightly packed) colby cheese , shredded into short strands (Note 5)
Italian dressing:
- 1/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
- 3 tbsp red wine vinegar (or white wine vinegar, sub apple cider vinegar)
- 1 garlic clove , crushed using garlic press or grated using microplane
- 1 tsp dried basil
- 1/4 tsp red chilli flakes (optional)
- 1 tsp dried oregano
- 1/2 tsp sugar
- 1 tsp cooking/kosher salt
Instructions
- Cook pasta – Bring a large pot of water to the boil. Add salt and risoni/orzo, then cook per packet directions (usually ~10 minutes). Drain in colander, rinse, shake off excess water well. Transfer to large bowl. Toss with the olive oil then let cool.
- Dressing – Shake in a jar.
- Crispy salami – Put salami in cold large non-stick pan, with no oil. Turn onto medium high – as the pan heats up, the fat will melt so it cooks in its own fat. Cook for 3 – 5 minutes, stirring regularly, until light golden. Drain on paper towels. It will crisp as it cools.
- Toss – Set aside 1/3 of the salami for topping. Put all remaining salad ingredients in with the risoni. Toss. Pour over dressing. Toss, toss, toss!
- Serve! Tumble into serving bowl. Sprinkle with remaining salami. Divide between bowls. Eat with spoon! Best eaten at room temp, not fridge cold (can taste flavours better).
Recipe Notes:
– Tomato: sub with 3 large tomatoes, scoop out watery middle then dice the flesh
– Rocket/arugula: holds up best it keeping leftovers, I find. But other leafy greens will work fine, chop into small(ish) pieces.
– Capsicum/bell peppers: cucumber could be substituted. Oh, and you don’t HAVE to use green 🙂 Yellow or red will be fine too!
– Red onion: Sub 1 large green onion stem finely chopped. Or 1 eschallot (US: shallot ie the baby onions), or 1/2 white onion. 4. Olives – Sub with other briny things. I’m thinking: pickles, artichokes, fire roasted capsicum, other pickled veg. Just want something with tang to balance out everything else going on in this salad! 5. Cheese – Sub with cheddar, monteray jack, pepper jack, gruyere, swiss etc. Not mozzarella (not enough flavour) and not parmesan (too much flavour!). Try to grate short rather than long strands – you get more pieces to litter throughout! 6. Leftovers keeps well for 2 to 3 days. If intentionally making ahead, keep all components separate then toss and dress just before serving. In particular, the salami softens once tossed through so preserve crispiness by keeping it separate!! Nutrition per serving assuming 5 servings.
Nutrition Information:
More cold pasta salad recipes
Life of Dozer
Somebody get Prince Edward Dozer Maehashi I some sunnies, stat! The morning sun is blinding him!
Fi says
This is basically pizza salad which would explain why I was instantly obsessed the minute I saw it.
Kat says
I just made this and it is AMAZING! Such a great recipe. I used elbow pasta cause that’s all I had. Yum!!!
Karren says
Thank you Nagi! I used an ancient grains mix instead of the orzo. It was a huge hit at my family barbecue, yummy!
Christine Lee says
Thank you so much for this delicious recipe. It was a total hit with my family. I served it with flatbread and we ended up eating the salad folded inside pieces of the flatbread. This is a perfect summer dinner and will go on our regular rotation for sure.
Christine says
I loved this salad. I thought dressing had perfect amount of flavor. I used fried pepperoni because I had it and not salami and added fresh basil and some spinach (chopped smaller). Definitely a keeper
Beatrice says
Greetings from the sunny hot Austrian Alps! Made this today for our BBQ dinner of brats and a 3-pound marinated free-range chicken. I subbed tapenade for the kalamatas and put it in the dressing. Fab!
Yallas says
Sorry Brenda, but is there anything you don’t complain about? Nagi has voluntarily tested & tweaked recipes over & over, cooked & posted her recipes online when they have been perfected. Its not up to her to tell you how to read them. Perhaps your surgeon or eye consultant can help with reading anything until you’ve recovered from surgery. I’m sorry if this sounds harsh but there are several ways to magnify digital articles these days that it should be up to the individual to manage how they read it. Not the one who posts. I hope you find a way to use the recipes you want. Happy cookin & baking
Liana says
I’ve always sliced my own Salami and popped it in the air fryer, turning after a few min, to crisps it up before adding to a pizza… Definitely will be adding streaky bacon as well as the salami done in the same way! (I have a rack air fryer, which also doubles as a dehydrator and rotating fries basket).
If you’re in NZ, You can get Fhelberg’s burger pickles at countdown… Taste the same as Maccas pickles, and will be the perfect addition, as my daughter won’t try anything else pickled! Will add my homemade chilli jam to the non-kid friendly dressing version. Yum! Nagi, let me know if you want the link to the jam… It really is delicious!
Jana says
Just having this for lunch. Delicious! Yet another of your wonderful orzo and something creations that I love. Thank you so much! And the crispy salami bits are very yummy.
Petra says
Goodmorning Nagi,
Can i make this with rice as well
? Thank you.
Warm regards, Petra
Nagi says
Hi Petra! Absolutely. It’s the perfect sub, I have it in the notes! N x
Ren says
Hi Nagi,
I made this last night already and it was DIVINE!!
True to so many of your recipes, as in simple yet packed full of flavour.
Ren
Nagi says
AWESOME!!! So glad you enjoyed it Ren, thanks for letting me know! N x
Brenda says
It’s possible but to me it’s really really thin. I’ve had cataract surgery on both eye which also correct near sight problems. But I still have major problems reading the print. The font chosen was really bad.
Nagi says
Brenda, I’m sorry to hear you are having issues reading the font! I can promise that much thought and discussion went into the readability 🙁 N x
Brenda says
Your new book is so beautiful that I’m actually considering cooking and baking again. Stopped when I became disabled. Love your recipes and your puppy he’s so cute. I have a kitty myself!
Ren says
Awww Brenda, I feel for you!!
I only have far sight issues thus far, but that can be a nuisance as well.
I agree with Cherie’s suggestion i.e. reading glasses from the pharmacy (drugstore, chemist). Have you thought about using a magnifying glass. It sounds silly, however that is what my 85 year old Dad uses, and he claims that it works well for him.
Ren
Brenda says
Your new book is pretty but I’m finding the print very thin and hard to read. And suggestions for my problem?
Cherie says
Get some reading glasses from the drug store!
Cherie says
Not sure what to say, if enlarging the print with readers doesn’t help. I don’t know any way to make the print darker other than writing over it with a dark pen and that would be a real chore. Perhaps someone could scan the recipes onto a thumb drive and then you could darken or enlarge the print as needed on your computer? Still a chore, but perhaps doable? Sometimes younger folks don’t realize how difficult it gets as we get older to see various fonts. Sad but true.
Brenda says
It’s possible but to me it’s really really thin. I’ve had cataract surgery on both eye which also correct near sight problems. But I still have major problems reading the print. The font chosen was really bad.
Yallas says
Sorry Brenda, but is there anything you don’t complain about? Nagi has voluntarily tested & tweaked recipes over & over, cooked & posted her recipes online when they have been perfected. Its not up to her to tell you how to read them. Perhaps your surgeon or eye consultant can help with reading anything until you’ve recovered from surgery. I’m sorry if this sounds harsh but there are several ways to magnify digital articles these days that it should be up to the individual to manage how they read it. Not the one who posts. I hope you find a way to use the recipes you want. Happy cookin & baking
Marilyn Lebowitz says
And chorizo gives more kick, yumm. You are a genius Yes prices at shows are obscene 🐾🐾❤️ Love and hugs for Dozer.
Jo harvey says
PLEASE put back amounts in grams for us UK folk, I have failed often when it matters!
One third cup means nothing for us!
Nagi says
Hi Jo! There’s a toggle button for the ingredient measures at the top of the list of the ingredients 🙂 Forgot a few on this one though so I added them, thanks for the reminder! N x
Liz says
Jo – above most of Nagi’s ingredient lists (certainly on recent recipes) you can click on a button and toggle between cups and metric. I’m a big fan of weighing over measuring too! Hope this helps 🙂
Pam from Oz says
Hope this helps Jo
1 cup= 250 ml 1/2 cup= 125ml
1/4 cup=80 ml 1/3 =60ml
But remember water & flour do not way the same. I find it’s easy to look up Ml and then convert to grams
Marble says
Wait… His real name is Edward???
Nagi says
he he NO!!! LOL!! It’s just a name we added when mockingly calling him “Prince Dozer” because Edward sounds like a much more regal name than Dozer 😂😂😂
Linda Sellers says
It’s easy to make deli sliced salami crispy in the microwave. I use it for snacks. Sprinkle with grated parmesan and microwave for about 2 min (depending on microwave power). comes out crispy and delicious!
Wendy says
Linda, this is awesome! I heard the same with pepperoni (no cheese though), but haven’t heard from anyone that actually did it. You’re awesome, thanks for sharing!
Nagi says
WHAT???! *She yells in amazement, and immediately puts salami straight onto the shopping list*
CimmieS says
Clever tip Linda. Will try it this evening. Taste buds at the ready.
Sharon says
Dear Nagi,
What a terrific use of thinner tail portions of fresh salmon filets! Crispy bits for salads. Your a genius. Thank you 😊
Sandy says
Nagi,
Didn’t know I needed a byo show chow complete with salami chews (but I do now) 😆 Mmm. Can’t wait to try 😋
S
PS I love that you’re still so down to earth! Don’t change!
Brigitte says
I can’t eat rice any more and this is a perfect substitute. I have been playing around with orzo already and this recipe gives me more ideas. Thanks for taking the time. Thanks also for all the other recipes you have posted over the years. Many of them are on rotation in my kitchen and hubby loves them. Especially the South Indian Aubergine you also call mush. That’s the name it goes by in this house. Nagi ‘s Aubergine mush. 😃Hugs from France.