Pea salad DSC6017

What’s in your English pea salad?

I was sitting with a group of food writers from the Northeast the other day (I would playfully call them Yankees, but as it was gently pointed out to me, they wouldn’t call me a Confederate so I should be careful with my adjectives). They asked me if there was something that we Texans eat that I was reluctant to write about and I didn’t blink before I said, “Pea salad.” (If you’re a fan, please do not take offense. Instead, bear with me. )

We didn’t often eat pea salad often in my family and for me it was always the strange-looking dish holding court next to the lime congeal at the church potluck or in the cafeteria line.

I can guarantee that you would never see it here in New York City, and, well, because it’s been out of sight, it’s also been out mind. (I know, I know—how could I forget about pea salad? I hear it all the time: I’ve lived away from Texas too long!) But when a reader requested that I post a recipe, saying, “We always eat it around Easter,” I figured it was time.

Pea salad is a Texan classic and yet it changes as much as the weather on a spring day.

Pea salad | Homesick Texan

Take my grandmother’s recipe: she makes hers with peas, cheddar, mayonnaise, and pickles. But I also know people who make their pea salad with boiled eggs and bacon, not to mention those that make theirs with pickled onions and pimento cheese. And let’s not forget those other weighty questions: Do you go with canned Le Sueur peas, frozen or fresh? Do you shred or cube your cheese? Do you add other vegetables such as carrots or celery? And how do you feel about the inclusion of macaroni or almonds?

As you can see, pea salad is the font of much debate and deliberation. .

I decided that in order to decide how best to eat it, I’d just have to make my own.

I love peas and bacon together, so that was simple decision. And since I’m the kind of person that eats mayonnaise by the spoonful, I was definitely including that. When it came time to add cheese, however, I was flummoxed. Of course, in Texas you add yellow cheese—most typically Longhorn cheddar (unless you prefer Velveeta or American). But the combination of peas and bacon reminds me of northern Italian food, and so I thought that Parmesan shavings would be tasty.

In the end, however, tradition won out over experimentation. I realized that pea salad can be found all over the place, but it’s the yellow cheese, preferably Longhorn cheddar, that marks pea salad as Texas pea salad (that is, unless you make it with hard-boiled eggs, but I’m just confusing myself).

Pea salad | Homesick Texan
And while I couldn’t remember the last time I had this classic Southern side dish, when I took my first bite I was pleasantly surprised as it was soft, sweet, crunchy and spicy. It was good. I wouldn’t try to overanalyze pea salad—if you dissect its parts you’ll probably be put off of it. But when you add all the ingredients together, you have a refreshingly cool spring salad that is certain to please most everyone.

So, what do you put in your pea salad?

Print
5 from 1 vote

English pea salad

Servings 6
Author Lisa Fain

Ingredients

  • 4 cups English peas, fresh or frozen
  • 4 pieces bacon, cooked and crumbled
  • 1/2 small yellow onion, finely diced
  • 1 tablespoon chopped fresh mint
  • 2 ounces sharp cheddar, cubed
  • 1 teaspoon white wine vinegar
  • 1/4 cup mayonnaise
  • Pinch cayenne pepper
  • Salt

Instructions

  • Rinse the peas (do not cook, either fresh or frozen) and then mix with the bacon, onion, mint, cheddar, white wine vinegar, mayonnaise, and cayenne. Add salt to taste. Chill for at least 4 hours before serving.

Notes

Like all salads, this is just a guide and you can jazz this up any way you see fit, such as using ham or chicken instead of bacon, adding pimientos or jalapenos, or maybe adding a dollop of mustard to give it some tang.

Similar Posts

5 from 1 vote (1 rating without comment)

Leave a Reply

111 Comments

  1. I’m from Texas and I love to make my Grandma’s Pea Salad recipe. I made a batch and took it on a family tubing trip at the Frio River … they devoured it at lunch with saltine crackers and when asked what was in it they were shocked and said they would have never guessed. I put canned sweet peas, cheddar cheese, 1015 onion, boiled eggs, mayo, salt, pepper and my secret ingredient is SPAM …. Yep … and they loved it!

  2. Re: Mayonnaise

    The novelist Tom Robbins writes about how North Carolinians are obsessed with mayonnaise in one of his recent novels. It’s VILLA INCOGNITO.

    “All Carolina folk are crazy for mayonnaise, mayonnaise is as ambrosia to them, the food of their tarheeled gods. Mayonnaise comforts them, causes the vowels to slide more musically along their slow tongues, appeasing their grease-conditioned taste buds while transporting those buds to a plane higher than lard could ever hope to fly. Yellow as summer sunlight, soft as young thighs, smooth as a Baptist preacher’s rant, falsely innocent as a magicians handkerchief, mayonnaise will cloak a lettuce leaf, some shreds of cabbage, a few hunks of cold potato in the simplest splendor, recycling their dull character, making them lively and attractive again, granting them the capacity to delight the gullet if not the heart…”

    DUKE’S is a favorite local brand.

    T. (who did not realize that pea salad was Texan. We’d have it at my Okie maternal grandmother’s when we visited in Lufkin.)

  3. twobarkingdogs says:

    Yikes! The first recipe you’ve posted that I’m not drooling over or running to the store for ingredients so I can make like a Homesick Texan.

    I’ve seen this salad with lots of variations like pasta or tuna or pasta and tuna mixed in. But then it isn’t a pea salad anymore. Hmm.

    But, hey! Great photos!

  4. NOW I GET IT! My whole life my grandmother (a Texas transplant to Kansas City who still has her accent after 40+ years here) has brought pea salad to every family dinner. I have tasted it several times and not liked it once. Hers is frozen peas, mayo, shredded cheddar and bacon bits. Your recipe is very appealing though, maybe I will give it a try at the next family pot luck.

  5. Lisa Fain says:

    Lauren–How do you feel about ranch dressing? Someone mentioned they use that instead.

    Charlotte W.–I reckon it is regional, even within Texas!

    Chocolate and Toast–It may be an acquired taste, so please don’t judge me if you don’t enjoy it.

    Pastor Dale–Pimentos are an awesome addition!

    MysticMeg–I’ll see what I can do!

    Casasalier–Yes, they do–good point!

    Southern Chateau–Sounds delicious! I’m definitely adding red onion next time.

    Steve Watt–Thank you! And good to hear they eat pea salad in Central Pennsylvania as well.

    Terrie–Oh, those 1015 onions! I do miss those.

    TBSamsel–Lordy, what a quote! I love Tom Robbins. And Duke’s is good, though we didn’t have that in Texas.

    Twobarkingdogs–No worries, pea salad isn’t for everyone.

    Michelle-Ha! Honestly, hers doesn’t sound that different from mine!