Taco Pasta Salad (Seasoned Ground Beef, Rotini, Black Beans, Corn, Cheese, 30 Min)

Taco pasta salad tutorial — boil rotini al dente, brown beef with taco seasoning, drain and cool, toss with beans-corn-tomato-cheese, dress with ranch-salsa, top with chips.

This is the salad I bring to every summer potluck because I learned the hard way that bringing a “healthy” green salad to a barbecue is the fastest way to take home a full bowl. Taco pasta salad is the potluck superstar that disappears faster than any other dish on the table: spiral rotini tossed with taco-seasoned ground beef, black beans, sweet corn, diced tomatoes, red onion, sharp cheddar, and a creamy dressing whisked from ranch and chunky salsa, finished with crushed tortilla chips for crunch.

Fun fact: pasta salad as we know it is an American invention from the 1970s, born when Italian immigrants in the Midwest discovered they could turn leftover pasta into a portable picnic dish by adding mayonnaise. The “taco” pasta salad mashup gained popularity in the 1990s during the Tex-Mex food craze, when home cooks started combining the ingredients of seven-layer dip with the structure of macaroni salad. The combination of warm spices (taco seasoning) with cold pasta is what makes it work — the flavors stay vivid even chilled, unlike most pasta salads that taste muted from the fridge.

Why this recipe works

  • Ranch + salsa dressing balances creamy and bright. Plain mayo would be heavy and boring; salsa alone would be too thin. The combination gives you both creaminess and a zippy tomato kick.
  • Cool the pasta and beef before mixing. Hot pasta wilts the greens, melts the cheese into clumps, and turns the dressing watery. Letting both cool first preserves texture and color.
  • Add chips JUST before serving. Mixed in early, tortilla chips go soggy in 20 minutes. Sprinkle on top right at the table for the crunch contrast.

Ingredients

Serves 8-10 as a side, 6 as a main.

For the pasta and beef

  • 1 lb (16 oz) rotini or corkscrew pasta
  • 1 lb (450 g) lean ground beef (85/15)
  • 1 packet (1 oz) taco seasoning (or 2 tbsp homemade)
  • 1/3 cup water

For the salad mix

  • 1 can (15 oz) black beans, drained and rinsed
  • 1 1/2 cups sweet corn kernels (canned, frozen-thawed, or grilled fresh)
  • 1 cup cherry tomatoes, halved (or 2 Roma, diced)
  • 1/2 cup red onion, finely diced
  • 1 red bell pepper, diced
  • 1 1/2 cups sharp cheddar cheese, shredded
  • 1/3 cup fresh cilantro, chopped

For the dressing

  • 3/4 cup ranch dressing
  • 3/4 cup chunky salsa (medium heat)
  • 2 tbsp lime juice
  • 1/2 tsp ground cumin
  • Salt and pepper to taste

For topping

  • 2 cups tortilla chips, lightly crushed (added at serving time)
  • 1 avocado, diced (optional)
  • Sliced green onions for garnish

Smart substitutions

  • Vegetarian: Skip beef — double the black beans or add 1 can pinto beans
  • Ground turkey or chicken: Sub directly for beef (same seasoning works)
  • Lighter dressing: Sub 1/2 cup Greek yogurt for half the ranch
  • Gluten-free: Use GF rotini (Banza chickpea pasta adds extra protein)

Instructions

Step 1: Cook and cool the pasta

Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Add rotini; cook to al dente per package directions (typically 8-9 minutes). Drain and rinse under cold water to stop cooking and cool quickly. Drain well; transfer to a large mixing bowl.

Step 2: Cook the seasoned beef

While pasta cooks, brown ground beef in a skillet over medium-high heat 6-8 minutes, breaking it up with a wooden spoon. Drain excess fat. Stir in taco seasoning and water; simmer 3 minutes until thickened. Spread on a plate to cool 10 minutes (hot beef would melt the cheese into clumps).

Step 3: Whisk the dressing

In a small bowl, whisk together ranch, salsa, lime juice, and cumin until smooth and well combined. Taste; add salt and pepper as needed. The dressing should be slightly thicker than pourable salad dressing.

Step 4: Combine everything

To the bowl of cooled pasta, add cooled beef, black beans, corn, tomatoes, red onion, bell pepper, cheddar, and cilantro. Pour dressing over; toss gently with a large spoon or rubber spatula until everything is evenly coated.

Step 5: Chill (optional but ideal)

Cover and refrigerate at least 30 minutes (or up to 4 hours) for flavors to meld. This step is optional but takes the salad from “good” to “great” as the dressing soaks into the pasta.

Step 6: Top and serve

Just before serving, give the salad a final toss (the dressing will have settled). Top with crushed tortilla chips, diced avocado (if using), and sliced green onions. Serve cold.

Nutrition information

  • Calories: 420 kcal per serving (1/8)
  • Protein: 22 g (44% DV)
  • Carbohydrates: 38 g
  • Fat: 22 g
  • Fiber: 6 g (from beans and veggies)
  • Iron: 18% DV

Pro tips for the best taco pasta salad

  • Rinse pasta in COLD water. Stops cooking immediately and removes excess starch that would make the salad gummy. Skip this step at your own risk.
  • Cool the beef before mixing. Hot beef melts the cheese into a clumpy mess instead of letting it stay as separate shreds.
  • Dress 30 min ahead, top with chips at the table. 30 minutes lets flavors marry; adding chips early lets them go soggy.
  • Make ahead, double batch: The salad keeps 3 days in the fridge and gets BETTER as it sits (just stir before serving and add fresh toppings).

Frequently asked questions

How long does it keep?

Refrigerator 3 days in an airtight container. The pasta soaks up dressing over time — add a splash more ranch or salsa before serving leftovers. Don’t freeze (texture ruined).

Can I serve this warm?

It’s technically a cold salad, but it’s also delicious served slightly warm right after mixing. The cheese gets a little melty around the warm pasta, which some people prefer.

Can I make this without taco seasoning?

Yes — DIY: 1 tbsp chili powder + 1 tsp cumin + 1 tsp paprika + 1 tsp garlic powder + 1/2 tsp onion powder + 1/2 tsp salt + 1/4 tsp cayenne + 1/4 tsp oregano. Mix and use 2 tbsp per pound of meat.

What pasta shape is best?

Rotini (corkscrew) is best — the spirals trap dressing and small fillings. Also great: penne, farfalle (bowties), shells. Avoid long pastas like spaghetti.

What goes with taco pasta salad?

BBQ ribs, grilled chicken, burgers, brisket, fajitas — any Tex-Mex or barbecue main. Also stands alone as a complete meal with the protein from beef and beans.

Is this kid-friendly?

Yes — most kids love it (it’s basically deconstructed tacos in pasta form). Use mild salsa for younger kids, or serve dressing on the side and let them add their own.