Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Shrimp Salad Recipe

A silky, smooth shrimp salad with bright lemon, a little Dijon, and crisp celery. Cozy on a sandwich, fancy on crackers, and weeknight easy.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A bowl of creamy shrimp salad with celery, scallions, and dill, served with lemon wedges on a wooden table

Shrimp salad can go two ways: either bland and gloopy, or shockingly good, the kind you keep “testing” with a spoon until half the bowl is mysteriously gone. This one is firmly in the second category.

We are going for silky and smooth dressing, savory shrimp, and crisp little pops of celery and scallion. The real trick is a simple one-two move: a quick ice bath so the shrimp do not overcook, then a hit of lemon zest and juice right after you dry them. That tiny step wakes everything up before the creamy dressing ever shows up.

A close-up photo of cooked shrimp being tossed with lemon juice and salt in a mixing bowl

Why It Works

  • Silky texture, not heavy: A mayo and Greek yogurt blend keeps it creamy but light, and the dressing stays smooth instead of pasty.
  • Big flavor with accessible ingredients: Lemon, Dijon, and Old Bay style seasoning do the heavy lifting without sending you on a specialty store quest.
  • Perfect bite balance: Tender shrimp, crisp celery, and scallions give you that creamy crunch contrast that makes shrimp salad addictive.
  • Meal-prep friendly: It holds beautifully in the fridge, and the flavor improves after a short chill.

Yield: Makes about 3 cups.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Refrigerate: Store shrimp salad in an airtight container for up to 2 to 3 days. Keep it cold (at or below 40°F/4°C), and do not leave it sitting out longer than 2 hours total.

Best texture tip: If you know you will be eating it over a couple days, reserve a little celery and scallion and stir them in right before serving. That keeps everything extra crisp.

Freezing: Not recommended. Mayo-based salads tend to separate and get watery after thawing, and shrimp can turn rubbery.

Common Questions

Can I use frozen shrimp?

Yes. Thaw overnight in the fridge if you can. If you are in a hurry, place the shrimp in a colander and run cold water over them for 5 to 10 minutes until thawed, then pat very dry.

How do I keep shrimp from getting rubbery?

Cook just until they turn pink and opaque. Look for a gentle C-shape curl (not a tight O), and make sure the thickest part is opaque. If you like numbers, shrimp are typically done around 120 to 130°F (49 to 54°C). Then straight into an ice bath to stop carryover cooking.

Is this shrimp salad healthy?

It is a solid protein-forward option. Using a mix of mayo and Greek yogurt keeps the dressing creamy with less heaviness. If you want it richer, go all mayo. If you want it lighter, go mostly yogurt.

What can I use instead of celery?

Finely diced cucumber (seeded), fennel, or even a crisp apple all work. Keep the dice small so the salad stays smooth and scoopable.

Can I make it ahead for a party?

Absolutely. Make it up to a day ahead, chill, then taste and refresh with a squeeze of lemon and a pinch of salt right before serving.

I started making shrimp salad when I wanted something that felt like lunch I would actually pay for, but without the deli price tag and the sad, over-dressed vibe. The first batch I made was fine, but it did not have that “pause mid-bite” seasoning.

The fix was almost annoyingly simple: stop the cooking with an ice bath so the shrimp stay tender, then toss them with lemon right after you pat them dry. It is a small move, but it keeps the whole thing from tasting flat. Now it is my go-to when I need something low drama that still feels a little special, like I did a responsible, adult thing with my afternoon.