Olive Garden Salad Dressing (Copycat)
Shake 9 ingredients in a mason jar and you have the best Olive Garden salad dressing you’ve ever tasted — creamy, tangy, garlicky, and way better than the bottled version. Ready in 5 minutes flat.
- Flavor: Tangy, savory, garlicky, with a slight sweetness
- Texture: Slightly creamy — not oily, not thick — perfectly pourable

About Olive Garden Salad Dressing
Olive Garden’s house salad dressing is the most recognizable Italian-style dressing in America. It is a creamy, tangy vinaigrette made with olive oil, white vinegar, lemon juice, garlic, Italian herbs, and — the ingredient that surprises most people — mayonnaise. The mayo is what makes it different from a standard Italian vinaigrette. It gives the dressing a slightly creamy, emulsified body that coats lettuce evenly instead of sliding off, which is why it clings to the salad the way it does.
Olive Garden sells it bottled in stores (look for “Signature Italian Dressing” at most major grocery stores and Costco). The bottled version is convenient, but it contains preservatives and stabilizers that make it taste noticeably different from the freshly made dressing that servers bring to your table. This homemade version tastes much closer to the in-restaurant experience.
Is Olive Garden dressing the same as Italian dressing? They are related but not the same. Standard bottled Italian dressing (like Wish-Bone or Ken’s) is a clear vinaigrette — oil, vinegar, herbs, no mayonnaise. Olive Garden’s dressing is thicker, slightly creamier, more garlicky, and has a distinct tang from the combination of white vinegar AND lemon juice together. The mayonnaise and the lemon juice are the two things that make this taste specifically like Olive Garden rather than generic Italian dressing.
My Recipe
Every time I order the endless salad at Olive Garden, I spend most of the meal thinking about the dressing. It has that perfect balance — tangy from the vinegar, bright from the lemon, creamy enough to cling to every lettuce leaf, and herby without being overwhelming. I‘ve tried multiple copycat versions over the years and the breakthrough was realizing that the mayonnaise is non-negotiable. Every version I made without it tasted like plain Italian dressing, fine, but not that.
This version uses extra virgin olive oil (not a neutral oil), a combination of white distilled vinegar and fresh lemon juice for a layered tang, and Italian seasoning that blooms in the oil and vinegar as the jar sits. It genuinely tastes like the restaurant — often better, because you are using quality ingredients without any artificial stabilizers.
The mason jar method is the easiest approach for a dressing like this: add everything, close the lid, shake for 20 seconds. Done. No blender, no food processor, no mess.

⭐ Why You’ll Love This Recipe
Ingredient Notes
Complete list of ingredients and amounts is written in the recipe card below.

Tried this recipe? A star rating ⭐️ and a quick comment below help others (and me!) know how it went.
Olive Garden Salad Dressing (Copycat)

US measuring cups are used (1 cup = 240 ml)
Ingredients
- ½ cup Extra virgin olive oil
- ¼ cup White distilled vinegar
- 3 tablespoons Mayonnaise, Vegan or Eggless
- 2 teaspoons Lemon juice
- 2 teaspoons Sugar
- 1 teaspoon Garlic powder
- 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning
- ¼ teaspoon Salt
- ½ teaspoon Black pepper powder
Instructions
- Add Everything to the Jar: Add the extra virgin olive oil, white distilled vinegar, mayonnaise, lemon juice, sugar, garlic powder, Italian seasoning, salt, and black pepper to a small mason jar or any jar with a tight-fitting lid.
- Shake Until Combined: Close the lid tightly. Shake vigorously for 20–30 seconds until the dressing looks uniform, creamy, and emulsified. The mayonnaise helps it come together quickly.
- No jar? No problem. Add all ingredients to a small bowl and whisk vigorously with a wire whisk for about 1 minute, until the dressing is emulsified and creamy.
- Taste And Adjust: Open and taste. Adjust to your preference:Tangier → add ½ teaspoon more white vinegarSweeter → add ½ teaspoon more sugarMore garlicky → add ¼ teaspoon more garlic powderMore herby → add a pinch more Italian seasoning
Notes
- Rest Before Serving: Make this dressing at least 30 minutes before serving, or better yet the night before. The Italian seasoning needs time to hydrate and bloom in the oil and vinegar, and the garlic powder needs time to fully dissolve. A freshly shaken dressing is good; a dressing that has rested overnight in the fridge is significantly better.
- Always shake before using. Shake or stir well before each use as the oil and vinegar will separate as it sits. This is normal for any vinaigrette — it does not mean it has gone bad. Give the jar a good 10-second shake every time you use it — this is the beauty of keeping it in a mason jar, it takes one second.
- Taste with the actual lettuce. A dressing always tastes more intense on its own than on the salad. Dip a piece of romaine into it and taste — this is how to judge if the balance is right, not by tasting from a spoon.
- For a thinner dressing: Reduce the mayo to 2 tablespoons and add 1 extra teaspoon of water.
- For a thicker, creamier dressing: Increase the mayo to 4 tablespoons. This is also closer to the consistency of the bottled Olive Garden dressing.
Nutrition
🍽️ What to Use This Dressing On
The obvious answer is the Olive Garden house salad — but this dressing is so versatile it deserves more credit:
On salads:
Beyond salads:
🧊 Storage

❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Did you try this Olive Garden salad dressing recipe? Leave a star rating and a comment below — I’d love to know how you used it! Did you do the classic salad, or dip your breadsticks in it? Tag me on Instagram @spice.up.the.curry



