Carrot Salad with Raisins Recipe
This carrot-and-raisins thing is basically my go-to when I need something crunchy, sweet, and annoyingly addictive to shove in front of people who say they “don’t like salads.” It’s bright, a little sweet, a little tangy, and doesn’t pretend to be fancy — which is why we eat it all the time. Easy to throw together, survives a day in the fridge, and the raisins give it this nostalgic school-lunch vibe that somehow feels like comfort food now.
My husband will inhale a bowl of this like it’s dessert. True story: he once ate it straight out of the mixing bowl while I was trying to take photos, and then pretended he hadn’t eaten before dinner so he could have seconds. Our kid calls it “orange crunch” and will trade a cookie for it sometimes, which is a parenting win I will not question. It’s become the thing I make when I need a quick side that everyone actually eats, and it travels well to potlucks and school lunches.
Why You’ll Love This Carrot Salad with Raisins Recipe
– It’s shockingly simple but layered — sweet raisins, crunchy carrots, and a bright dressing that wakes everything up.
– Make-ahead friendly: it tastes even better after a few hours once the flavors marry.
– Kid-approved and grown-up-approved simultaneously (rare combo).
– No weird ingredients — you can make it entirely from pantry staples and whatever’s in your crisper.

Kitchen Talk
This is one of those recipes that started because I had too many carrots and a sad little jar of raisins. I shredded carrots on purpose once, and the texture was different — softer and more salad-like — but I usually stick with thicker shreds for crunch. I also once used apple cider vinegar instead of lemon in a panic and it was… fine, but lemon gives it that zip I love. Pro tip: if you toss it and it looks dry, it probably needs salt or a splash more acid — I’ve learned that the hard way.
This carrot salad with raisins is a total winner—super quick to whip up with just shredded carrots, plump raisins, and a creamy mayo dressing that hits all the right sweet and crunchy notes.[1][3] I added a pinch of nutmeg like one tip suggested, and it took the flavor up a notch without any fuss.[1] It's the perfect easy side for potlucks or weeknight dinners, and my family devoured it!
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Shopping Tips
– Vegetables: Pick firm, bright carrots without green tops; avoid limp or cracked ones — they’ll be watery.
– Fresh Herbs: Parsley or cilantro brightens things up; buy a small bunch and use it all so it doesn’t go sad in your fridge.
– Nuts & Seeds: Toasted sunflower seeds or chopped walnuts add great crunch if you want to jazz it up; buy raw and toast at home for best flavor.
– Citrus: For the acid, use fresh lemon; bottled juice is okay in a pinch but fresh is noticeably brighter.
– Fats & Oils: Use a neutral oil (like canola) or mild olive oil; extra-virgin is fine but skip anything overly peppery for this one.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Shred or grate the carrots a day ahead and store in an airtight container lined with a paper towel to absorb moisture.
– Make the dressing up to 2 days ahead — give it a good shake before tossing.
– Combine everything a few hours before serving and refrigerate; take it out 15–20 minutes before to take the chill off if you like it less icy.

Time-Saving Tricks
– Use a box grater or the shredding disc on a food processor to blitz carrots fast.
– Buy pre-shredded carrots if you’re really pressed (they can get soggy faster, so eat sooner).
– Mix the dressing in a mason jar — shake and dress straight from the jar, less washing.
Common Mistakes
– Over-salting before the lettuce/water content is accounted for — I did this once and it was briny. Fix it with a squeeze of lemon or a little sugar.
– Letting it sit too long without acid — it can taste muted; a last-minute citrus splash revives it.
– Using raisins that are rock-hard — plump them in hot water briefly if they’re old and dry.
What to Serve It With
– Grilled chicken or roasted pork for an easy weeknight dinner.
– Toss on top of leafy greens to make it more of a composed salad.
– With warm flatbread or pita for a light lunch.
– Slap it next to roasted salmon for a bright contrast.
Tips & Mistakes
– Add salt in small increments and taste — carrots sweeten as they sit.
– If dressing tastes flat, add an acid (lemon/vinegar) before adding more oil.
– Don’t toss nuts in until serving if you want them crunchy.
– If raisins are too sweet, balance with extra lemon or a pinch of salt.
Storage Tips
Keep leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge for 3–4 days. It mellows as it sits — still tasty cold on its own, and great on toast or stirred into yogurt for breakfast (no shame, I do it). If it gets too dry, stir in a little extra oil or lemon juice.

Variations and Substitutions
– Swap raisins for dried cranberries or chopped dates if you want different sweetness.
– Add grated apple for extra crunch and freshness.
– Use maple syrup or honey instead of sugar in the dressing for a deeper flavor.
– Toss in chopped mint instead of parsley for a fresher lift — cilantro works too if you like it.
Frequently Asked Questions

Carrot Salad with Raisins Recipe
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 4 cups carrots, grated freshly shredded for best texture
- 0.75 cups raisins
- 0.5 cups pineapple tidbits, drained well drained, optional
- 0.33 cups chopped walnuts lightly toasted, optional
- 2 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped
- 0.25 cups mayonnaise
- 0.33 cups plain Greek yogurt
- 1.5 tbsp lemon juice freshly squeezed, if possible
- 1.5 tbsp honey maple syrup also works
- 0.5 tsp kosher salt to taste
- 0.25 tsp black pepper freshly ground
- 0.13 tsp ground cinnamon optional pinch
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Soak raisins in warm water for 5 minutes to plump, then drain well. Pat pineapple dry if using.
- Whisk mayonnaise, Greek yogurt, lemon juice, honey, salt, pepper, and cinnamon in a bowl until smooth.
- Combine grated carrots, drained raisins, walnuts, parsley, and pineapple in a large mixing bowl.
- Pour in the dressing and fold until everything is evenly coated.
- Chill 15–30 minutes to meld flavors. Taste and adjust salt or lemon before serving.
Notes
Featured Comments
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