The iconic Italian salad featuring ripe tomatoes, fresh mozzarella, and basil, drizzled with olive oil and balsamic glaze. Simple, elegant, and bursting with summer flavors—a celebration of quality ingredients.

Caprese salad (insalata Caprese) is the iconic Italian salad from the island of Capri — ripe tomatoes, fresh mozzarella, and basil leaves arranged in alternating layers and dressed with the finest extra virgin olive oil. The tricolor of red, white, and green represents the Italian flag. It is the ultimate expression of Italian culinary philosophy: with three world-class ingredients, no cooking, and five minutes of assembly, you produce a dish of genuine elegance.
Caprese salad is proof that simplicity done perfectly is better than complexity done ordinarily. When made with ripe, fragrant tomatoes, creamy fresh mozzarella, and fragrant basil, it is one of the most satisfying dishes in Italian cooking. The combination of the sweet-acid tomato, milky mozzarella, and sweet basil, tied together with good olive oil, achieves a near-perfect balance of flavors and textures.
Caprese is the quintessential summer appetizer — it exists to celebrate peak-season tomatoes. Serve it as a starter at dinner parties, as a light lunch, or alongside any Italian main course. It works equally well at casual summer barbecues or at elegant dinner tables. The visual beauty of the arranged salad makes it a particularly impressive first course.
Use only the ripest, most flavorful tomatoes available — this is a non-negotiable ingredient quality dish. Remove all ingredients from the refrigerator 20-30 minutes before serving. Pat mozzarella dry before slicing. Season tomatoes with a pinch of salt 5 minutes before arranging. Dress with olive oil just before serving.
The star of Caprese salad. Only use tomatoes at the absolute peak of ripeness — they should be deeply fragrant, yield slightly to gentle pressure, and taste intensely of tomato. In summer, heirloom varieties in different colors make for a stunning, complex presentation. Never refrigerate tomatoes before using.
The counterpoint to the tomato — mild, milky, slightly tangy, and creamy. Mozzarella di bufala (from water buffalo milk) is the most prized for its richer, more complex flavor. Fior di latte (cow's milk) is more widely available and still excellent. Always use fresh, not packaged shredded mozzarella.
The aromatic third element that ties the salad together. Fresh basil provides a sweet, slightly peppery fragrance that is inseparable from Caprese. Never substitute dried basil. Tear the leaves rather than cutting them to prevent bruising and browning.
The dressing — nothing more. Use your finest extra virgin olive oil as it is not cooked or diluted and its quality is fully apparent. A fruity, peppery Sicilian or Tuscan oil is particularly suited to this dish. Drizzle generously over the assembled salad just before serving.
Burrata (fresh mozzarella with a cream-filled center) can replace mozzarella for an even more indulgent version — serve whole in the center of the tomatoes. Stracciatella (the stringy inner cream of burrata) spooned over sliced tomatoes creates a deconstructed version. Micro basil or basil oil can replace whole leaves for a more modern presentation. Peaches or watermelon can partially replace tomatoes in summer for a sweet, unexpected variation. Balsamic vinegar reduced to a syrup can replace purchased balsamic glaze.
Cut 4 large ripe tomatoes into 1/4 to 1/2-inch thick slices. Pat them gently with paper towels to remove excess moisture. Slice 16 oz fresh mozzarella into similar thickness (about 1/4 inch). If using mozzarella stored in water or brine, drain well and pat dry with paper towels.
On a large serving platter, arrange the tomato and mozzarella slices in an alternating pattern, slightly overlapping them. You can create a line, circle, or any decorative pattern you prefer. Tuck fresh basil leaves between and around the tomato and mozzarella slices.
Drizzle 3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil evenly over the salad. Follow with 2 tablespoons balsamic glaze or reduction, drizzling it artistically over the top. Sprinkle with 1/2 teaspoon flaky sea salt and 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper.
Serve the Caprese salad immediately at room temperature. It pairs beautifully with crusty Italian bread for soaking up the juices and oil. Optionally, garnish with extra fresh basil leaves.
Techniques that separate good from great
Caprese has only three main ingredients, and the tomato quality determines 50% of the dish. Out-of-season, refrigerated supermarket tomatoes will produce a mediocre salad no matter what olive oil or mozzarella you use. Use heirloom tomatoes in summer, San Marzano, or vine-ripened for peak flavor. Never refrigerate tomatoes before using them.
Fresh mozzarella stored in brine or water releases a significant amount of liquid when sliced that dilutes the dressing and makes the plate look watery. After slicing, lay the mozzarella on paper towels for 5 minutes and pat the surfaces dry. This single step dramatically improves the presentation.
Salting the sliced tomatoes 5 minutes before arranging them causes osmosis — moisture drawn to the surface carries concentrated tomato flavor with it. This juice mingles with the olive oil to create a natural, intensely tomato-flavored dressing that no bottled product can replicate.
The olive oil should be drizzled last, just before serving, so it does not coat the mozzarella and prevent the other flavors from adhering. Add the balsamic glaze in a thin drizzle from a squeeze bottle for precise, elegant presentation. Season with flaky sea salt and fresh cracked pepper only after dressing.
Different ways to make this dish your own
Replace mozzarella with a whole ball of burrata placed in the center of the arranged tomato slices. Cut it open at the table to reveal the creamy stracciatella center. Dramatic, indulgent, and far more luxurious than the original.
Replace half the tomatoes with ripe, sliced peaches. The sweet, juicy peach contrasts beautifully with the creamy mozzarella and fresh basil for a summery, unexpected variation that is particularly good with a drizzle of aged balsamic.
Thread cherry tomatoes, mini mozzarella balls (ciliegine), and small basil leaves onto cocktail skewers. Drizzle with olive oil and balsamic. Easy to eat standing up, visually striking, and perfect for parties and aperitivo.
Drape thin slices of prosciutto di Parma between the tomato and mozzarella layers for a more substantial version. The salty, cured ham adds savory depth and makes the salad more filling and meal-worthy.
Perfect pairings to complete the meal
Grilled or toasted Italian bread alongside the Caprese salad for soaking up the tomato juices and olive oil from the plate. The crusty bread creates a more complete course and ensures none of the flavorful dressing is wasted.
Caprese is the ideal first course before pasta, pizza, risotto, or grilled meats. Its lightness and freshness prepare the palate without filling you up, and its Italian identity creates a cohesive meal narrative.
The salad's acidity and freshness pair particularly well with grilled proteins. The tomato-mozzarella combination cuts through the richness of grilled salmon, chicken, or a bistecca alla Fiorentina.
A crisp, dry Italian white wine is the ideal pairing for Caprese. Pinot Grigio's clean, neutral profile complements the salad without competition. A Sardinian Vermentino with its slightly mineral, citrus character is particularly harmonious.
Keep it fresh and plan ahead
Caprese salad is best assembled and eaten immediately. If storing components separately, wrap tomato slices and mozzarella individually and refrigerate for up to 1 day. Always bring everything to room temperature before serving.
Not suitable for freezing. Tomatoes and mozzarella both change texture dramatically when frozen and thawed.
The only make-ahead step is making the balsamic glaze reduction, which keeps for weeks in the refrigerator. Slice the tomatoes and mozzarella up to 2 hours ahead and store separately. Assemble and dress the salad no more than 15-20 minutes before serving.
Caprese salad is served at room temperature and never reheated. If the components have been refrigerated, remove them at least 20-30 minutes before serving to allow the flavors to bloom fully.
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