This post contains affiliate links
There’s Caesar Salad, and Then There’s This Caesar Salad
Caesar salad dressing should be creamy, punchy, and balanced, and this version nails it every time.
Once you make Caesar salad dressing from scratch using this method, bottled dressing is done.
You’ve had Caesar salad a hundred times. Some great. Most forgettable.
We see it constantly in class. People think Caesar salad dressing is either complicated or not worth the effort. Then we make it together, and suddenly it’s the thing they can’t stop talking about.
This version is different. It’s not traditional in the strict sense, and that’s on purpose. We’ve tested it, tweaked it, and taught it for years. It’s built to work in real kitchens, not just restaurant ones.
And recently, it became official in Jody’s house. Her daughter made it on her own, then saved the recipe in her phone so she could keep making it. No prompting. No reminders.
That’s when you know a recipe sticks.
How to Make Caesar Salad Dressing That Actually Tastes Good
Blend bold ingredients, build your emulsion, and finish with richness. That is how Caesar salad dressing comes together. This is not about following steps blindly. It’s about understanding what each ingredient is doing.
Originally tossed right at the table, Caesar’s salad became an instant classic, spreading across North America and evolving along the way. Anchovies were added by some. Egg yolks swapped for mayo. Dijon, capers, even Worcestershire sauce made their way into modern versions.
We both remember getting our first massive ‘wooden salad bowl’ for Caesar salads. It was a staple wedding gift lol!
And while we respect the OG, we think we’ve built the best Caesar Salad recipe ever. Here’s why.
Why This Caesar Salad Dressing Works
It uses mayonnaise for stability, capers for brightness, and a layered acid system for balance.
This is where this recipe separates itself.
Mayonnaise makes it foolproof
Traditional Caesar uses egg yolk. We use mayonnaise. It’s stable, safe, and gives you consistent creaminess every time.
Capers replace anchovies
Same salty, briny hit. Less intimidating. More approachable. Still delivers that depth people expect from Caesar.
Two acids, not one
Vinegar and lemon juice work differently. One sharpens, one brightens. Together, they balance the richness of the oil and cheese.
Emulsification still matters
Even with mayo, slowly adding oil builds structure. That’s what gives you that cling factor on the lettuce.
The science behind emulsification is the same reason classic Caesar dressing and mayonnaise hold together. You’re binding fat and water into one smooth system, which is what makes the dressing creamy and stable.
The Best Caesar Salad Dressing (Chef-Developed and Family-Tested)
This version makes a generous jar and keeps beautifully in the fridge for days. That means Caesar salads all week, and bonus drizzling opportunities on paninis, wraps, and roasted veggies.
- Author: Culinary Studio
- Prep Time: 10
- Cook Time: 5
- Total Time: 15 minutes
- Yield: 4 servings 1x
Ingredients
- 1 large clove of garlic
- 1/4 cup red wine vinegar
- Juice of 1 large lemon
- 1 tbsp. capers
- 1 tbsp. Dijon mustard
- 1/2 cup grated parmesan cheese (Grana Padano is great)
- 1 tsp. kosher salt
- 1/2 tsp. freshly ground black pepper
- 1/2 cup olive oil
- 1 cup mayonnaise
Instructions
-
- In a blender, combine garlic, vinegar, lemon juice, capers, Dijon, parmesan cheese, salt, and pepper.
- Blend until smooth (or leave a little texture if you like it rustic)
- Slowly drizzle in olive oil
- Transfer to a mixing bowl and whisk in mayonnaise (by not blending the mayonnaise, the dressing stays thicker).
- Taste and adjust seasoning.
- That’s it! Rich, punchy, creamy perfection.
Cook With Us!
Like this recipe? You should try cooking with us! Start with an on-demand pre-recorded class, or jump in to the best experience with our live classes!
I subscribe the updates and get links to recipes - I recently made the Olive Oil Lemon cake. It turned out delicious – as you said in the description, very moist! My daughter has a birthday in strawberry season and typically she asks for strawberry shortcake with a traditional shortcake recipe… I served the lemon came this weekend with a bit of whipping cream and fresh strawberries (your picture was quite enticing) and her comment was that her birthday request this year would be to replace the traditional shortcake with this recipe!
I made Dan Dan noodles last month and again referred to the recording as it has been awhile. I was grateful for the reminders, tips and tricks. Not to mention, I love to cook with Kirstie and Jody. They make it so much fun!
Most of the meals I make are from your repertoire. I think I have close to 60!
You will learn delicious recipes taught in real time from start to end by two good friends who want nothing more than to teach you how to cook and and have fun doing it. Class presentation is practical and encouraging with one chef starting and one playing 'catch up' so you do not miss anything and no question will go unanswered!
The recipe with food pack is perfectly packaged and always arrives on time to make it easy so you do not have to shop!
Several recipes from the Culinary Studio are in our regular rotation!
Excited to keep cooking with you Kirstie and Jody!
I was at the Studio for the very first class they held and I have continued to take classes for the past 13 years. While some things have changed over the years, the quality, knowledge and skills Jody and Kirstie bring to each class has not.The skills I learned through the their instruction have been used daily.
Notes
Jody and Kirstie’s Hot Tips
• Use real parmesan. It matters more than you think
• Blend the base well before adding oil
• Taste before adding extra salt, capers and cheese bring plenty
• Add oil slowly, even with mayo, it improves texture
• If it’s too thick, loosen with a splash of water or lemon
• Always dress your lettuce right before serving
Substitutions
This Caesar salad dressing is flexible and forgiving.
• No capers → use anchovies or Worcestershire
• No red wine vinegar → white wine vinegar or apple cider vinegar
• No mayonnaise → use egg yolk if you want a more traditional version
• No parmesan → Pecorino works beautifully
What to Know and Avoid
Avoid overthinking it and avoid skipping key ingredients.
• Do not dump oil in too fast
• Do not skip acid, it will taste heavy
• Do not overdress your salad
• Do not use wet lettuce, the dressing will slide right off
Storage
Store it properly and it keeps well for a few days.
• Refrigerate in an airtight container
• Use within 3 to 4 days
• Stir before using
FAQ
Can I make Caesar salad dressing ahead of time?
Yes. It holds well in the fridge for a few days and often tastes even better the next day.
Why use mayonnaise instead of egg yolk?
It’s more stable, safer, and gives consistent results without compromising texture.
Can I make this without cheese?
You can, but it will lose body and depth. Add a touch more salt and acid to compensate.
Why does my dressing taste flat?
It likely needs more acid or salt. Taste and adjust.
Key Takeaways
• Caesar salad dressing is simple when you understand the balance
• Mayonnaise makes it reliable and consistent
• Capers deliver depth without anchovies
• Emulsification creates the creamy texture
• Making it once builds real confidence in the kitchen
Want to Turn This Into Dinner?
If you love this dressing, we take it way further in one of our most popular meals.
Our Chicken Caesar Rice Bowl shows you how to build a full dinner around it, something you’ll make on repeat.
👉 https://www.theculinarystudio.ca/products/chicken-caesar-rice-bowl?_pos=1&_psq=caesar&_ss=e&_v=1.0
About the Authors
Jody O’Malley and Kirstie Herbstreit are the Red Seal certified chef co-owners of The Culinary Studio in Waterloo, Ontario. Jody is a Stratford Chefs School graduate (2002) and Kirstie trained at SAIT in Calgary (2003). Together, they bring over 20 years of professional cooking experience and 15 years building one of Canada’s leading culinary education businesses. They teach home cooks the science and techniques behind great food, not just the recipes, and co-host the Chef Over Your Shoulder podcast alongside Amy Schlueter.






