A quinoa salad lives or dies on how you treat the grain. Rinse it, salt the water, cook it just until tender, 10 minutes, not 20, and let it cool completely before you add anything else. Do that, and this quinoa spinach power salad stays fluffy, not pasty.
The rest is just a smart balance of sweet raisins, tart lemon, and a fine chop on the spinach so every forkful gets some green. Simple ingredients, but the margin for error is small: mushy quinoa ruins the texture, and a heavy dressing would swamp the delicate spinach. This one gets it right because it leans on technique, not tricks.
Salt the cooking water for quinoa
Cooked in plain water, quinoa tastes flat. A little salt in the pot seasons the grains from the inside out.
For 2 cups of water, 1/4 teaspoon is enough to enhance flavor without making it salty. The quinoa absorbs some of that salt as it swells.
After cooking, you strain it, so any excess salt is left behind. This is the same approach you’d use for rice or pasta: the grain gets seasoned at the foundation. Bites of the finished salad carry a subtle savoriness that plain quinoa would lack.
Keep the dressing simple and balanced
Lemon juice and olive oil are a classic pair that brighten the earthy quinoa and spinach without weighing them down. 5 tablespoons each, keep the salad light, not soggy. The raisins bring sweetness that rounds out the lemon’s acidity.
Whisk them together, and they form a temporary emulsion, no mustard or honey needed. The dressing coats each ingredient evenly, so every forkful tastes fresh.
A sturdy vinaigrette would overpower the delicate spinach; this one lets the vegetables and quinoa come through.
Chop the spinach fine for even distribution
Whole spinach leaves would clump and make the salad hard to mix. A fine chop lets the pieces coat with dressing and scatter throughout the quinoa. Since the spinach stays raw, it keeps its crisp texture and bright color.
You get a bit of green in nearly every bite, but the pieces are small enough that they don’t dominate. No cooking means no wilting, so the salad stays lively.
The result is a cohesive mix where the spinach integrates without becoming the sole focus.

Prep: 5 min · Cook: 10 min · Total: 15 min · Servings: 4 · Calories: 170 kcal
Ingredient notes for this salad
Quinoa: Rinse it first to remove the bitter coating called saponin. The grain will taste clean and not soapy.
Spinach: Buy pre-washed baby spinach for convenience. Chop it finely so it mingles evenly with the quinoa.
Raisins: Standard dark or golden raisins work the same here. They add sweetness that balances the lemon.
Lemon juice: Fresh squeezed lemon juice is noticeably brighter than bottled. The flavor pops in this simple dressing.
Extra-virgin olive oil: Use a good quality one you like the taste of. It’s a main flavor, not just a cooking fat.
I see so many people end up with a gluey mess because they boil quinoa like pasta until it splits.
Build the salad with cooled quinoa and a light hand
Cook the quinoa
Bring 2 cups salted water to a boil, stir in the rinsed quinoa, then lower the heat. Cook gently for about 10 minutes, the grains will be tender with a tiny white curl, not mushy. Strain well and let cool completely.
Whisk the dressing
In a small bowl, combine lemon juice, olive oil, salt, and pepper. Whisk vigorously until it looks slightly cloudy and thickens a bit, that means it’s emulsified enough to cling to the ingredients.
Chop the spinach fine
Stack the leaves, roll them up like a cigar, and slice crosswise into thin ribbons. The finer you chop, the more evenly the spinach will mix with the quinoa. You’ll see green flecks throughout, not clumps.
Assemble the salad
In a large bowl, combine the cooled quinoa, chopped spinach, diced tomato, cucumber, and raisins. Pour the dressing over and toss gently with a fork, you want everything evenly coated but not smashed. Taste and add a pinch more salt if needed.

Quinoa Spinach Power Salad
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup quinoa, uncooked
- 2 cups spinach, finely chopped
- 1 tomato, diced
- 1/2 cup cucumbers, diced
- 1/4 cup raisins
- 1 1/2 tablespoon lemon juice
- 1 1/2 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
Instructions
Cook Quinoa:
Wash the quinoa using a fine-mesh sieve. In a medium pot, heat 2 cups of salted water until boiling. Stir in the quinoa, lower the heat, and let it cook gently for roughly 10 minutes until soft. Strain off the water and allow to cool.Make Dressing:
In a small bowl, combine lemon juice, olive oil, salt, and pepper, then whisk thoroughly to create the dressing.Combine Salad:
In a large mixing bowl, put the cooled quinoa, spinach, diced tomatoes, cucumbers, and raisins. Add the dressing and mix well. Adjust seasoning with extra salt and pepper if desired.

Storage and Serving
This salad is best eaten within 2 hours of assembling, while the quinoa is fluffy and the vegetables are crisp. The dressing keeps the grains moist without making them soggy. For leftovers, transfer to an airtight container and refrigerate for up to 3 days.
Over time, the quinoa absorbs the dressing, so the texture becomes softer and less distinct. To revive a stored portion, add a splash of lemon juice and a drizzle of olive oil, then toss. This restores brightness and loosens the grains.
The spinach will wilt slightly after a day, but the salad remains pleasant. Do not freeze the assembled salad. The thawed quinoa turns mushy, and the vegetables release water, making it watery.
If you have leftover quinoa, freeze it plain in a sealed bag for up to 1 month and use it later in another dish. For the best texture, serve cold or at room temperature.
Let refrigerated salad sit out for 10 minutes before eating to take off the chill without warming the vegetables.
Tips
- Toast the quinoa in a dry skillet over medium heat for 2 minutes, stirring often, until it smells nutty and pops slightly. This deepens the flavor before cooking, giving the salad a toasty background note that plain quinoa lacks.
- Use the same pot for toasting and boiling: toast the quinoa, then add the salted water directly to the pot. This avoids extra dishes and lets any browned bits dissolve into the cooking water for extra flavor.
What you can swap in this quinoa salad, and what to leave alone
Quinoa: Cooked farro, bulgur, or couscous. The salad base gets chewier, and the cooking time changes.
Farro needs about 25 minutes, bulgur can be steeped in hot water. The texture becomes less fluffy, more toothsome.
Spinach: Chopped kale or arugula. Kale is tougher, massage it with a little oil and salt first to soften.
Arugula adds a peppery bite. Both hold up better than spinach if you plan to eat leftovers.
Raisins: Dried cranberries or chopped dried apricots. Cranberries are tarter, apricots sweeter and chewier.
Both provide the same pop of sweetness against the lemon. Use the same 1/4 cup.
Salt: Crumbled feta cheese. Feta adds salty tang and creamy pockets. Omit the salt in the dressing, start with 2 tablespoons of feta, then taste.
The salad becomes richer, less lean.

Frequently Asked Questions
Can I make this salad ahead of time?
You can, but it’s best within 2 hours of assembling. The quinoa stays fluffy and the vegetables stay crisp. For leftovers, refrigerate up to 3 days; the quinoa will soften as it absorbs the dressing.
To revive, add a splash of lemon juice and olive oil.
How do I prevent the quinoa from getting mushy?
Cook it gently for only 10 minutes until the grains are tender with a tiny white curl. Strain well and let it cool completely before mixing. Overcooking or adding the dressing while still warm will make the quinoa absorb too much liquid and turn mushy.
Should I serve this salad warm or cold?
Serve it cold or at room temperature. The spinach stays crisp and the dressing bright when not heated. If refrigerated, let it sit out for 10 minutes to take off the chill without warming the vegetables.
What makes this a ‘power’ salad compared to other quinoa salads?
It’s lean: only 170 calories per serving with a light lemon-olive oil dressing, no heavy add-ins. The spinach adds volume without weighing it down, and the raisins provide a touch of sweetness. It’s a simple, nutrient-dense base you can customize.
