This raspberry spinach salad is what I make when I need a dish that looks like it took hours but came together in 20 minutes. Jewel-bright raspberries against dark baby spinach, crumbled white feta, amber-glazed candied pecans, and paper-thin slivers of red onion — all dressed in a honey balsamic vinaigrette that ties every flavor together into something genuinely spectacular. It became one of the top-trending spinach salad recipes of 2025, with over 220,000 monthly searches — and one taste makes it obvious why.
This is the kind of salad that converts people who claim they "don't like salad." The sweetness of raspberries, the crunch of candied nuts, the salty tang of feta, and the bright dressing create a fully rounded flavor profile that satisfies in a way most salads simply don't.
Why Candied Pecans Are Non-Negotiable
Plain toasted pecans are good. Candied pecans are transformative. The caramel glaze adds sweetness and crunch that echoes the raspberries, and creates a textural contrast against the soft spinach and creamy feta that makes every forkful interesting. The candying process takes exactly 5 minutes on the stovetop and the pecans can be made a week ahead — store them in an airtight container and you have an instant salad upgrade ready to go at any time.
The only trick: when the sugar caramelizes and coats the nuts, immediately spread them on parchment paper in a single layer. Don't let them cluster together — once the caramel sets (about 3 minutes), they'll form one large brittle cluster that's impossible to break cleanly.
The Honey Balsamic Dressing: Balance Is Everything
A great salad dressing is a study in balance. This honey balsamic hits four flavor notes simultaneously:
- Sweet — honey rounds out the sharp edges of the balsamic
- Sour — balsamic vinegar provides fruit-forward acidity
- Savory — Dijon mustard and garlic add depth (and Dijon emulsifies the oil and vinegar)
- Rich — quality extra-virgin olive oil ties it all together
The ratio matters: 3 parts oil to 2 parts vinegar is richer and rounder than the standard 3:1 for this particular salad. The sweetness of the raspberries can handle — and benefits from — a more acidic dressing. Taste it before dressing the salad and adjust honey or vinegar until it tastes balanced.
How to Turn This Into a Full Meal
With a protein addition, this salad becomes a complete, impressive main course:
- Grilled chicken breast — slice thin and fan over the top
- Seared salmon fillet — the richness of salmon with raspberries is exceptional
- Shrimp — sauté with garlic and a splash of balsamic before adding
- Crispy prosciutto — bake prosciutto until crisp, crumble over the top
- Soft-boiled eggs — halved, yolk-side up, for a vegetarian protein option
Seasonal Swaps: Year-Round Versions
Raspberries are at peak sweetness in summer. Here's how to adapt this salad through the seasons:
- Spring — strawberries, goat cheese, sliced almonds
- Summer — raspberries (peak season), feta, candied pecans (this recipe)
- Fall — sliced pears, gorgonzola, candied walnuts, dried cranberries
- Winter — clementine segments, pomegranate seeds, candied pecans, brie
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you make spinach salad ahead?
Prep all components separately, assemble fresh just before serving. Candied pecans last a week in a sealed container.
What dressing goes best with spinach salad?
Honey balsamic vinaigrette is the classic — its sweet-tangy balance complements spinach and raspberries perfectly.
Can you use frozen raspberries?
No — they release too much liquid. Use fresh raspberries; strawberries or blackberries are the best fresh alternatives.
Is spinach salad healthy?
Very — baby spinach is iron-rich and loaded with vitamins K, A, and folate. At 280 calories with 5g fiber, it's genuinely nutritious.