Homemade Honey Mustard Dressing
Store-bought honey mustard dressing is not so good. You pay way too much for a bottle full of preservatives, weird thickeners, and a flavor that tastes like it almost got there. Meanwhile, the homemade version takes about two minutes, uses five ingredients you probably already have, and tastes like something a fancy restaurant drizzled on your salad while you weren’t looking.
What Makes Honey Mustard Dressing So Good?
The Sweet-Tangy Balance Is Everything
Honey mustard dressing works because it hits two flavor notes at once — the sweet warmth of honey and the sharp, punchy tang of mustard. Neither one overpowers the other. They meet in the middle and create something genuinely crave-worthy.
That balance is also why honey mustard dressing is so versatile. It works on salads, as a dip, drizzled over roasted veggies, or slathered onto a sandwich. It plays well with everything, which is rare for a condiment.
The Ingredients You Need (And Why Each One Matters)
Here’s what goes into a truly great honey mustard dressing:
- 3 tbsp olive oil — adds richness and helps everything emulsify into a smooth, cohesive dressing
- 3 tbsp Dijon mustard — brings the tangy, complex backbone of the whole recipe
- 2.5 tbsp apple cider vinegar — adds brightness and a fruity sharpness that lifts all the other flavors
- 6 tbsp honey — the star of the show; provides sweetness and that gorgeous golden color
- Salt — just a pinch, but don’t skip it; salt makes every flavor pop
Each ingredient pulls its own weight here. The olive oil isn’t just filler — it gives the dressing a silky texture and carries the flavors across your palate. The apple cider vinegar is specifically better than white vinegar here because it adds a subtle fruitiness that complements the honey beautifully.
How to Make It — Seriously, It’s This Easy
The One-Bottle Method
Here’s the thing nobody tells you about homemade salad dressings: you don’t need a blender, a whisk, or any special equipment. Just grab a glass bottle or jar.
Here’s exactly what you do:
- Add 3 tbsp olive oil to your glass bottle
- Add 3 tbsp Dijon mustard
- Pour in 2.5 tbsp apple cider vinegar
- Add 6 tbsp honey
- Sprinkle in a pinch of salt
- Seal the bottle and shake it until everything combines into a smooth, unified dressing
That’s it. No fancy technique. No standing over a bowl whisking until your arm falls off. You shake it, and it’s done.
Why Shaking Works Better Than You Think
The olive oil and vinegar naturally want to separate — that’s just chemistry. But Dijon mustard acts as a natural emulsifier, meaning it helps bind the oil and water-based ingredients together. When you shake everything in a sealed bottle, the mustard does its job and creates a dressing that stays blended far longer than most homemade versions.
FYI — if your dressing does separate after sitting in the fridge, just shake it again before using. Totally normal, totally fine.
How to Use Your Honey Mustard Dressing
As a Salad Dressing
This is the obvious one, but let’s talk about which salads it works best on. Honey mustard dressing shines on heartier salads — think spinach with walnuts and cranberries, a chopped romaine with apple slices, or a classic wedge. The sweetness pairs beautifully with bitter greens like arugula or radicchio.
Light, delicate lettuces like butter lettuce can get a little overwhelmed, so use a lighter hand with those.
As a Dip
Chicken tenders, roasted broccoli, sweet potato fries, pretzel bites — honey mustard dressing as a dip is practically unbeatable. It’s thick enough to cling to whatever you’re dipping without being gloopy, and the flavor pairs with just about any snack you can think of.
Honestly, I’ve eaten it straight off a spoon while cooking. No regrets.
As a Sandwich or Wrap Spread
Swap out mayonnaise or plain mustard and use honey mustard dressing as a spread on your next turkey sandwich or chicken wrap. It adds moisture, flavor, and a touch of sweetness that takes a basic lunch to a completely different level.
It works especially well on a wrap with grilled chicken, shredded cabbage, and avocado. Try it once and you’ll stop reaching for plain mayo forever.
As a Marinade or Glaze
Here’s one most people overlook — honey mustard dressing makes an excellent marinade for chicken or salmon. The honey caramelizes beautifully in the oven or on a grill, and the mustard tenderizes the protein while adding flavor. Just coat your protein, let it sit for 20–30 minutes, and cook as normal.
Storage Tips and Shelf Life
Keep It in the Fridge
Store your honey mustard dressing in the same glass bottle you made it in, sealed tightly in the fridge. It stays fresh for up to two weeks, though in my experience it rarely lasts that long because it disappears too fast.
The olive oil will solidify slightly when chilled — that’s completely normal. Just let the bottle sit at room temperature for a few minutes before using, or run it under warm water for 30 seconds.
Don’t Make Too Much at Once
Because this recipe contains no preservatives, make it in batches you’ll actually use within two weeks. The recipe above is perfectly sized for a household that uses dressing regularly. If you’re cooking for one, halve the quantities.
Customizing Your Honey Mustard Dressing
Make It Spicier
Want more heat? Add a pinch of cayenne pepper or a dash of hot sauce. It won’t change the fundamental flavor profile — it’ll just add a pleasant kick that builds at the end of each bite. Great if you’re using it as a dip for something rich like fried food.
Make It More Tangy
Increase the apple cider vinegar by half a tablespoon if you want something more assertive and sharp. This version works particularly well on bitter greens where you want the dressing to push back a little.
Make It Thicker
Add a touch more Dijon mustard to thicken the consistency. This is useful if you want a dipping sauce that clings better or a spread that doesn’t run off your sandwich.
Why Homemade Always Beats Store-Bought
Let’s settle this once and for all. Store-bought honey mustard dressing often contains modified food starch, xanthan gum, and preservatives that alter both the texture and taste. You get a product that’s shelf-stable for 18 months but doesn’t actually taste like honey or mustard in any meaningful way.
Homemade honey mustard dressing uses real ingredients, takes two minutes, and costs a fraction of what you’d spend at the grocery store. The flavor difference is enormous :/
The only argument for store-bought is convenience — and this recipe is so fast that even that argument falls apart.
The Nutritional Side of Honey Mustard Dressing
What You’re Actually Getting
Honey mustard dressing made with olive oil provides healthy monounsaturated fats, which support heart health and help your body absorb fat-soluble vitamins from the salad vegetables you’re dressing. Honey adds natural sugars with trace minerals. Apple cider vinegar contributes acetic acid, which many people associate with digestive benefits.
This isn’t a low-calorie dressing — the olive oil and honey make sure of that — but the calories come from real, wholesome sources rather than processed fillers.
Watch Your Portions
Two tablespoons is a standard serving size, and this recipe is rich enough that two tablespoons genuinely goes a long way. Drizzle, don’t flood. Your salad will thank you.
Final Thoughts: Make a Batch Today
Honey mustard dressing is one of those things that sounds simple — because it is — but delivers every single time. Five ingredients, one bottle, thirty seconds of shaking, and you have something better than almost anything you’ll find at the store.
Make a batch this week. Use it on everything. Then make another batch because the first one ran out in three days. That’s the honey mustard dressing cycle, and once you start, there’s no going back.
6
servings2
minutes20
minutes120
kcalIngredients
3 tbsp olive oil
3 tbsp Dijon mustard
2.5 tbsp apple cider vinegar
6 tbsp honey
Pinch of salt
Directions
- Add the olive oil to a glass bottle or jar.
- Add the Dijon mustard, apple cider vinegar, honey, and a pinch of salt.
- Seal the bottle or jar tightly and shake until the dressing is smooth and well combined.
- Use immediately, or chill and shake again before serving if it separates.
Notes
- Store in the refrigerator for up to 1 week; shake well before each use since it may separate naturally.



