Ina Garten Sun Dried Tomato Dip

Ina Garten Sun Dried Tomato Dip

I once brought this dip to a casual dinner party thinking it would just fill a spot on the table. But halfway through the evening, it was the only dish people were still hovering over. The balance of tangy, creamy, and just-spicy-enough surprised even me.

Here’s how I made it Ina-level (and what not to skip).

Why This Works So Well

The game-changer is the balance: Ina uses equal parts cream cheese, sour cream, and mayo—not too heavy, not too tangy. The sun-dried tomatoes aren’t just stirred in; they’re blended until velvety, making the flavor feel woven through the entire dip.

And those scallions? They don’t just add crunch. They brighten everything.

Not Just What—But Why

  • Sun-dried tomatoes in oil – These are the backbone. I tried dry-packed once, and the flavor didn’t bloom the same. Use oil-packed, drained well.
  • Cream cheese (room temp) – Adds body and richness. Cold cream cheese will clump, not blend.
  • Sour cream – Balances the richness with acidity. I used full-fat for depth.
  • Good mayonnaise – Ina always says “good,” and in this case, she means it. I like Hellmann’s.
  • Hot red pepper sauce – Ten dashes sounds precise—and it is. Just enough heat to make you curious.
  • Kosher salt + black pepper – Don’t underseason. The dairy needs it.
  • Scallions – Add them last. They should stay fresh and sharp, not disappear into the food processor.

Safe Substitutions

  • Greek yogurt can work in place of sour cream if you want it tangier.
  • Vegan mayo holds up well if you’re avoiding eggs.
  • Once, I swapped chives for scallions when I ran out. Milder, but still worked beautifully.

What I’d Do Differently

What Went WrongWhy It HappensHow to Fix It
Dip tasted flatSkipped the saltAdd the full teaspoon—especially with dairy-heavy dips
Gritty textureTomatoes weren’t soft enoughSoak them in hot water for 5 minutes before blending
Scallions turned bitterOver-processedAdd last and pulse just twice

How to Make Ina Garten’s Sun-Dried Tomato Dip

  1. Drain and chop about 8 oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes (1/4 cup).
  2. In a food processor fitted with the metal blade, blend the tomatoes, 8 oz cream cheese (room temp), 1/2 cup sour cream, 1/2 cup mayo, 10 dashes hot sauce, 1 tsp kosher salt, and 3/4 tsp pepper until smooth.
  3. Add scallions (2, thinly sliced) and pulse twice.
  4. Let sit at room temp for 30 minutes—or refrigerate an hour to deepen the flavor. Serve with something crunchy.
Ina Garten Sun Dried Tomato Dip
Ina Garten Sun Dried Tomato Dip

Tips I Always Use

  • I soak the tomatoes in hot water for a few minutes if they feel firm—it smooths out the dip.
  • Letting it rest, even for 20 minutes, lets the scallions mellow and the flavors settle.
  • A rubber spatula helps get every last bit out of the processor—this stuff disappears fast.

How I Store It

  • Fridge: 5–7 days, airtight container.
  • Freezer: Technically fine for up to 3 months, but the texture softens a bit. Best fresh.

Reader Qs Answered

Q: Can I make this ahead of time?
A: Absolutely. I make it the night before—it tastes even better the next day.

Q: What should I serve with it?
A: Crostini, cucumber slices, seeded crackers, or even spread in a sandwich. Once, I dolloped it on roasted zucchini. No regrets.

Q: Is it gluten-free?
A: Yes—just watch what you dip into it.

Try More Recipes:

Ina Garten Sun Dried Tomato Dip

Difficulty:BeginnerPrep time: 5 minutesCook time: minutesRest time:1 hour Total time:1 hour 5 minutesServings:2 cups servingsCalories:116.8 kcal Best Season:Suitable throughout the year

Description

Creamy, tangy, and effortless—this sun-dried tomato dip comes together in minutes and always disappears fast.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. In a food processor, blend tomatoes, cream cheese, sour cream, mayo, hot sauce, salt, and pepper until smooth.
  2. Add scallions; pulse just twice.
  3. Serve at room temperature or chill for one hour before serving.
Keywords:Ina Garten Sun Dried Tomato Dip