Classic Ranch Dressing Recipe (2024)

Recipe from Eleanore Park

Adapted by Julia Moskin

Classic Ranch Dressing Recipe (1)

Total Time
15 minutes
Rating
4(766)
Notes
Read community notes

The original dressing served in the 1950s at Hidden Valley Ranch, a guest ranch near Santa Barbara, Calif., was made mostly from dry herbs and aromatics. To recreate that taste, this recipe, from the “Ranch” cookbook (Dovetail, 2018) by Abby Reisner, with recipes by Eleanore Park, is made with garlic powder instead of garlic, dried parsley instead of fresh, and so on. It makes enough seasoning mix for about 4 cups dressing; you can mix it, store it, then add dairy as needed. If you don’t like the zip of mustard, try hot sauce or Worcestershire sauce instead — or simply omit for a milder taste. To make a thick dip instead of a pourable dressing, reduce the amount of buttermilk to ¼ cup. —Julia Moskin

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Ingredients

Yield:4 to 5 cups dressing

    For the Seasoning Mix

    • teaspoons dried chives
    • 1teaspoon dried parsley
    • 1teaspoon dried dill
    • 1tablespoon onion powder
    • 1teaspoon garlic powder
    • 1teaspoon salt
    • ¼teaspoon black pepper
    • ¼teaspoon mustard powder (optional)
    • 2tablespoons buttermilk powder (optional)

    For Each Cup of Dressing

    • ½cup chilled sour cream or mayonnaise
    • ½cup chilled buttermilk
    • Salt, to taste

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (9 servings)

37 calories; 3 grams fat; 1 gram saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 1 gram monounsaturated fat; 0 grams polyunsaturated fat; 2 grams carbohydrates; 0 grams dietary fiber; 1 gram sugars; 1 gram protein; 73 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Classic Ranch Dressing Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    For the seasoning mix: In a bowl, whisk all the ingredients together. Taste and adjust the seasonings to your liking. Transfer to an airtight container and store in the refrigerator until ready to use; it will keep indefinitely.

  2. To make 1 cup dressing: In a medium bowl, place 1 tablespoon seasoning mix. Add sour cream and buttermilk and whisk together until smooth. Taste and add salt if needed. Serve immediately or refrigerate, covered, up to 2 days (or up to 2 weeks if made with mayonnaise).

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766

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

ML

Garlic powder & onion powder are dried garlic & dried onion. There should be nothing "not real" about them. Just like any dried herbs.

abstract668

I am a ranch fanatic and am so happy to see Julia's take on the necessity of using dried herbs and aromatics. I have made many versions and have finally arrived at a recipe very similar to Julia's. I use Penzey's Spices, and I add in some dried red bell pepper instead of Julia's mustard. Also, I usually don't have buttermilk in the fridge, so I use labneh thinned with milk instead, along with mayo. For the best cole slaw ever, chop up a cabbage and use this dressing.

Debbie

The reason they are using dried herbs is because that is what the original Ranch Dressing used, so while it offends your preferred cooking habits, it's actually closer to "authentic" to use dried herbs.

BrookeCookie

Please revise my prior note to read:I'm from Santa Barbara. Mayo & buttermilk for dressing. If you want to make Ranch Dip you use mayo and sour cream.

Ruchama

I plan to veganize this. I use vegan mayonnaise or vegan sour cream; I clabber soy milk or almond milk (soy works a bit better). Sometimes to make a close version, I pour apple cider vinegar into the remains of a jar of vegan mayonnaise (amount depending on how much mayo is left) and add the powdered ingredients. Not the original but it's quick and easy.

Annabelle Chappell

There's good news, Abby! MSG is natural and found in many foods, such as Worcestershire sauce, soy sauce, mushrooms, tomato paste, etc. If you can tolerate any of these foods, you don't have a problem with MSG. It's the original umami!

Richie

Nothing beats a crispy, crunchy, ice cold crudités served alongside a refreshing, frothing ranch dunk tank.

Laura

I was happy to see this recipe, as I’ve always wanted to replicate the original Hidden Ranch dressing. And it’s fun to hear the back story. Thanks and kudos to Julia Moskin!

Heidi

King Arthur Flour has buttermilk powder. Of course. :)

Marianne

I'm not ashamed to admit I love ranch dressing and I was pretty excited to see this recipe. Commercial ranch is full of additives so I've been making my own for the last couple years. This recipe is the best I've ever made and the one I will use from now on. I had to check a few stores to find the buttermilk powder but I found it and I'm glad I did. I think it makes a difference. I didn't have mustard powder so I left it out.

Craig

I enjoyed the article. Ranch dressing was invented by a plumber! - who knew? Ranch dressing is called American dressing in Europe. The only way to get the original flavor is to use dried spices! Finally,. I never even imagined let alone heard of, buttermilk powder....

Art

The comment about using the dried herb mixture for the original flavor brought .to mind the packet of dried herbs included in Van de Kamp’s Fish Sticks and Fisk filets. As I recall, it was mixed with some warm water and then added to mayo to make a very good tartar sauce. I have been unable to reproduce that flavor. Do you suppose it would be possible to get the dried herb recipe from Van de Kamp?

Laura

Cashew cream also works nicely (and nutritional yeast adds a little je ne sais quoi)

Imbrod

None of the individual dried seasonings requires refrigeration; why store the mix in the refrigerator?

zeetze

I've always found a 50/50 mix in recipes like this to be the best of all possible worlds.

Reduce Salt In Recipe

This recipe is very salty.

Cindy

YUM! Lotsd of room for riffing on this. I added a little milk to thin it slightly. Then experimented with adding finely grated parm cheese and load of crack pepper.

holtkj

This was way too thin to be a Ranch dressing. I would lessen the milk and up the sour cream or mayo

Denise

This recipe worked very well for my cooking class with 6th grade students. We made both versions and taste tested both. One student couldn't decide between the sour cream and the mayo version so he combined them! My students suggest making this with the full amount of buttermilk and using 1/4 cup sour cream AND 1/4 cup mayo.

Joan from Maine

I just want to reinforce the fact that most dried herbs, garlic and onion powder are the same as their undried counterparts, just with the water removed. It is a way of preserving food. These are VERY real food ingredients but with more intense flavors because they are no longer watered down. There are definitely times when fresh is the way to go but in this recipe, there is more bang for your buck using dried.

Nbonini

Use yogurt and add mayo to taste then add the herb mix. Still tasty and a lot less calories.

Barbara

This is one of my weekly standard options for salad dressing with a couple of adjustments. I use whole milk plain yogurt instead of mayo or sour cream. I am not fond of garlic powder because I find tastes bitter. Instead I crush and peel one clove of fresh garlic leaving the root end intact and just toss it in the jar whole. Everything else is dried. Finally, generous lashings of freshly-ground white pepper and a pinch of cumin go in for depth. It is a favorite with the family.

Big Bad Dad

Made this and it was quite good and true to the classic ranch taste. However, even after refrigeration it was quite thin and runny. Wonder if anyone has tried adding guar or xanthan gum to help thicken it up.

Pam

This recipe outshines purchased dressing with its fresh, clean taste with no gummy texture or additives. Superb!

Laurie Shentalevenn

Buttermilk powder was listed as optional. I had buttermilk so used that, thinking it was either/or. The instructions said to add a Tbsp of the mix to 1/2 cup of mayo or sour cream + 1/2 cup buttermilk. The recipe says it makes 4 - 5 cups of dressing, but without the buttermilk powder there isn't 4 to 5 Tbsp of mix! Obviously the mix used in the instructions also includes the buttermilk powder. That should be stated, and a smaller amount quoted for the mix without it. Very good though!

Barbara

I found the instructions to be a bit confusing too. I forgot that it was two parts and ended up using the entire herb mix in the half-and-half buttermilk/whole milk Greek yogurt (in my case) mix. Two tablespoons of buttermilk powder to one cup of mixture was not what was intended. I simply topped it up with more buttermilk. It tastes great and, for those who complain about the runniness, goopy, library-paste commercial dressing is disgusting. The thinner consistency is vastly better.

Laurie Shentalevenn

Note 2: I did add the 1/4 teaspoon of mustard powder, because bland ranch dressing is no fun. My finished version used 1/2 cup sour cream + 1/2 cup buttermilk for the base. It 2/3 fills a cleaned, sterilized and reused Portland Catsup bottle. 1.5 X the amount would give you a full bottle.

PacNW

I'm confused: Why is it only good for 2 days in fridge if made without mayo? Buttermilk and sour cream last longer than 2 days; does mixing them with herbs make them go bad faster? And how does mayo change the calculation so drastically?

Julie

Very good indeed! I make salad dressing every week (usually Julia Child's vinaigrette) but I needed a new recipe to spice things up or a new old recipe in this case! Used all my trusty Penzys herbs, etc. plus Kate's buttermilk and sour cream (low on mayo, sans buttermilk powder, did not have) and with very little effort had a bottle of nostalgia to drizzle on our greens tonight. Huzzah! What's the trick to keeping onion and garlic powder from hardening up? Bonus points for you if you know!

Anne-Marie

I've made this multiple times and it never fails. I made it as a dip with mayo and sour cream, and a friend said, "Oh my God, why is this so delicious?"When I made it as a dressing, I used 1/2 mayo and 1/2 whole milk yogurt, then loosened it up with 1 tablespoon of water. Worked great. I thought the seasoning was close, just needed a tiny pinch of salt at the end.

barbie

This is so good! I sometimes add a deseeded jalapeno and a bunch of cilantro, blend it all with 2 x mayo and buttermilk. Then whisk in the 2 TBLS of mix. Divine. Also, I may do half cup mayo (full fat seems to taste best) w low fat sour cream as a dip. Add or delete the garlic depending on taste (my family is a hard pass), it is wonderful. I've made batches for everyone with customizations to preference. Thank you for this! Goes with everything. :)

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Classic Ranch Dressing Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How was the original ranch dressing made? ›

Who Invented Ranch? Around 1950, Steve Henson unknowingly made history when he whipped up a unique mixture of dry herbs and buttermilk. Originally a plumber, Steve came up with the concoction while working briefly in Anchorage as a construction worker and part-time cook for his crew.

What kind of ranch dressing do most restaurants use? ›

Most restaurants don't buy pre packaged ranch. They buy hidden valley seasoning and mix it themselves with ingredients they already have.

Why does ranch dressing taste different at restaurant? ›

Scratch ranch relies on fresh herbs and aromatics, which bring bite and those pops of grassy flavor that dried or powdered versions never can, so you get an eating experience that is elevated. Usually, ranch recipes will contain fresh buttermilk, and sometimes sour cream as well, for a tang that is really balanced.

Why is restaurant ranch so creamy? ›

Because while some restaurants do use a bottled shelf stable dressing, what you are referring to is a powdered ranch mix (typically the Hidden Valley brand) that the restaurant cooks add milk/ buttermilk and sour cream to make their dressing.

Is there a difference between ranch and ranch dressing? ›

Ranch dressing is usually based with mayonnaise, with sufficient water added that it will pour to cover the salad. Ranch dip is usually based with sour cream, or sometimes yogurt, and is not thinned so that it will stick to chips or vegetable slices.

What is the first ingredient in ranch? ›

Ranch Dressing Ingredients

Sour cream and mayonnaise: The base for this creamy ranch recipe is a mixture of sour cream and mayonnaise. Seasonings: This flavorful ranch dressing is seasoned with dried chives, dried parsley, dried dill weed, dried garlic powder, onion powder, salt, and ground black pepper.

How do restaurants make their ranch so good? ›

The secret that many restaurants have up their sleeves is seasoning mix. Well-known brands make dry counterparts to their bottled ranch that encapsulate all the flavors, including powdered buttermilk, with none of the additives and oils.

Why does Hidden Valley Ranch taste different? ›

The ranch packet has a fresher taste, because you add your own mayo and milk. Even though all the herbs and spices in the mix are dried, they rehydrate quickly and leave you with a product that feels homemade. This version of Hidden Valley Ranch is more flavorful than the bottled version and much, much thicker.

How do you make bottled ranch taste like restaurant? ›

  1. Half and half: Replace half the store-bought ranch with an equal amount of sour cream or plain Greek yogurt for a thicker ranch.
  2. Buttermilk touch: Whisk in some buttermilk for a richer flavor (start with a couple of tablespoons).
Mar 17, 2022

Is Hidden Valley Ranch homestyle the same as original? ›

A: I found flavor is pretty much the same but the new original container I just got has more salt: homestyle 45 mg vs original 60 mg. I can taste the difference. Great product for either version.

What kind of ranch do bars use? ›

It's no secret that Hidden Valley Ranch is a staple ingredient in many homemade ranch dressings, but did you know that restaurants also rely on this classic brand? According to several chefs I spoke with, Hidden Valley Ranch provides the perfect balance of tanginess and creaminess that customers love.

Why is there no Hidden Valley Ranch in stores? ›

Clorox, Hidden Valley's parent company, is dealing with a cyberattack that has affected the dressing's production. So stores for months have had trouble stocking what some people call America's favorite dressing. Other mayonnaise-based dressing brands are available, including at fast food restaurants.

Does cool ranch actually taste like ranch? ›

The flavor in a Cool Ranch Dorito just feels like ranch that died and now we're left with its spirit. It's weak ranch. The biggest problem with Cool Ranch Doritos is the ingredients. Among a hodgepodge of miscellaneous binders and chemicals, they pretty much just include onion, garlic, and buttermilk.

What's the difference between buttermilk ranch and creamy ranch? ›

The Classic and Southern are the same, but the creamy ranch has buttermilk powder and some other ingredients like lactose, malic acid, and carrageenan (the latter to hold it together since buttermilk powder thins out in a weird way)... the flavor is much milder than the classic/southern because of the buttermilk powder ...

Who made the original ranch dressing? ›

Steven Henson, the Nebraska native who created ranch dressing, invented the now-ubiquitous condiment after moving to Anchorage in 1949 and taking a job as a plumbing contractor in the Alaskan bush, according to a biography of Henson published in the Santa Barbara Independent.

Was the inventor of Hidden Valley Ranch black? ›

by a black Nebrask and cowboy named Steve Henson. Steve named his company after his ranch, Hidden Valley, and he came up with it. while trying to find a new recipe to feed his workers. he eventually sold this company to Clorox in 1972.

What was the first brand of ranch dressing? ›

History tells us ranch dressing was created in 1949 by a plumber-turned-cowboy in Alaska. Steve Henson is the man behind this dressing perfection. In fact, Henson moved to California and purchased a ranch he called Hidden Valley Ranch, which made the now famous dressing a staple.

Did an African American invent ranch dressing? ›

Ranch Dressing: Recipe Invented By Black Rancher Steve Henson.

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