Light, fragrant, and easy to prepare, this French Couscous Salad, also known as Taboulé, is a beloved staple of French summertime cooking. Unlike its Levantine cousin Tabbouleh, this version features fluffy couscous, crisp vegetables, sweet raisins, and a zesty lemon dressing — making it the perfect cold salad for picnics, potlucks, and casual lunches.

What is French Couscous Salad (aka French Taboulé)?
If you’ve ever browsed the deli section of a French supermarket, chances are you’ve spotted little individual tubs labeled “Taboulé.”: one of the French’s favorite salads on the go! But while traditional Middle Eastern tabbouleh is studded green with parsley and mint, French taboulé is more of a couscous salad. It swaps bulgur for couscous, uses fewer herbs, and includes sweet raisins, tomatoes and colourful bell peppers.
This French-style Couscous Salad is a summer staple in France – perfect for picnics, barbecues, or light lunches. It’s best served cold, and I love its balance of tangy, savory and sweet – with crisp veggies and chewy couscous and raisins.
It’s fresh, satisfying, and surprisingly simple to prepare too — with just a handful of pantry staples and a few summer vegetables. This recipe is always on a rotation in my kitchen in the Summer and widely enjoyed in French households. It makes a great introduction to French home-style cooking for North American kitchens, or anywhere else you are in the world!
Why You’ll Love This French Couscous Salad
- Fresh and flavorful: Packed with herbs, seasonal veggies, and lemon juice.
- Quick to make: Ready in under 30 minutes (plus chilling time).
- Perfect for meal prep: A great make-ahead recipe that keeps well for days and travels easily.
- A taste of French Summer: A classic side dish in warm-weather meals.
What You’ll Need to Make French Taboulé at Home
- Chicken broth and couscous – For the couscous base, cook medium-grain couscous in low-sodium chicken stock for the best flavor. Medium-grain couscous cooks quickly and fluffs beautifully – avoid pearl couscous for this recipe; the texture is too dense. For a vegetarian version, substitute with vegetable broth or water + ½ tsp salt.
- Extra virgin olive oil – Add it both when cooking the couscous (adds flavor and keeps the couscous from clumping) and later in the dressing.
- Raisins – I love the raisins in this recipe! They add a nice sweetness and satisfying chew. Golden or regular raisins both work.
- Veggies – A mix of diced tomatoes and bell peppers are the traditional mix found in the French taboulé. Choose ripe, juicy tomatoes for the best flavor, like Vine or Roma. The Bell peppers add sweetness and crunch. I love to use a mix of red, yellow and green for vibrant colors.
- Fresh herbs – A mix of parsley and mint is chopped up and added to the salad for freshness, brightness and volume. I feel like this amount of fresh herbs recreates the traditional Taboulé salad I grew up with in France, but feel free to add more if you yearn for a more herbaceous, greener salad.
How to make French Taboulé (Step-by-Step)
- Rehydrate the Raisins. Soak the raisins in a bowl of water for at least 30 minutes. This softens them and adds a chewy, juicy sweetness to the salad.
- Prepare the Couscous. Bring chicken broth (or salted water) to a boil. Add olive oil and couscous, stir, cover, and remove from heat. Let steam for 6 minutes, then fluff with a fork. Transfer to a large bowl and allow to cool to room temperature. (Or cook according to the directions on the package of your couscous)
- Add the Veggies and Herbs. Once cooled, stir in the diced bell peppers, diced tomatoes, chopped parsley and mint, and drained raisins.
- Make the Dressing. Whisk together lemon juice, EVOO, salt, pepper, cumin, and cayenne. Pour over the couscous mixture and stir well. Cover and refrigerate for at least 2 hours so the flavors meld beautifully.

My Cooking tips
- Add 2 tablespoon of good-quality EVOO to the chicken stock (or water) when steaming the couscous – this will ensure a light and fluffy couscous, every time.
- You can substitute large tomatoes, diced for cherry tomatoes, halved – same quantities apply.
- I know raisins are not everyone’s favorite, but they truly make the salad! They yield that signature chew that make this French taboulé salad so unique. You can swap them if you really don’t like them, but know the texture won’t be as traditional.

Serving Suggestions
This French couscous salad is endlessly versatile. Serve it cold as:
- A side dish for summer BBQs or grilled meats such as chicken or lamb chops.
- A light lunch with stuffed vegetables or a slice of quiche.
- A picnic-friendly main with a wedge of cheese and a slice of country bread.
I hope you’ll love this classic French Couscous Salad recipe as much as I do. If you have any questions, please leave a comment.
More French Salads to try:
- Green Bean Potato Salad
- French-style Rice and Tuna Salad
- French Grated Carrot Salad (Carottes rapées)
- French-style Potato Salad
- Piemontaise Potato Salad
- Frisée Salad with bacon, eggs and croutons (Salade Lyonnaise)
- French Egg Salad
- Classic French Lentil Salad
- Cucumber Salad with crème fraiche
- Classic French Celery Root Remoulade
- Classic Parisian Salad (Salade Parisienne)
- French Lentil Salad with tomatoes and cucumbers
- Authentic Niçoise Salad
- Warm Goat Cheese Salad

12 comments
I was looking for the couscous salad and found your blog. I love French cuisine and I am so glad that I stumbled upon here. Excited to try some of your recipes. Thumbs up!
Thank you, I hope you enjoy this couscous recipe, all many more!
Hi.thanks for the recipe. We have a large family gathering this coming weekend and I hope to make it then. French often use this as part of a plate of crudites.
N France you can get it in a packet, which comes with a small packet of oous cous and a can of the vegetable/ herb mixture. You just add them together in a salad bowl, stir and refrigerate for an hour and they presto.
With what can I serve this beautiful salad
It’s delicious with grilled meat and fish, or just as is for an appetizer!
I’m afraid taboule (tabbouleh) is not a French dish, but Eastern Mediterranean. The reason why it is so popular in France comes from the fact that they have very large Algerian and Lebanese communities. I think it would be nice to add this information to the recipe’s background so that people won’t wrongly mistaken this as a French dish 🙂
You are right, and I did mentioned that what the French call “Taboulé” is more of a loose-adaptation from the authentic Levantine “Tabbouleh” (in first paragraph). Thank you for adding more details to the recipe background 🙂
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Delicious
Much appreciated! I just had some of this Taboule for lunch this past weekend, so I can’t help but very much agree!
Changing the spelling of the dish does not make it an entirely different one, it’s still an Arabic word. Lebanese to be specific. It’s not a “cousin” of tabboule (which hints that they have co-existed in different regions at the same time), rather it is indeed a french version inspired by Lebanese tabboule following the huge Lebanese diaspora in France. It’s not personal i love your blog, but food is political, especially during these times.
I can appreciate that, Bee and completely understand what you’re saying.