25 Best Labor Day Side Dishes: BBQ-Ready Salads, Slaws + Grilled Sides for 2026
A cookout-tested lineup of cold salads, slaws, grilled vegetables, and loaded starches that pair with brisket, ribs, and burgers — with a shopping list, make-ahead timeline, and food-safety guardrails for the long weekend.
Labor Day is the last real cookout weekend of the year — the smoker's fired, the mains are handled, and the entire party lives or dies on what you serve alongside them. Below are 25 side dishes that actually pair with smoked brisket, sticky ribs, and char-crusted burgers, organized by role on the plate so you can build a menu that covers cold-and-crunchy, tangy-vinegar, smoky-vegetable, and hearty-starchy without repeating yourself.
Every recipe is scaled to feed at least eight people, tested to survive an outdoor buffet in the heat, and cross-referenced to the pantry staples you probably already own. If you want the shopping list built for you, ask AislePrompt — it will pull ingredients from every recipe you pick, de-duplicate, and hand you a single sorted list.
Introduction: What pairs with the smoked brisket, ribs, and burgers on Labor Day
The classic cookout plate is protein-heavy and fat-forward: fatty brisket, glazed ribs, buttered corn on the cob, cheesy burger. Your sides have exactly two jobs — cut through the richness with acid and crunch, and add a starch that soaks up whatever juices land on the plate. Get those two pillars right and everything else is decoration.
A safe menu for 12 people is: one vinegar-forward slaw, one mayo-based creamy salad, one loaded starch (potato salad, mac, or beans), one grilled or charred vegetable, and one bright fruit-forward salad or corn dish. Five sides, twenty-five servings each, plates come back clean.
Timing matters as much as recipes. Anything with fresh herbs, cucumber, avocado, or leafy greens goes together within the last two hours. Slaws, potato salads, baked beans, and cornbread can all be finished 24 hours ahead and hold their texture better than same-day. Anything grilled — corn, asparagus, peaches, halloumi — is a same-day, hot-off-the-grate job.
5 Cold Salads That Travel Well
Cold salads are the workhorses of the cookout buffet: they hold at temperature, they scale predictably, and they pair with any protein on the grill. The five below cover the flavor map from bright-citrus to salty-savory to sweet-and-crisp.
1. Mexican street corn salad. The single best crowd-pleaser on this list. Fresh or frozen corn kernels charred in a cast-iron pan, tossed with mayo, sour cream, cotija, lime, chili powder, and cilantro. Assembles in 15 minutes, tastes like a party, holds for four hours on a buffet. See our Sellersburg-inspired Mexican street corn salad or the popular Street-Style Mexican Elote Salad for two takes.
2. Watermelon-feta salad with mint. Cubed watermelon, crumbled feta, torn mint, thin-sliced red onion, a splash of lime and olive oil. Refreshingly counterintuitive with barbecue — the salty-sweet combo resets the palate between bites of ribs. Full method: Crisp Summer Watermelon and Feta Salad with Mint Vinaigrette.
3. Heirloom tomato and peach caprese. August is peak stone-fruit and heirloom-tomato season. Ripe peaches, thick tomato slices, torn burrata or mozzarella, basil, flaky salt, and a good olive oil. Assembles in five minutes and disappears in three. Recipe: Heirloom Tomato & Peach Caprese with Smoked Tomato Vinaigrette.
4. Chickpea and cucumber salad with feta. Canned chickpeas, diced cucumber, cherry tomatoes, red onion, feta, parsley, lemon-oregano dressing. Vegetarian-friendly, gluten-free, satisfying enough to be a main for the plant-based guests. Holds 48 hours in the fridge, gets better on day two.
5. Corn, black bean, and avocado salad. Charred corn, black beans, red onion, avocado (added last minute so it doesn't brown), cilantro, cumin-lime dressing. Doubles as a chip dip if you chop the corn finer. If you can only make one grain-forward salad, make this one.
Cold salad portion cheat sheet
| Dish | Servings per batch | Refrigerator life | Add day-of |
|---|---|---|---|
| Street corn salad | 10 | 2 days | cotija |
| Watermelon-feta | 12 | 1 day | mint |
| Heirloom tomato-peach caprese | 8 | hours | burrata |
| Chickpea-cucumber-feta | 10 | 2 days | fresh herbs |
| Corn, black bean, avocado | 12 | 1 day | avocado |
5 Slaws Beyond Boring Coleslaw
Coleslaw is a cookout requirement, but the mayo-shredded-cabbage version at the deli counter is a low-effort dish that everyone politely tolerates and no one actually loves. Any of the five below will change that.
1. Vinegar-forward Carolina slaw. Green cabbage, apple cider vinegar, mustard, sugar, celery seed, black pepper. No mayo. Sharp, crisp, made specifically to cut through pulled pork or smoked brisket. Holds a full week in the fridge.
2. Asian sesame slaw with peanuts. Napa cabbage, shredded carrot, edamame, red bell pepper, cilantro, sesame-soy-ginger-lime dressing, roasted peanuts on top. Pairs with grilled chicken thighs and Korean short ribs. The dressing is essentially a slow-shaken vinaigrette — no mayo means it holds outdoors better.
3. Creamy jalapeño-lime slaw. Green and purple cabbage, jalapeños, cilantro, lime, mayo, sour cream, a whisper of honey. Perfect on pulled-pork sandwiches or fish tacos and popular with anyone who ordered "medium" salsa at a Mexican restaurant.
4. Apple-fennel slaw. Thin-shaved fennel bulb, matchstick Granny Smith apple, celery, dill, lemon, olive oil, a touch of Dijon. Bright, anise-forward, unexpected. This is the slaw that quietly gets scraped from every plate.
5. Broccoli-bacon slaw with sunflower seeds. Chopped raw broccoli, bacon, red onion, dried cranberries, sunflower seeds, mayo-honey-cider vinegar dressing. Old-school potluck classic that Instagram forgot. Make it once and someone will ask you for the recipe.
Slaws made 24 hours ahead soften slightly but the flavors marry — for best texture, salt the cabbage 30 minutes before dressing and squeeze out the excess liquid so the dressing coats crisp shreds rather than pooling in the bowl. That's the professional-kitchen trick that separates a great slaw from a wet, sad one.
5 Grilled Vegetable Sides
The grill is already lit; use it. Grilled vegetables have four advantages over stove-cooked ones on cookout day: (1) no extra pan to clean, (2) more counter space in the kitchen, (3) smoky char that plays nicely with smoky mains, (4) they turn skeptical vegetable-avoiders into fans.
1. Grilled asparagus with lemon and Parmesan. Toss spears in olive oil, salt, and pepper; grill 3-4 minutes per side over medium-high; finish with lemon zest, cracked pepper, and grated Parmesan. Pair with our salmon and grilled asparagus method if you want a grilled protein-and-side one-tray.
2. Grilled zucchini and yellow squash planks. Slice lengthwise into planks, oil, salt, grill 3 minutes per side, finish with balsamic reduction and torn basil. A pound of squash yields 8 servings for pennies.
3. Grilled peaches or plums with honey and mascarpone. Halve, pit, brush cut side with honey and olive oil, grill cut-side-down 2-3 minutes until char marks appear. Serve with a dollop of mascarpone or Greek yogurt. Works as a savory side alongside pork chops or as a dessert.
4. Charred broccoli with garlic and lemon. Toss florets in oil, salt, and red-pepper flakes; grill in a perforated basket 5-7 minutes until edges char. Finish with garlic-lemon-oil drizzle.
5. Grilled halloumi with watermelon and mint. Halloumi is the one cheese that grills without melting — 90 seconds per side gives you golden char without a mess. Serve on cubed watermelon with mint. Salty, sweet, smoky, done.
Reach for a solid pair of long tongs and a stiff-bristle grill brush for any grilled-vegetable side. Our cookware and utensils picks include the specific grill-friendly tongs and turners we recommend for outdoor cooking.
5 Corn Recipes (elote, salads, skillet)
Corn is at peak season the first week of September — sweet, milky, cheap. Two of the top-rated recipes on AislePrompt are corn-forward and cookout-perfect: Popular Street-Style Mexican Elote Salad and Sellersburg-Inspired Mexican Street Corn Salad. Here's how to build a full corn subsection around them.
1. Grilled elote (corn on the cob, Mexican style). Char shucked cobs over high heat until spotty-black. Slather with mayo-crema, roll in cotija and chili powder, finish with lime. Serve as-is; do not pre-cut.
2. Elote-style street corn salad. Same flavors, kernel form. Charred kernels tossed with mayo, cotija, cilantro, chili, lime. Portions predictably from a bowl and doesn't require napkins.
3. Sweet corn skillet with brown butter. Kernels sautéed in browned butter with shallots, thyme, and a splash of cream. Nutty, sweet, luxurious. Best made 30 minutes before serving so the butter doesn't congeal.
4. Corn salsa with jalapeño and cotija. Blister corn in a dry pan, fold in diced jalapeño, red onion, cotija, and lime. Doubles as a chip dip or a topping for grilled fish.
5. Cornbread with honey butter. No cookout is complete without a good pan of cornbread. Bake in a cast-iron skillet for crisp edges. Try the Blueberry Jalapeño Jam Glazed Cornbread Muffins for a sweet-heat variation that's a conversation piece.
Buying corn tip: at the farm stand or grocery, feel the tip through the husk — you want plump kernels all the way to the top. Silk should be dry and dark, not pale and slimy. Buy corn the day of or the day before serving; sugar starts converting to starch within 24 hours of picking.
5 Baked & Loaded Potato Sides
Potato is the plate anchor. Any of these five hold their own next to a $40-per-pound brisket.
1. Loaded potato salad with bacon, cheddar, and scallions. The gold standard. Boiled Yukon golds, cubed and dressed with mayo, sour cream, mustard, bacon crumbles, sharp cheddar, chives, dill. Full method in our Old Chicago Loaded Potato Salad recipe.
2. German-style warm potato salad. Boiled potatoes tossed with warm bacon vinaigrette (bacon fat, apple cider vinegar, whole-grain mustard, red onion, parsley). Served warm or room-temp, not cold. Better for a smaller sit-down crowd than a buffet.
3. Smashed potatoes with garlic-Parmesan. Boil small potatoes until fork-tender, smash flat on a sheet pan, drizzle with garlic-oil, sprinkle Parmesan, bake at 450 for 25 minutes until crispy. Best eaten within 30 minutes of pulling from the oven.
4. Baked beans with molasses and bacon. The cookout classic. Canned pinto or navy beans finished with molasses, brown sugar, mustard, bacon, and onion, baked slow for 90 minutes. Made a day ahead, they reheat with better flavor.
5. Mac and cheese with panko crust. Cavatappi, sharp cheddar and Gruyère mornay sauce, panko-Parmesan topping, baked in a big dish. Feeds 20 for the cost of one brisket sandwich in a barbecue restaurant. Serve directly from the baking dish in a dining tray to keep it warm for the buffet.
Loaded potato side portion + prep timeline
| Dish | Serves | Prep time | Best made |
|---|---|---|---|
| Loaded potato salad | 12 | 45 min | 1 day ahead |
| German warm potato salad | 8 | 30 min | 1 hour ahead |
| Smashed potatoes | 10 | 50 min | 30 min ahead |
| Molasses baked beans | 12 | 2 hours | 1-2 days ahead |
| Baked mac and cheese | 20 | 60 min | assemble, bake fresh |
Make-Ahead Timeline: What to Do 2 Days, 1 Day, and 4 Hours Before Guests Arrive
The biggest cookout mistake is not the food; it's the cook running around at guest-arrival time instead of drinking a beer. The timeline below solves that.
Two days before. Make all slaws (dressing on, they improve). Make baked beans (reheat gently on serving day). Make cornbread batter and refrigerate; bake fresh. Bake pie or dessert. Shop for shelf-stable groceries. If ordering perishables from Instacart, place the order.
One day before. Make potato salad(s). Make macaroni salad or mac-and-cheese base (crumble panko separately and top just before baking). Char corn for salads and refrigerate. Slice watermelon and refrigerate covered.
Four hours before. Take proteins out of the refrigerator to temper. Set the grill for a hard preheat 30 minutes before the first pull. Set up the buffet table with serving spoons, plates, and napkins. Prep grilled vegetables so they can go on right after the last protein comes off.
Thirty minutes before. Grill vegetables and any last-minute halloumi. Slice tomatoes for caprese. Take slaws and cold salads out — but only what will get eaten in the first hour. Refill from the fridge in shifts.
Fifteen minutes before. Fresh herbs, croutons, cheese crumbles, and other finishing touches go on cold dishes. Set out ice for drinks. Open bug spray for the guests who forgot theirs.
Shopping List for a 12-Person Cookout
Pick five sides (one from each category above) and build the list. For a benchmark, here's the shopping list for our default 12-person menu: elote corn salad, Carolina vinegar slaw, watermelon-feta, loaded potato salad, and molasses baked beans.
| Category | Item | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Produce | Sweet corn | 8 ears |
| Produce | Green cabbage | 1 head |
| Produce | Seedless watermelon | 1 whole (5-6 lb) |
| Produce | Yukon gold potatoes | 3 lb |
| Produce | Red onion | 2 |
| Produce | Lime | 6 |
| Produce | Cilantro | 2 bunches |
| Produce | Fresh mint | 1 bunch |
| Dairy | Cotija cheese | 8 oz |
| Dairy | Feta cheese | 8 oz |
| Dairy | Sour cream | 16 oz |
| Dairy | Sharp cheddar (shredded) | 8 oz |
| Dairy | Bacon | 1 lb |
| Pantry | Mayo | 32 oz |
| Pantry | Apple cider vinegar | 16 oz |
| Pantry | Molasses | 12 oz |
| Pantry | Canned pinto or navy beans | 4 (15 oz) |
| Pantry | Yellow mustard | 8 oz |
Skip the trip: ask AislePrompt to build the exact list for the sides you picked and push it to Instacart for delivery. The typical shopping run for 5 side dishes and 12 guests takes 45-60 minutes at a grocery store; delivery saves the whole trip.
What to Cook In: Grill Gear + Serving Ware
The most-used tools for the sides in this guide are:
- A 12-inch cast-iron skillet for charring corn indoors when the grill is full of protein. See our cookware picks for the best-value skillet.
- Long-handled locking tongs for turning corn cobs and asparagus on the grill without singeing your knuckles. Browse utensils for our current pick.
- A perforated grill basket for zucchini, broccoli florets, and cherry tomatoes that would fall through the grate.
- Half-sheet baking pans (18x13 inch) for the potato salad, smashed potatoes, and prep. See bakeware.
- A large serving platter and 3-4 shallow bowls for the buffet lineup. Browse dining for our serving-ware picks.
Skip the disposable plastic bowls — they hold heat, they attract wasps, and food looks sad in them. Real serving ware makes a $30 side dish look like a $60 side dish, and everything gets photographed anyway.
Food-safety cheat sheet
According to FoodSafety.gov's Four Steps, the four food-safety pillars for outdoor cookouts are: clean surfaces, separate raw from ready-to-eat, cook proteins to the correct internal temperature, and chill everything perishable below 40 degrees Fahrenheit as fast as possible.
For a Labor Day buffet in typical late-August heat, the rules that matter most are:
1. Cold food out no more than one hour above 90 degrees Fahrenheit; two hours below.
2. Hot food held above 140 degrees Fahrenheit until served — use a chafing dish for mac-and-cheese and baked beans, not a bare serving dish.
3. Refresh mayo-based salads from the refrigerator in small shifts; do not put the entire bowl out at 1 pm and hope it survives to 5 pm.
4. Separate raw meat prep from the salad prep with dedicated cutting boards and a hand-wash step between them.
For plating and menu-building inspiration beyond this guide, browse Bon Appétit's Labor Day recipes and Serious Eats' Labor Day menu ideas — both editorial teams cover the holiday every year and their annual updates are worth a read.
Common pitfalls we see every Labor Day
- Too many mayo-based sides. Two is the ceiling; three feels heavy and the buffet reads beige. Balance one mayo salad with two vinegar-forward or bright-fruit dishes.
- Serving watermelon with pre-cut skin. Cut watermelon within an hour of serving; the flesh weeps liquid past that and turns mushy.
- No dedicated tongs for the buffet. People will use their hands. Put a serving spoon or tongs in every dish.
- Forgetting drinks in the ice count. Plan on 2 lb ice per person for drink chilling and buffet cooling combined — most hosts underestimate by 50 percent.
- Serving corn on the cob without a way to eat it neatly. Corn holders or halved cobs make the difference between happy guests and buttered chins on your couch.
When NOT to serve these sides
- A brunch cookout (before 11 am). Skip the cold mayo salads; nobody wants potato salad with pancakes.
- A small four-person dinner. These recipes scale down to two servings and up to 30, but for four people, pick two sides — not five — or you'll be eating leftovers for a week.
- A pool party where hands stay wet all day. Serve grab-and-go sides only (chips, whole fruit, veggie tray with dip); anything requiring a fork doesn't get eaten.
Enjoy the long weekend. If you want to plan the whole menu — mains, sides, dessert, and drinks — plus a de-duplicated shopping list, our meal-plan tool will build it in about 60 seconds. See you around the grill.