Mexican Fruit Salad with Chili Lime Seasoning

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Juicy fruit gets a sharp, salty kick here, and that contrast is what keeps this salad from tasting flat. Pineapple and mango bring the sweetness, strawberries add brightness, and the chili-lime dressing wakes everything up without burying the fruit. The jicama stays crisp, the red onion adds a little bite, and the cilantro at the end pulls it all together.

The trick is keeping the dressing light. Lime juice and Tajín are enough to coat the fruit and leave behind a glossy, tangy finish, but if you overmix or let the salad sit too long before chilling, the softer fruit starts to break down. A short rest in the fridge helps the flavors meld while the jicama keeps its crunch.

Below, I’ve included the small details that matter most: how to balance the chili-lime seasoning, when to add the onion so it doesn’t take over, and a few smart ways to adapt the salad depending on what fruit you have on hand.

The lime dressing coated everything without turning it soggy, and the little bit of jalapeño made the mango taste even sweeter. I also loved that the jicama stayed crunchy after chilling.

★★★★★— Monica R.

Pin this chili-lime fruit salad for a bright side dish that stays crisp, tangy, and colorful on the table.

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The Dressing Needs to Coat, Not Drown, the Fruit

Fruit salad falls apart when the seasoning gets heavy enough to pool in the bottom of the bowl. Here, the lime juice and Tajín should cling to the fruit in a thin, shiny layer. That gives you tang and heat in every bite without turning the pineapple and strawberries watery.

Jicama helps more than people expect. It adds structure and keeps the salad feeling crisp even after chilling. If you skip it, the salad still works, but it leans softer and reads more like a macerated fruit bowl than a true side salad.

What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Dish

  • Pineapple — Brings the boldest sweetness and enough acidity to stand up to the chili lime seasoning. Choose a ripe one that smells fragrant at the stem end. If you use canned pineapple, drain it very well or the salad gets loose fast.
  • Strawberries — Add juiciness and a softer texture that catches the seasoning. Halve them so they hold their shape better and don’t disappear into the bowl. Very ripe berries are fine here because the lime sharpens them up.
  • Mango — Gives the salad that silky, lush bite that makes every forkful feel complete. Dice it into firm cubes so it doesn’t collapse when tossed. If mangoes are out of season, peaches can step in, but the salad loses a little of its tropical depth.
  • Jicama — This is the crunch that keeps the salad from becoming dessert. It’s mild, crisp, and clean-tasting, which is exactly why it works with fruit. If you can’t find it, cucumber can fill in, though it brings more water and a softer finish.
  • Red onion — Use it sparingly. Thin slices add a savory bite that keeps the salad from tasting one-note, but too much will overpower the fruit. Soak the slices in cold water for 5 to 10 minutes if you want a gentler edge.
  • Lime juice, Tajín, and jalapeño — This is the backbone of the whole dish. Fresh lime juice matters more than bottled here because the sharpness is cleaner, and Tajín brings salt, citrus, and chili in one move. The jalapeño adds a mild heat; leave the seeds in for more bite, or pull them out for a softer finish.

Building the Salad So It Stays Crisp After Chilling

Cut the Fruit for Texture, Not Just Looks

Use evenly sized pieces so the dressing spreads without bruising the softer fruit. Pineapple and mango should be bite-sized cubes, and the strawberries should be halved or quartered depending on size. If the pieces are too small, they slump during chilling and the salad loses its structure.

Mix the Dressing Separately

Whisk the lime juice, Tajín, and minced jalapeño together before it hits the bowl. That keeps the seasoning from clumping in one spot and gives you a more even coating. If you dump the seasoning straight over the fruit, the first few bites taste sharp and the rest taste plain.

Toss Gently, Then Chill Briefly

Fold the fruit with a large spoon or spatula so the berries don’t break. You want the pieces coated, not crushed. Thirty minutes in the fridge is enough for the flavors to settle in; much longer than that and the strawberries and pineapple begin releasing too much juice.

Finish Right Before Serving

Add the cilantro after chilling so it stays bright and fresh. If you add it too early, the leaves darken and lose their clean flavor. Serve the salad cold, with a little extra Tajín on top if you want a stronger chili-lime edge.

How to Adapt This for a Bigger Crowd or a Different Diet

Make it milder for kids or spice-shy guests

Skip the jalapeño and use just the lime juice and Tajín. The salad will still have that tart, savory edge without any heat. If you want a little extra punch without real spice, add a pinch more Tajín right before serving.

Make it vegetarian, vegan, and naturally gluten-free

This salad already fits all three, which is part of why it works so well for mixed crowds. Just check your seasoning blend if you’re using a different chili-lime mix, since some brands include anti-caking agents or added sugar. Tajín keeps it straightforward.

Swap the fruit based on what’s ripe

Watermelon, cantaloupe, kiwi, or grapes can join the bowl, but keep at least one firm fruit in the mix so the salad doesn’t collapse into juice. If you use softer fruit, reduce the lime a little and chill for a shorter time. The goal is a crisp, lightly dressed salad, not a syrupy fruit mix.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Best within 1 day. After that, the fruit softens and the bowl turns juicier, though it still tastes good.
  • Freezer: Don’t freeze this salad. The fruit releases too much water when thawed and the texture turns mushy.
  • Reheating: No reheating needed. Serve it cold straight from the fridge, and if it looks a little wet, spoon off the excess juice before plating.

Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Can I make Mexican fruit salad ahead of time?+

Yes, but it’s best served the same day. You can cut the fruit and whisk the dressing a few hours ahead, then toss everything together and chill for 30 minutes before serving. That keeps the strawberries from getting too soft and the jicama from losing its crunch.

How do I keep the fruit salad from getting watery?+

Use ripe but firm fruit, and don’t overmix once the dressing goes in. The biggest culprit is over-chilling for too long, which pulls juice from the strawberries and pineapple. If you need to hold it longer, keep the dressing separate until closer to serving time.

Can I use bottled lime juice instead of fresh lime juice?+

You can, but the flavor won’t be as clean or bright. Fresh lime juice gives the salad a sharper finish that plays better with the Tajín and fruit. Bottled juice can taste flatter, so use it only if that’s what you have.

How do I make this less spicy without losing the chili lime flavor?+

Cut the jalapeño completely and start with a little less Tajín, then taste after tossing. The lime still gives plenty of lift, and the fruit carries the salad even without heat. If you want spice at the table, add a pinch of Tajín to individual servings instead.

Can I leave out the red onion?+

Yes. The salad will still work, just with a sweeter, more purely fruity taste. The onion adds contrast, not structure, so if you skip it, the biggest change is that the salad feels a little less savory and a little more like a dessert-style fruit bowl.

Mexican Fruit Salad with Chili Lime Seasoning

Mexican fruit salad with chili lime seasoning—an ultra-fresh mix of pineapple, strawberries, mango, and crunchy jicama tossed in a lime-jalapeño Tajín dressing. Chill to let the citrus and spice cling to every bite for a vibrant, glistening finish.
Prep Time 15 minutes
chill 30 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Servings: 6 servings
Course: Side Dish
Cuisine: Mexican
Calories: 210

Ingredients
  

Fruit base
  • 2 cup fresh pineapple chunks
  • 2 cup strawberries, halved
  • 2 cup fresh mango, cubed
  • 1 cup jicama, julienned
  • 0.5 red onion, thinly sliced
Chili lime dressing
  • 0.25 cup fresh lime juice
  • 1 tsp Tajín seasoning
  • 1 jalapeño, minced
To finish
  • 1 fresh cilantro for garnish

Equipment

  • 1 mixing bowl

Method
 

Combine the fruit
  1. Add the pineapple, strawberries, mango, jicama, and red onion to a large mixing bowl, arranging them so the colors are evenly distributed.
Make the chili lime dressing
  1. Whisk the fresh lime juice with Tajín seasoning and minced jalapeño until the seasoning dissolves and the mixture looks uniformly speckled.
Toss and chill
  1. Pour the lime-chili dressing over the fruit mixture and toss gently to coat every piece with a light glossy sheen.
  2. Cover and chill the salad for at least 30 minutes in the refrigerator so the flavors meld and the fruit feels refreshingly cold.
Serve
  1. Sprinkle with fresh cilantro and serve cold for a bright finish with an herbal aroma.

Notes

For best texture, keep the jicama julienne crisp and chill the salad in a covered container; it stays fresh in the refrigerator for up to 2 days (freezing not recommended as the fruit and onion soften). For a lower-heat version, use half the jalapeño or remove the seeds before mincing to keep the chili-lime flavor while reducing spiciness.

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