How to Create a Cheese Board (2024)

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My personal mission in cheese is to make it more accessible. Cheese has the reputation as a fancy food, but at the end of the day, it’s the food of farmers, of agrarian people. As a former cheesemonger, when I serve cheese, I want to honor all the hard work that goes into making it, but I also want to take the fussiness out of it. I want people to enjoy and celebrate cheese as a regular part of their diet.

So I'm going to give you some rules. But there are really no rules! Eat cheese with what you like, the way you like, and most importantly, have fun with it.

How to Create a Cheese Board (1)

SELECTING THE CHEESE

How many and how much cheese to feature?
While I personally think there's no such thing as too much cheese, a general rule is that the tastes get lost with anything more than five cheeses. Three to four is a nice number to have a variety of flavors. I've also made really special cheese boards that spotlight one cheese and all the different pairings that could go with it.

Plan on one to one and a half ounces per person per cheese for an appetizer board. If cheese is the main event, round up. If you have a lot of other snacks going on, or it's just a couple of people, round down. Leftover cheese isn’t necessarily a bad thing!

"Something old, something new, something goat, and something blue."
If you're going to a cheese shop or grocery store, remember this fun rhyme! Find a cheese in each of those four categories and you’ll have a really nice variety of cheeses that will most likely satisfy everyone in your party.

  • Old: Any kind of firm cheese that is aged for a longer amount of time, like Shelburne Farms cheddar, or an aged Gouda or Gruyère.
  • New: could be a Brie or a Camembert, or other soft cheese.
  • Goat: This could be a hard, aged goat cheese or a fresh chèvre.
  • Blue. That’s pretty straightforward. But if you don't like blue cheese, skip it! Maybe try a flavored cheese instead?

Themed cheese boards
It can be fun to showcase, say, everything from one country or region, or cheeses from all the different animals (sheep, cow, goat). It's really about whatever you're into. Celebrate Bastille Day with all French cheeses or watch The Godfather with a board featuring Italian cheeses. The possibilities are endless!

Here are a few boards I've created to inspire you:

SELECTING THE ACCOUTREMENTS or PAIRINGS

Pairing is fun! Often the combination of flavors that you put together are greater than the sum of their parts. Once again, there are both rules and no rules to guide you!

Contrast
Contrast is a key concept for cheesemongers. Try contrasting textures, like pairing a creamy Brie with crunchy crackers or candied nuts. Or salty and sweet. A marbled blue cheese goes amazingly well with honey. Try an aged gouda with some chocolate: it'd be like a Butterfinger-y kind of salty, caramel and chocolate vibe.

Complementary
Putting like things together can be really interesting and enhance flavors. So pair smoked cheddar with a smoky meat, or with bacon. Many Swiss cheeses are really nice with toasted nuts.

“What grows together goes together.”
Foods from the same place often pair really well. Here in Vermont, we say, “Apple pie without the cheese is like a hug without the squeeze.” So pair apples and cheddar! (Shelburne Farms cheddar, of course.) Parmigiano Reggiano pairs beautifully with prosciutto, both from the Parma region of Italy. In fact, the whey from Parmigiano Reggiano production is fed to the pigs that become prosciutto. So it's incredibly full circle and I can't think of anything better than a little prosciutto with a little parm.

The idea is particularly true with wine. Goat cheese is really popular in the Loire Valley of France and is a natural pairing with the white wines from that region. They sing together! Likewise, red wines in Northern Italy go great with a cheese like Parmigiano Reggiano.

Don’t fuss too much!
I say this over and over because the fun part of all this is just experimenting. Sometimes you may pair items that taste like drinking orange juice after brushing your teeth. It does not work! But that's okay, because you'll learn, and you'll have fun. And the next time you may create a pairing that’s transcendent.

How many elements per bite?
Three is pretty ideal. I think of a bite as cheese + accoutrement + vessel. That means your cheese, your jam/jelly/mustard/honey/grape/nut, and then what you serve those on. Maybe that’s a cracker or a piece of bread. Maybe the vessel is a piece of prosciutto. It's fun to guide people but think about how people naturally eat these types of things, too. For accoutrements, I also like to have at least one or two crunchy things, some sort of fresh fruit like a grape (they’re so easy and everyone loves them), and usually something salty (I love olives), and something tangy, like a pickle or a mustard. (Pickles are one of my favorite things in the entire world, so I pretty much always put a pickle on a cheese board.)

Hot tip: Think about flavor intensities. If you pair something really mild with something really strong, you're not doing a service to the mild thing. That smoky cheese or meat is going to suck up all the air in the room and not leave any for the Brie!

And a few more boards:

  • How to Create a Cheese Board (7)
  • How to Create a Cheese Board (8)
  • How to Create a Cheese Board (9)
  • How to Create a Cheese Board (10)
  • How to Create a Cheese Board (11)

PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER

Your board
Use what’s on hand. Cutting boards are great, of course, but plates are fine, or even tinfoil if you’re on a picnic. I know someone who was at the slopes and turned his ski upside down to serve the cheese! I like to start with a fairly small surface because if you're serving a crowd, you can pile the cheese really high and it still looks nice and relatively full as people are eating it.

Cutting the cheese (hold the snicker)
If you're a beginner at making cheese boards, cheddar is easy because you can pretty much cut it into any shape you want. Some other cheeses aren't going to play that nice, but with cheddar, you can do almost anything. Try cookie cutters! For more crumbly cheeses like a well-aged cheddar or a Parmesan, I just dig in with a fork or a knife and turn it with my wrist to make beautiful little chunks or crumbles that pile nicely. Then I like to leave the excavated block on the board so if people decide they want more, they'll see they can also just “dig in.” Crumbles are fully acceptable and encouraged! If you’re serving a cheese with a rind, you typically include a bit of rind in each cut, unless the rind is inedible (like a wax rind). With soft cheese, sometimes I don’t pre-cut them at all, because you’ll have goop running all over the table. Or I might cut just a few pieces to give people an example of how to cut it for themselves. Sometimes you have to let the cheese speak to you and tell you what it wants to become.

Hot tip! Most cheeses are easier to cut straight from the fridge, even though you’ll want to serve them at room temperature. That’s because as the fat in cheese comes to room temperature, it releases its volatile aromas—maximizing flavor!

Assembly
Cheese is the star of the show so I always start by creating “anchors” of cheese, just making piles that are nice and high. If you’ve cut a cheese into matchsticks, you could build a Jenga pile!

After you have your anchors on your board, fill in the space with your various accoutrements. On a large board, I like to fill up most of the space with bread. Baguette carbs are a filler in life and a filler on a cheese board! You can also add crackers (feel free to break up larger crackers into smaller pieces), or drizzle nuts into the space, or create a “salami river.” Add jams or jellies last, unless you’re serving them in a beautiful dish or jar that you want to feature (Maple Onion Jam is one of my favorite things ever). Put the items that are meant to complement each other together. But encourage people to explore, too.

Hot tip! I'm going to save you embarrassment at the cheese counter: A cheese board is not a charcuterie board in the cheese world. A charcuterie board needs to showcase cooked cured meats to qualify!

Hot tip! Don’t drizzle jams and jellies straight on the board. It’s a hot mess. And it’s not fun to clean.

Hot tip! Don’t put anything inedible on your cheese board, including garnishes or inedible cheese rinds. It can lead to unpleasant surprises.

Hot tip! If your cheese board doesn't look quite right, move items around and fix it.

How to Create a Cheese Board (12)

That’s it! And just remember: if you like eating Shelburne Farms cheddar with Ritz crackers, enjoy it. If you want to eat it with Blake Hill Jam, do that, too. Have a go and send us a photo of your board!

Discover more:

Shop our Cheddar
How we make cheddar

Comments

This is mouth-watering wonderful as well as helpful! Thanks

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How to Create a Cheese Board (2024)

FAQs

What is the 3-3-3 rule for charcuterie board? ›

The 3333 rule applies to the number of foods to create the perfect board. To follow the 3,3,3,3 rule, stick to three cheeses, three meats, three starches, and three accoutrements.

How to make a cheese board look attractive? ›

Cut wedges of brie into slices and soft round cheeses into wedges (it's totally fine to leave portions of cheese whole). Place small bowls of tapenade, olives, honey, or jam on the board. Add color by filling large blank areas with sliced fruit, then place your crackers and nuts across the board in clusters.

Can you pre make a cheese board? ›

Prep your cheese plate ahead of time.

Assemble the cheese plate a few hours early, cover with reusable beeswax wrap or plastic wrap, and stick it back in the fridge (just make sure to take it out at least half an hour before you need it so the cheese can come to room temperature!)

What not to put on a cheese board? ›

CHARCUTERIE // Stop Adding These 10 Ingredients To Your Charcuterie Boards!
  1. STINKY CHEESES. The cheese section at the grocery store can be overwhelming and intimidating. ...
  2. FRUITS THAT GO BROWN. ...
  3. SPICY FOODS. ...
  4. CRACKERS & BREAD. ...
  5. Veggies. ...
  6. Allergens and Sensitivities. ...
  7. Dips, Sauces and Jams. ...
  8. Boring and Bland Foods.
Jan 15, 2023

What are 3 good cheeses for a charcuterie board? ›

Here are the best cheeses for your charcuterie board
  • Hard cheese: chunks of parmesan, aged gouda, asiago.
  • Firm cheese: gruyere, comte, manchego, colby, cheddar.
  • Semi-soft cheese: havarti, butterkäse, muenster.
  • Soft cheese: burrata, mascarpone, stracchino.
  • Blue cheese: gorgonzola, dunbarton blue, marbled blue jack.

How many cheeses should be on a cheese board? ›

A good rule of thumb is 1 ounce of each cheese for every guest and about five types of cheese. For a party in which cheese is the main event, plan on buying 3 pounds for eight people, 6 pounds for 16 people, or 9 pounds for 24 people. If cheese is one of many items being served, plan on buying 3 to 4 ounces per person.

How to make a cheap charcuterie board for beginners? ›

Meat and cheese boards are super easy to make. The staples for a proper charcuterie board are cured meats with cheese options, plus a selection of dried or fresh fruits, nuts, crackers, spreads, olives and pickled vegetables. Think of it as a glorified snack tray and choose what appeals to you.

How do you jazz up a cheese board? ›

We all know that the cheese is the star of the board but no board would be complete without the right accompaniments. Fresh fruit, Jams & honey bring sweetness to the cheese as well as a pop of colour. Nuts, olives and charcuterie bring a savoury saltiness that elevates almost any cheese they're paired with.

What nuts go on a cheese board? ›

Recommended Nuts for a Cheese Board
  • Walnuts.
  • Pecans.
  • Almonds.
  • Pistachios.
  • Cashews.
  • Candied nuts.
  • Nut brittles.
Mar 23, 2020

How do you elevate a cheese board? ›

Share
  1. Start with the hero – the cheese. Begin by selecting a variety of cheeses in both taste and textures. ...
  2. Pick a board. ...
  3. Add different sized jars & bowls and fill. ...
  4. Add those extras, such as cured meats, smoked salmon, pate or terrine, quince paste and dried fruits. ...
  5. Add some freshness for that finishing touch.

How long should cheese sit out for a cheese board? ›

Cut produce and cheeses need to be refrigerated until served and should not be kept at room temperature for more than 2 hours total (one hour if the temperature is above 90 °F). Use clean serving utensils, spoons for dips, tongs, or toothpicks to keep guests from contaminating the entire board.

How early can you cut cheese for a cheese board? ›

When you do pre-cut cheeses, be sure to plan your prep for no more than one day in advance of serving. Store your pre-cut cheeses on the shelves of your Cheese Grotto and keep them in the fridge for up to 12 hours, then take it out and bring everything to room temperature a couple of hours before you plan to serve.

What is the best meat for a charcuterie board? ›

Dry-Cured Pork: Thin-sliced, fatty and salty — dry-cured pork is a must. Serrano ham, prosciutto, country ham, Iberico ham, capicola and speck are all readily available. Look for meat that is pink or red in hue (not brown or gray) with fat that is white (not transparent or opalescent).

What is on a classic cheese board? ›

The perfect, classic cheese selection: Brie, Cheddar and Blue. This is that classic combination, but with their modern day British counterparts.

What should every charcuterie board have? ›

Recipe Ingredients
  • Cured meat. Use a selection of 3-4 different cured meats for your charcuterie board. ...
  • Cheese. Select 4 or more cheeses of varying texture and flavor. ...
  • Bread and crackers. I love to include a baguette with a charcuterie board. ...
  • Nuts and chocolate. ...
  • Condiments and jams. ...
  • Fruit. ...
  • Garnish.
Dec 16, 2023

Is a charcuterie board the same as a cheese board? ›

While they are wildly similar, a charcuterie board is one where the center of attention is the cured meat, while a cheese board revolves around cheese. That's not to say that either type of board can't borrow ingredients from one another, but the main selection has to remain true to its name.

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