How to Make a Basic Cheese Plate (2024)

  • Cheese Appetizers
  • American Appetizers

Guidelines for Buying, Serving and Garnishing a Cheese Plate

By

Jennifer Meier

How to Make a Basic Cheese Plate (1)

Food writer, cookbook author, and recipe developer Jennifer Meier specializes in creating healthy and diet-specific recipes.

Learn about The Spruce Eats'Editorial Process

Updated on 12/7/19

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How to Make a Basic Cheese Plate (2)

In This Article

  • Buying the Cheese

  • Displaying the Cheese

  • Garnish

  • Serve

  • Helpful Tips

Making a basic cheese plate involves four steps: buying the cheese, displaying the cheese, garnishing, and serving.

This cheese plate includes three types of cheese that are sold in almost every cheese store or the cheese section of upscale grocery stores: Gruyere (cows' milk), Istara (sheep's' milk) and Humboldt Fog (goat's milk). If your cheese shop does not sell Gruyere, Istara or Humboldt Fog, ask them to suggest similar cheese.

Buying the Cheese

A basic cheese plate should include at least three types of cheese to represent each of the different milk types: cow, sheep, and goat. Keep flavor and texture in mind. Serving three mild, soft kinds of cheese isn't as interesting as serving a variety of flavors and/or textures. For this cheese plate, the flavors are all mild-to-medium, but the texture of each cheese is different.

As a general guideline, assume each person will eat at least 2 ounces of each cheese. (16 ounces = one pound)

Displaying the Cheese

First, choose your platter. Be creative! You can use a large dinner plate, a wood cutting board, a serving platter, or a cheese dome. Unwrap each cheese and evenly space them on your serving plate, leaving a space in the middle of the plate for garnish. The cheese rinds should face the center of the plate, and the part of the cheese wedge that guests will cut into should face outward. Consider cutting off any side rinds and leave only one rind on the end of the cheese. This makes it easier for guests to cut into the cheese.

  • Cow's Milk: Gruyere has a hard texture. It is often sold in sturdy wedges that can be stood upright to add height to the plate.
  • Sheep's Milk: Istara has a semi-soft texture. The orange rind will provide a little bit of color on the plate. If the wedge is too thin to stand up, lay it down flat on the plate.
  • Goat's Milk: Humboldt Fog has a soft, creamy texture. Lay the wedge of cheese down flat, rather than standing it upright. This way, the beautiful line of vegetable ash down the middle of the cheese is visible. Don't cut off any of the rinds - it helps this cheese keep its shape.

Garnish

The easiest garnish is setting a cluster of grapes in the middle of the cheese plate or piling dried fruit or nuts in the middle of the plate. Consider using seasonal garnishes such as summer or autumn fruit. Many cheese shops also sell fruit spreads for pairing with cheese. Olives and sliced meats are also a nice accompaniment to a cheese plate. Always serve crackers and/or a sliced baguette. Other types of bread that taste great with cheese are ciabatta, french bread, and bread with dried fruit and nuts baked into it.

Serve

Cheese tastes best when served at room temperature. Set knives on or near the cheese plate, ideally one for each cheese. Cheese markers are a fun way to identify the types of cheese you are serving. Provide napkins and small plates.

Helpful Tips

  • Set the cheese out a half-hour before eating to bring it up to room temperature
  • Ideally, put out a separate serving knife for each cheese. Or, put out one knife for the Gruyere and Istara, and a separate knife for the Humboldt Fog, which is softer and messier.
  • If you don't have a serving platter, a regular dinner plate can work just fine.
  • As a rule of thumb, plan for each guest to eat 1-2 ounces of each cheese you serve. If you're serving heavy garnishes (sliced meat, olives, fruit) or other food along with the cheese plate, this amount may be a bit less.
  • A light Chardonnay will pair well with this cheese plate as will a Riesling. If you want to serve red wine, choose something light with nice fruit; perhaps a pinot noir.
  • Always have plenty of sliced bread and/or crackers on hand. These items fill guests up, so they eat less cheese.
How to Make a Basic Cheese Plate (2024)

FAQs

How to create a cheeseboard? ›

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.

What should be in a cheese platter? ›

Keep Your Cheese Board Simple:

Buy some cheese and meat. Pair it with crackers, bread, nuts and some mustard, jam or honey. Finally, add a fruit that you already have on hand.

How to make a cheese platter on a budget? ›

How to Build a Cheap Cheese Board for Under $30 - Grilled Cheese...
  1. Meat. • 1 Meat combo pack. ...
  2. Produce. • 1 Ingredient - blueberries, fresh. ...
  3. Condiments. • 1 Pickly ingredient - olives. ...
  4. Nuts & Seeds. • 1 Treat ingredient - chocolate covered almonds.
  5. Snacks. • 1 Brioche crackers. ...
  6. Dairy. • 1 Blue cheese cheese.

How do you use a cheese plate? ›

You'll set out a small cutting board and set on it little gems of cheese. You'll add crackers, dried fruit, sliced vegetables, making it look as pretty as you would for a dinner party. And then you'll eat it, all by yourself.

How to make a wooden cheese board? ›

  1. Step 1: Pick Out a Hardwood, Cut to Size, and Flatten. ...
  2. Step 2: Fill Any Holes or Voids in the Wood As Necessary. ...
  3. Step 3: Design and Cut Out Your Handle. ...
  4. Step 4: Drill a Hole in the Handle. ...
  5. Step 5: Sand the Live Edge and Refill Any Exposed Holes. ...
  6. Step 6: Wet the Board With Water and Sand to Final Grit.

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

No matter the style of the wood charcuterie board, you can always follow the 3-3-3-3 rule. Every charcuterie board should have three meats, three cheeses, three starch options, and three accompaniments, such as fruit, nuts, or veggies.

How many cheeses do you need for a cheese platter? ›

We recommend choosing at least three to five cheeses of varying milk sources, colours, textures and flavours from the five following categories: fresh, soft, blue and hard.

How to arrange cheese and crackers? ›

It might also help to place larger items first—if you have a bowl of crackers or bread slices or a larger wheel of Brie, position those on the platter first, then fill in with smaller cheese slices and crackers. Letting all the ingredients touch will add to the look of a bountiful, large cheese board.

What is a good cheese for a platter? ›

Soft-ripened cheeses: brie and camembert. Pasta filata (spun, stretched): halloumi, mozzarella and provolone. Semi-hard cheeses: fontina, gouda, muenster, butterkäse, cheddar, colby, edam, emmental, gruyere, jarlsberg, manchego, gruyère, comté and Monterey Jack.

How to make a cheese board for 50 people? ›

A typical board would be meat, cheese, extra (fruit, veggies, crackers). Therefore if you have 50 people you would want 50 ounces of meat, 50 ounces of cheese and 50 ounces of extras. One pound of cheese, one pound of meat, and one pound of a combination of fruit, veggies and crackers= 16 people.

What is a cheese plate? ›

A basic cheese plate should include at least three types of cheese to represent each of the different milk types: cow, sheep, and goat. Keep flavor and texture in mind. Serving three mild, soft kinds of cheese isn't as interesting as serving a variety of flavors and/or textures.

What to include on a cheese board? ›

Accompaniments
  1. Crackers and small-sliced breads.
  2. Fresh vegetables and fruit: cucumbers; grapes; sliced pears or apples, for example.
  3. Sweet: dried figs; and honey or jam.
  4. Tangy: olives and other marinated items like artichokes.
Dec 11, 2018

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.

What not to put on a charcuterie board? ›

What should you not put on a charcuterie board? You'll want to avoid overly juicy fruits whose juices will run across the board and turn your crackers and bread soggy. Skip fruits like watermelon, pineapple, and tomatoes and stick with grapes, berries, and apples or dried fruits.

How much does it cost to make a cheese board? ›

Today, these large platters are made with cured meats, various kinds of cheese, dried fruits, nuts, crackers, olives, and honey, jelly, or jam. Place these items in your shopping cart and your bill can quickly add up; the average cost to put together a charcuterie board is $50-$100.

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