How to Make a Charcuterie Board (2024)

Wondering how to make a Charcuterie Board? Learn how to pull one together the easy way – and how to make it look pretty, too!

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (1)

Charcuterie boards are my favorite thing to prepare for any casual get-together, family event or reason to celebrate. My grandfather was the master of charcuterie boards and taught me how to put one together that’s not only tasty, but also beautiful.

You can easily make a charcuterie board for just a couple of people (or just for yourself!) or for a large group – all you need to do is adjust how much you pack on your board! It truly is the perfect party appetizer.

Ingredients you’ll need

Here is a visual overview of the ingredients in the recipe. Scroll down to the printable recipe card at the bottom of this post for quantities!

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (2)

Ingredient notes

How many varieties to pick of each food group

I like to use an easy formula when I put together my board: I pick the same count of cheeses, cold cuts, carbs, nibbled, spreads and fruit. I just vary the amount depending on how many people I’m serving.

Here, I chose to use 4 of everything. This size board will serve a decent amount of people as a party appetizer for some casual grazing. My rule of thumb is as follows:

  • 1 person: 1 or 2 of each group; if 2 then very small amounts
  • 2 people: 2 of each group, but small amounts
  • 3 people: 2 of each group, but decent amounts
  • 4-6 people: 3 of each group
  • 6-8 people: 4 of each group with moderate amounts
  • more than 8 people: 4 of each group with generous amounts

Quantities of each item needed

When making a cheese or charcuterie board, the big question is always how much food you should serve.

It’s obviously hard to gauge if you’ll have big or small eaters (so cliché, but I’d guess a party with teenage boys would require more per person than a Manhattan socialite get-together, you know what I mean?).

But here are my rules of thumb:

  • 3-4oz cheese and meat combined per person, as an appetizer
  • OR 6-8oz cheese and meat combined per person as a meal
  • 2-3 pieces of fruit per person
  • 3-8 oz bread/crackers per person (3-4 as an appetizer, 6-8 as a meal)
  • Enough nibbles so each person can eat from each. For dried fruit, I like to put 2 pieces per person. For things like nuts and olives, a small handful per person.

Keep in mind: Leftovers of a charcuterie board make a great lunch the next day! I’m not for crazy over-buying, but if in doubt, I play it safe and go for leftovers rather than not having enough food.

The cheese

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (3)

I like to pick a variety of cheeses. Even if I make just a small charcuterie board, I always make sure to pick at least one soft and one semi-hard or hard cheese.

For a large cheese board like here, I choose a hard cheese, a semi-hard, a soft and a fresh/spreadable cheese. Here, I picked parmesan, a young Manchego, Brie and a soft goat’s cheese log.

For more ideas:

Hard cheeses

  • Parmesan
  • Pecorino Romano
  • Vintage Gouda
  • Asiago
  • Comté

Semi-hard cheeses

  • Cheddar
  • young Gouda
  • young Manchego
  • Gruyère
  • Havarti

Soft cheeses

  • Brie
  • Camembert
  • Roquefort
  • Gorgonzola
  • Mozzarella
  • Feta

Fresh/spreadable cheeses

  • Ricotta
  • soft goat’s cheese (Chèvre)
  • Neufchatel
  • Farmer’s cheese

The cold cuts

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (4)

So, technically, charcuterie means cold cuts. But we’ve come accustomed to call this kind of party platter will all the things a charcuterie board… So there you go, potato – potahto.

For my cold cuts, I just went to the store and picked an Italian variety platter. It had Parma ham, Prosciutto Cotto, salami and bresaola.

I don’t have much to say about the cold cuts – pick 4 you enjoy, and make sure you don’t buy all the same type; eg. make sure you don’t pick all dry cured ones or all cooked ones (here, the Prosciutto Cotto is a cooked product (the light pink one in the photo) and the other three are cured.

The spreads

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (5)

Dips and spreads are a must with any charcuterie board! The really elevate the flavor of everything and make it feel extra-special.

I like to serve a choice of sweet and savory spreads. Here I chose honey, apricot preserves, sun-dried tomato spread and coarse Dijon mustard.

More ideas

Sweet spreads

  • any fruit preserve, jam or jelly
  • a runny honey
  • any fruit chutney
  • any sweet relish
  • cranberry sauce

Savory spreads

  • honey mustard
  • smooth mustard
  • whole grain mustard
  • any savory relish
  • pesto
  • sun-dried tomato paste
  • aioli or other mayo-based dips

The fruit

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (6)

I love the look (and taste!) of fresh fruit on a party platter. Makes it look kind of fancy, adds color… and I feel like I’m a hostess in the early 19th century, when exotic fruit was a luxury and showed your wealth. Now we just get to pick it all at the grocery store, but you know, the feeling counts ?

I pretty much always choose grapes and figs. Since it’s winter right now, I also added mandarin oranges (found pretty ones with the leaves still attached!) and kiwi fruit.

I try to strike a balance between sweet fruit and more acidic fruit, so there’s something for everyone. I also try to avoid fruit that’s difficult to eat/fruit that doesn’t keep well when sliced.

More ideas

Sweet fruit

  • Grapes
  • Figs
  • Pineapple (sliced)
  • Blueberries
  • Strawberries

Acidic fruit

  • Kiwi fruit (peeled and sliced – I totally forgot to peel for the photos!)
  • Raspberries
  • Blackberries
  • Oranges (segmented)
  • Mandarin oranges (they can also be sweet depending on the exact type!)

The nibbles

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (7)

These are the fun bit for casual grazing! They also help to fill in any empty space on your board to make it look pretty.

Here, you can add anything from dried fruit and nuts to things like pickles, olives and marinated vegetables.

I chose nuts, dates, small pickles and marinated olives for a bit of variety.

More ideas
  • Dried cranberries or raisins
  • Other dried fruit, such as mango, pineapple, apricots or dates
  • Any kind of olives, I strongly suggest using pitted olives!
  • Favorite nuts: Roasted/salted pistachios, walnuts, pecans (both either roasted or raw) or smoked almonds.

The carbs

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (8)

Finally, we arrive at the carbs: Bread and crackers for nibbling, dipping, spreading and layering with cold cuts and cheeses!

I like to provide a variety of more seasoned and less seasoned crackers, and a bread. Here I chose Grissini, cheese crackers, salted crackers and a crusty Baguette.

More ideas
  • Ritz crackers
  • Cream crackers
  • Goldfish – if you’re serving kids! They love it.
  • Wasa Thins
  • Fruity crisps
  • Olive crackers
  • Cheesy crackers

How to make a Charcuterie Board

The board

Start by choosing your board. If you want to serve a group of 8+, you’ll need a pretty substantial board! The right size is pretty essential, if it’s too small it will look like too little food with all the gaps. If it’s too big, you’ll have an overflowing board and things will fall off when people try to serve themselves.

Mine in the photos is 20 x 16 inches and it’s pretty big. Perfect for a cheeseboard to serve 8 people.

When I make one for just 2-3 people, I use a round board with a diameter of 12 inches.

Unfortunately, I don’t have any other pointers to go off, but I hope you’ll find the right size board with this guidance.

How to assemble your board

1. I like to start with the main parts. First, I place the cheeses in roughly the four corners of the board.

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (9)

2. Next, I place the cold cuts in between the cheeses.

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (10)

3. Now, I add the spreads. I like to place them in small glass bowls and re-fill as needed.

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (11)

I like to place the spreads next to items they go with on the board. Here, I placed the honey next to the goat’s cheese, the apricot jam next to the Manchego, the sun-dried tomato spread next to the cooked ham and the Dijon mustard with the Brie.

4. Now, I nestle the fruit in places where there’s still a lot of empty space.

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (12)

You don’t need to put the same type of fruit together – you can spread it out like I did with the kiwi fruit. Just make sure you fill in any large gaps.

5. The nibbles are perfect to fill both small and large gaps. I always place “wet” nibbles (here the marinated olives and the pickles) in small bowls and place them on a corner that hasn’t much going on yet.

The “dry” nibbles (here the nuts and dates) I use to fill in any smaller empty spots.

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (13)

6. Finally, I place the crackers and bread wherever there is any space left.

I try to place them mostly around the edge of the board to fill any gaps there. But you can also nestle them in the middle where the board needs a little extra something.

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (14)

In the end, just add some spoons/forks/spreading knives for serving! And just like that, your perfect party platter is ready ?

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (15)

What to do with leftovers

If your guests are civil eaters (ahem, mine mostly aren’t when it comes to party platters and charcuterie boards…), you can easily pack up and store the leftover cheese and cold cuts in the fridge for 3-5 days, providing they didn’t sit out in the warmth for more than an hour or so. If they were out at room temperature for a long time, I make sure to eat leftovers the next day.

If you’re very uncertain about how much your people are going to eat, put out half the amount and then re-fill as needed.

Sliced fruit should be eaten on the same day, or kept in the fridge for up to a day.

Crackers can be stored in the fridge for up to a day. They usually touch hands, cold cuts etc on the board, so please do not put them back in their box to store in the cupboard. The same goes for nuts and dried fruit you put directly on the board.

Pickles, olives etc in their own bowl can easily go back in the fridge for a week.

For the spreads, I don’t store leftovers. I prefer using small bowls and re-filling as needed.

More easy party food

  • Cranberry Pecan Cheeseball
  • Loaded Sheet Pan Nachos
  • Sticky BBQ Slow Cooker Meatballs
  • Crockpot BBQ Little Smokies

PSIf you try this recipe, please leavea review in the comment section and add a star rating in the recipe card – I appreciate your feedback! Follow along onPinterest,FacebookorInstagram.

Printable recipe

Printable Recipe Card

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (20)

Save Recipe

Easy Charcuterie Board

Wondering how to make a Charcuterie Board? Learn how to pull one together the easy way – and how to make it look pretty, too!

Recipe by Nora from Savory Nothings

made it? tap the stars to add your rating!

4.86 from 7 votes

Print Add Review

Recipe details

Prep 30 minutes mins

Total 30 minutes mins

Servings 8 people

Difficulty Easy

Ingredients

  • 16 oz cheese I recommend choosing 4 varieties for 8 people; see notes for ideas
  • 16 oz cold cuts I recommend choosing 4 varieties for 8 people; see notes for ideas
  • 4 types of spread filled into small bowls; see notes for ideas
  • 16 small servings of fruit I recommend choosing 4 varieties for 8 people; see notes for ideas
  • 4 types of nibbles nuts, dried fruit, olives, pickles…; see notes for ideas
  • 32 oz crackers and bread I recommend choosing 4 varieties for 8 people; see notes for ideas

Instructions

  • Arrange everything on a large wooden board in the order given (see post for tips), making sure to leave as little gaps as possible.

  • Keep well chilled for up to 6 hours before serving. I like to put out the board 10-15 minutes before serving to allow the meats and cheeses to come to room temperature. Serve with spoons, knives and small forks.

Want to save this recipe?Create an account for free to start your personal recipe box. Save any recipe by tapping the heart in the bottom right corner.

Join Now

Notes

To serve more or less people

  • 1 person: 1 or 2 types of each food group; if 2 then very small amounts
  • 2 people: 2 of each food group, but small amounts
  • 3 people: 2 of each food group, but decent amounts
  • 4-6 people: 3 of each food group
  • 6-8 people: 4 of each food group with moderate amounts
  • more than 8 people: 4 of each food group with generous amounts

Rules of thumb for food quantities if serving more or less people

  • 3-4oz cheese and meat combined per person, as an appetizer
  • OR 6-8oz cheese and meat combined per person as a meal
  • 2-3 pieces of fruit per person
  • 3-8 oz bread/crackers per person (3-4 as an appetizer, 6-8 as a meal)
  • Enough nibbles so each person can eat from each. For dried fruit, I like to put 2 pieces per person. For things like nuts and olives, a small handful per person.

Make sure to adjust the amounts to suit the people you’re serving! Bigger eaters will need more than small eaters/young children. Also, it’s always better to have leftovers vs hungry people at a party!

Cheese

I like to pick a variety of cheeses. When I serve 4 types of cheese, I choose a hard, semi-hard, soft and spreadable cheese.

Hard cheeses

  • Parmesan
  • Pecorino Romano
  • Vintage Gouda
  • Asiago
  • Comté

Semi-hard cheeses

  • Cheddar
  • young Gouda
  • young Manchego
  • Gruyère
  • Havarti

Soft cheeses

  • Brie
  • Camembert
  • Roquefort
  • Gorgonzola
  • Mozzarella
  • Feta

Fresh/spreadable cheeses

  • Ricotta
  • soft goat’s cheese (Chèvre)
  • Neufchatel
  • Farmer’s cheese

Cold cuts

I don’t have much to say about the cold cuts – pick 4 you enjoy, and make sure you don’t buy all the same type; eg. make sure you don’t pick all dry cured ones or all cooked ones (here, the Prosciutto Cotto is a cooked product (the light pink one in the photo) and the other three are cured.

I often pick a cold cut party platter at the grocery store so I already have a selection made for me.

Spreads

I like to serve a choice of sweet and savory spreads.

Sweet spreads

  • any fruit preserve, jam or jelly
  • a runny honey
  • any fruit chutney
  • any sweet relish
  • cranberry sauce

Savory spreads

  • honey mustard
  • smooth mustard
  • whole grain mustard
  • any savory relish
  • pesto
  • sun-dried tomato paste
  • aioli or other mayo-based dips

Fruit

I try to strike a balance between sweet fruit and more acidic fruit, so there’s something for everyone. I also try to avoid fruit that’s difficult to eat/fruit that doesn’t keep well when sliced.

Sweet fruit

  • Grapes
  • Figs
  • Pineapple (sliced)
  • Blueberries
  • Strawberries

Acidic fruit

  • Kiwi fruit (peeled and sliced – I totally forgot to peel for the photos!)
  • Raspberries
  • Blackberries
  • Oranges (segmented)
  • Mandarin oranges (they can also be sweet depending on the exact type!)

The nibbles

  • Dried cranberries or raisins
  • Other dried fruit, such as mango, pineapple, apricots or dates
  • Any kind of olives, I strongly suggest using pitted olives!
  • Favorite nuts: Roasted/salted pistachios, walnuts, pecans (both either roasted or raw) or smoked almonds.

The carbs

I like to provide a variety of more seasoned and less seasoned crackers, and a bread.

  • Ritz crackers
  • Cream crackers
  • Goldfish – if you’re serving kids! They love it.
  • Wasa Thins
  • Fruity crisps
  • Olive crackers
  • Cheesy crackers

The board

Start by choosing your board. If you want to serve a group of 8+, you’ll need a pretty substantial board! The right size is pretty essential, if it’s too small it will look like too little food with all the gaps. If it’s too big, you’ll have an overflowing board and things will fall off when people try to serve themselves.

Mine in the photos is 20 x 16 inches and it’s pretty big. Perfect for a cheeseboard to serve 8 people.

When I make one for just 2-3 people, I use a round board with a diameter of 12 inches.

Leftovers

If your guests are civil eaters (ahem, mine mostly aren’t when it comes to party platters and charcuterie boards…), you can easily pack up and store the leftover cheese and cold cuts in the fridge for 3-5 days, providing they didn’t sit out in the warmth for more than an hour or so. If they were out at room temperature for a long time, I make sure to eat leftovers the next day.

If you’re very uncertain about how much your people are going to eat, put out half the amount and then re-fill as needed.

Sliced fruit should be eaten on the same day, or kept in the fridge for up to a day.

Crackers can be stored in the fridge for up to a day. They usually touch hands, cold cuts etc on the board, so please do not put them back in their box to store in the cupboard. The same goes for nuts and dried fruit you put directly on the board.

Pickles, olives etc in their own bowl can easily go back in the fridge for a week.

For the spreads, I don’t store leftovers. I prefer using small bowls and re-filling as needed.

Nutrition is an estimate.

More recipe information

Course: Appetizer

Cuisine: American

How to Make a Charcuterie Board (2024)

FAQs

What are 5 tips to making a charcuterie board easy? ›

Here's an easy, step-by-step guide.
  1. Choose your board, platter, or plate.
  2. Lay out your soft and moist ingredients first.
  3. Place your dips and spreads around the board.
  4. Lay out your dry ingredients, like meats, nuts, and hard cheeses.
  5. Top with your choice of garnishings.

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

What is the 3-3-3-3 Rule for Charcuterie Boards? 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.

What are 5 things to avoid on a charcuterie board? ›

There are a few that I would stay away from eggplants, brussels sprouts, turnips, beets, zucchini and mushrooms. Many of these vegetables taste best when cooked, and Charcuterie boards generally don't include steamed or cooked veggies.

How do you arrange items on a charcuterie board? ›

Space the cheeses apart equally on your board, followed by the meats, then fill in the remaining empty spaces with fruits, nuts, crackers, etc. Add some finishing touches like a drizzle of honey over cheddar or bleu cheese, or top goat or cream cheese with jam or preserves.

How do you make a charcuterie board look professional? ›

Charcuterie Board Styling Tips & Tricks
  1. Consult the guest list. ...
  2. Work with uneven numbers. ...
  3. Keep organized. ...
  4. Start with your bowls or round shapes. ...
  5. Next, move on to your biggest pieces and arrange by category. ...
  6. Avoid same category items touching. ...
  7. Move and adjust as you go. ...
  8. Fill final empty spaces with nuts.
Nov 24, 2021

Are there rules for charcuterie boards? ›

Depending on the size of your board, you should have one each of cow, sheep, and goat options with soft rind, firm, and hard cheeses in the mix. Flavors should range between nutty and mild to funky and unique. Rule of thumb: 1 cow, 1 sheep, 1 goat; 1 soft, 1 firm, 1 hard.

How many cheeses should be on a charcuterie board? ›

As with everything else, we're shooting for variety in flavor and texture so aim to include at least three types of cheese. To please palates of all kinds, you can start with a milder choice like our mozzarella or provolone.

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 do you make a high end charcuterie board? ›

You'll want at least one cracker or piece of bread for every slice of meat. Extras — pickles, spreads, nuts, fruits — should all be plentiful. It's OK if they out-number your meats and cheeses, since your guests may want to play with different flavor combos in each bite.

How do you make a charcuterie board from scratch? ›

You can customize your charcuterie board however you like, however typically it will include the following:
  1. Cured meats.
  2. Various cheeses – Nice cheeses and meats are generally on the pricier side. With that said, it feeds A LOT of people.
  3. Olives and Nuts.
  4. Fruit.
  5. Dried Fruits.
  6. Crackers or small slices of bread.
  7. Jelly or Jam.
Nov 20, 2023

What are three tips for making your own charcuterie board? ›

Anyone can create a visually impressive charcuterie board by keeping these tips in mind.
  1. Start With Bowls and Jars. Start your board by placing any bowls or jars you want to include. ...
  2. Space out Meats and Cheeses. ...
  3. Include Pops of Color. ...
  4. Use Smaller Items to Fill Gaps. ...
  5. Garnish With Herbs.
Mar 2, 2020

What is traditionally on a charcuterie board? ›

The most important elements of a charcuterie board are meats, cheeses, savory accompaniments, sweet accompaniments, and crackers. Cheeses: choose a variety of hard and soft cheese, and cheese made from different animals (cow, sheep, goat).

How to make homemade charcuterie? ›

  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.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Greg O'Connell

Last Updated:

Views: 5814

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (62 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Greg O'Connell

Birthday: 1992-01-10

Address: Suite 517 2436 Jefferey Pass, Shanitaside, UT 27519

Phone: +2614651609714

Job: Education Developer

Hobby: Cooking, Gambling, Pottery, Shooting, Baseball, Singing, Snowboarding

Introduction: My name is Greg O'Connell, I am a delightful, colorful, talented, kind, lively, modern, tender person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.