A culinary education for the home kitchen — from fond to flame
Fond & Flame

Chapters

The Complete Charcuterie Board

A masterclass in composition — cured meats, artisan cheeses, pickles, fruits, nuts, and condiments arranged for maximum visual and flavor impact.

★ Beginner$$$30 minServes 8
The Complete Charcuterie Board — Chapters — recipe plated and ready to serve

Nutrition (per serving)

450

Calories

22g

Protein

24g

Carbs

30g

Fat

3g

Fiber

A masterclass in composition — cured meats, artisan cheeses, pickles, fruits, nuts, and condiments arranged for maximum visual and flavor impact.

Ingredients

  • Cured meats (choose 3): prosciutto di Parma, soppressata, coppa, bresaola, or Spanish chorizo — about 3 oz each
  • Cheeses (choose 3, varying textures): aged cheddar or Manchego (hard), Brie or Camembert (soft), blue cheese or goat cheese (pungent) — about 3 oz each
  • Pickled items: cornichons, pickled onions, castelvetrano olives, peppadew peppers
  • Fresh fruit: grapes, figs, apple slices, or pear slices
  • Dried fruit: apricots, dates, or cranberries
  • Nuts: Marcona almonds, walnuts, or candied pecans
  • Spreads: whole-grain mustard, fig jam or honey, hummus
  • Crackers and bread: water crackers, crostini, grissini breadsticks
  • Fresh herbs for garnish: rosemary sprigs, thyme

Method

  1. Start with the board: Use a large wooden cutting board, slate, or marble slab. Place small bowls first for wet items (mustard, honey, olives) — these anchor the layout.

  2. Add the cheeses: Place them in different zones of the board. Cut hard cheese into cubes or triangles. Leave soft cheese whole with a knife for guests to cut. Crumble blue cheese or slice goat cheese into rounds.

  3. Fold and arrange the meats: Fold prosciutto into loose rosettes. Fan soppressata slices in overlapping rows. Roll coppa into tubes. Place meats near (but not touching) the cheeses.

  4. Fill gaps with crackers and bread: Fan crackers in rows. Stand breadsticks upright in a small glass. Tuck crostini into empty spaces.

  5. Add fruit and nuts: Cluster grapes in one area. Scatter dried fruit and nuts to fill remaining gaps. Place fig halves cut-side up for color.

  6. Finish with herbs: Tuck rosemary sprigs and thyme between items for color and aroma. The board should look abundant with no empty space visible.

  7. Let everything sit at room temperature for 20-30 minutes before serving. Cold cheese has muted flavor.

What You're Practicing

What You're Practicing

Composition and visual design: A charcuterie board is an exercise in the same principles used in plating — color contrast, texture variety, negative space management, and visual flow. The eye should travel across the board, discovering new items.

Flavor pairing: The classic pairings exist for a reason. Salty cured meat + sweet fruit (prosciutto and fig). Sharp cheese + sweet condiment (cheddar and fig jam). Rich pâté + acidic pickle (liver mousse and cornichon). Each pairing creates a complete flavor experience.

Quantity planning: For a pre-dinner board, plan 2-3 oz of meat and cheese per person. For a charcuterie-as-dinner board, plan 4-5 oz per person. Always have more crackers than you think you need.

Make-ahead advantage: Everything except sliced apples and pears can be arranged 2-3 hours ahead, covered with plastic wrap, and refrigerated. Pull it out 30 minutes before guests arrive. This is the ultimate stress-free entertaining.

Comments (0)

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.