How to build a dinner-worthy charcuterie board (2024)

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How to build a dinner-worthy charcuterie board with ideas for what to put on a cheese and charcuterie board and tips and tricks for arranging a showpiece platter! Plus all the components of an Italian Salumi themed charcuterie board! Serve with basil artichoke tapenade.

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This post is sponsored by Safeway, a year-long partner of Snixy Kitchen

Dating all the way back to when we first moved in together, Lucas and I have been making cheese and charcuterie platters as part of our regular dinner rotation. Snacking Dinner,we call it. Back when it was just the two of us, we lived in a tiny in-law apartment. With a pint-sized kitchen, easy dinners that didn't require tons of cooking or dishes were welcome and necessary.

Today, snacking dinner is still on our short list of dinner ideas and our 3 year old even asks for snacking lunch for school. She also calls it picnic lunch/dinner and insists we all eat on a blanket on the living room floor.

We're about to move back into that same tiny in-law unit - 6½ years later - for a month and a half while we rip off the back of our house to add on another bedroom and bathroom. Now with two kids and two cats in a pint-sized kitchen, I anticipate a lot of snacking dinner-worthy charcuterie boards in our future.

I'm partnering withSafewayagain this year, joining them on a Northern California blogger tour aimed at inspiring recipes that show off some of their California-based products and initiativesthat you might not already know about. You canfind all the recipes inspired by these tours here. We recently touredJ Vineyards & Winery, co-hosted by Columbus Craft Meats, and Good Thins.

After touring the winery, we got to build our own picnic lunch boxes, mixing and matching meats, crackers, and other snacks - complete with wine pairing. This bento box served as inspiration for this dinner-worthy charcuterie board.

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Snacking Dinner Board

Whether I'm making a cheese and charcuterie platter for a weeknight dinner or summer entertaining, the board must hit all the marks for menu and presentation. No matter the reason, it should offer enough sustenance to be filling and nutritious as a meal. That's this dinner-worthy charcuterie board.

You can serve it as a meal for 2-4 people or make a few large platters to put out for Memorial Day party grazing.

What is charcuterie?

Charcuterie is a French word used to describe any of a variety of cold cooked or cured meats. When served on a board for entertaining, it's often served along side cheese, crackers and/or bread.

With meat as the hero of a charcuterie platter, it's the perfect starting point for creating a dinner-worthy board.

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What goes on a charcuterie board?

Typically, a charcuterie board has a variety of cooked or cured cold meats, cheeses, and crackers and/or bread. The rest of the elements are all bonus - let your creativity shine!

Here are my tips for how to build a dinner-worthy charcuterie board.

Theme & Planning

Start with a theme to help you choose what should go on your board! For my dinner-worthy board, I've chosen an Italian salumi board theme and built out my flavors for things that will pair well together.A salumi board typically contains Italian pork cold cuts like salami, where a charcuterie board more generally is a French term for a board that may contain other meats like patés.

To make a dinner-worthy board, choose a selection from each of the categories below. Make a list of the bigger components you want, then leave room for inspiration once you're at the grocery store.

Tip: Safeway has a great bulk section that's perfect for finding little filler items of your charcuterie board.

Meat

The meat is the most important part of the spread. It is a charcuterie board, after all. Include a variety of quality cooked or cured meats.

On my board, I've used a combination of salumi: spicy peppered salami, thick cut cacciatore, Italian dry salami, and calabrese salami - all from Columbus Craft Meats.They use only high-quality whole muscle pork in their salame and carefully source all the ingredients and spices for flavor quality. We go through an impressive amount of Columbus salame in our house.

Cheese

Choose a variety of hard and soft cheeses. For any hard cheese, pre-slice or cut the cheese into bite-sized pieces to make grabbing and eating quicker for your guests. For soft cheese, make sure you have a cheese knife for spreading. Think about what goes well with the meats you've chosen.

Some of my favorites for a charcuterie board: parmesan, pecorino romano, mozzarella balls, a bowl of fresh ricotta, brie, gouda, or smoked cheddar.

Crackers and/or bread

Crackers and/or bread serves as the tiny plate to deliver the meat and cheese to your mouth. For a large charcuterie platter with lots of different elements, choose a neutral cracker that will add texture, but let the flavor of the fixings do the talking.

Here I've used a neutral rice-based gluten-free cracker from Good Thins.You could also add slices of lightly toasted baguette.

Vegetables

For a meal-worthy board, your platter should also include vegetables, either roasted or raw.

Roasted: For my board, I've chosen cold roasted vegetables that will pair with the salumi - roasted cauliflower and blistered tomatoes. You could use asparagus or roasted peppers.

Raw: Depending on your theme, you could opt for fresh raw veggies like carrots, snap peas, sliced radishes, cherry tomatoes, or cucumbers.

Fruit

Add a combination of fresh and dried fruit that pairs well with your meats and cheese. Fresh fruits like berries, grapes, apples, pears, or cantaloupe and dried fruit like figs, dates, or apricots all work well.

Dips, Tapenades, or Spreads

Dips or tapenades are themusical break on a charcuterie board. It's your chance to add something unique and interesting. It also lets you add a bowl to the platter to visually break up and physically support all the components!

Here I've made a quick basil artichoke tapenade that goes with the flavor profile of my Italian salumi - get the easy recipe!

These recipes would all go well as a dip or spread for your charcuterie board.

  • Baked white bean and artichoke dip
  • Pistachio basil ricotta spread
  • Beet cashew hummus
  • Everything bagel whipped goat cheese
  • Basil artichoke tapenade (shown here)

Extras

Ideas for extras: A bowl of honey or honeycomb, cornichons, nuts (marcona almonds, dry roasted almonds, walnuts, etc), jam, spicy mustard, orwarm olives with citrus, rosemary, and gin.Don't forget the toothpicks!

Once you've chosen all the other elements of the board, these extras help fill in the gaps - both in flavor and visually. Maybe you need something pickled, spicy, crunchy, or sweet. These extras are also great for filling in the visual spaces on your board.Here's where you can really get creative.

Serve with

Pairing your platter with a special wine can make your board feel more festive, especially if you're serving it at a dinner party.

I've paired my board with J Vineyard's Cuvee 20 Brut sparkling winethat offers subtle notes of almonds. This brut is soft and creamy without being astringent. It's fermented in the same bottle it's sold in, a traditional method that creates smaller more delicate bubbles.

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How do you arrange a charcuterie board?

Just as important as the food to a charcuterie board, so is the arrangement. Arranging a charcuterie board can seem daunting. How do you decide what to put in each place? What goes where? How do you make it look balanced? While a complete charcuterie board certainly looks like a piece of art, I'll give you some tips to make it easy for you to arrange.

Step 1: Platter and bowls

Choose a platter according to how big of a charcuterie board you want to make - large plates, ceramic platters, or wood serving boards all work great. Use one large platter or, if you plan plan to spread out the platters on different tables, use multiple smaller platters. Here I've used an oval ceramic platter that's about 19-inches x 14-inches.

Add visual variation by using different sizes of bowls for things like dips, honey, jams, spreads, or tapenades. Or use bowls for smaller components like nuts or berries.

Start by placing these bowls on your platter, then use them to prop up your meats, crackers, or other components.

Step 2: Texture, Shape, Color, Flavor

Next, start placing the larger components on the board, using the bowls as your starting point. Think about texture, shape, and color when deciding what goes where. As you start placing things, don't worry about filling in all the space just yet. Reserve some of each component to fill in space later, if needed.

For texture, roll up, fold, or fan out the meat, crumble or slice the cheese.

For shape, think about placing contrasting different shapes near each other and putting similarly shaped items further away from each other. Round roasted cherries next to long skinny cornichons instead of next to mozzarella balls.

Similarly, think about adding contrast to your board by mixing up the colors. For example, don't put two light-colored cheeses right next to each other or near similarly colored crackers. Distribute the meats on different parts of the board.

Also consider flavor. Keep things that go nicely together near each other, and away from clashing components. For example, I purposefully kept the blackberries and roasted tomatoes away from one another, but the blackberries near the hard cheese and honey.

Step 3: Fill the space

Reserve smaller or more neutral items for last to fill in the empty space. Nuts and crackers work great for this. Once you've placed all your main components, sprinkle nuts or scoot in some crackers to fill in all the empty spaces on your board.

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How to build a dinner-worthy charcuterie board (9)

My Dinner-Worthy Charcuterie Board Menu

Here's an overview summary of all the components for my dinner-worthy charcuterie board -meat, cheese, crackers/bread, vegetables, fruit, dips/tapenades/spreads, and all the extras! What are your favorite things to include on a charcuterie board - let me know and I'll add them to the list!

Get the recipe for the basil artichoke tapenade here!

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Yield: 1 large 19x14 platter

How to build a dinner-worthy charcuterie board with ideas for what to put on a cheese and charcuterie board and tips and tricks for arranging a showpiece platter! Plus all the components of an Italian Salumi themed charcuterie board!

Ingredients

3-4 Cured or Dried meats (¼-1/2lb each)

  • Featured: spicy peppered salami, thick cut cacciatore, Italian dry salami, and calabrese salami

2-3 Cheeses (4 ounces each)

  • Featured: pecorino romano and mozarella balls
  • Other options: parmesan, fresh ricotta, brie, gouda, or smoked cheddar

2-3 Vegetables

  • Featured: ½ head roasted cauliflower & 1lb whole roasted tomatoes (roast up to 2 days in advance and chill until ready to serve)
  • Other options: roasted asparagus, roasted peppers, carrots, snap peas, sliced radishes, cherry tomatoes, or cucumbers

2-3 fruits, fresh or dried

  • Featured: blackberries and dried figs
  • Other options: Berries, grapes, apples, pears, or cantaloupe. Dried dates or apricots.

1-2 dips or tapenades

  • Featured: homemade basil artichoke tapenade
  • Other options: hummus, white bean dip, pistachio ricotta spread, whipped goat cheese

The Extras

  • Featured: cornichons, honeycomb, salted marcona almonds, and toothpicks
  • Other options: walnuts, dry roasted almonds, candied nuts, jam, spicy mustard, olives

Instructions

  1. Roast any veggies and prepare your dips or tapenades in advance.
  2. Prepare your platter for arranging and pull out all of your ingredients. Start by arranging any components you're serving in bowls around the platter.
  3. Next, start placing the larger components on the board, using the bowls as your starting point. Think about texture, shape, and color when deciding what goes where. As you start placing things, don't worry about filling in all the space just yet. Reserve some of each component to fill in space later, if needed. For texture, roll up, fold, or fan out the meat, crumble or slice the cheese.For shape, think about placing contrasting different shapes near each other and putting similarly shaped items further away from each other. Similarly, think about adding contrast to your board by mixing up the colors. Keep flavors that go nicely together near each other, and away from clashing components.
  4. Reserve smaller or more neutral items for last to fill in the empty space. Nuts and crackers work great for this. Once you’ve placed all your main components, sprinkle nuts or scoot in some crackers to fill in all the empty spaces on your board.

Disclosure: Special thanks toSafewayfor providing the ingredients for this recipe and sponsoring this post! And thanks to you for supporting the companies that keep Snixy Kitchen cooking!

How to build a dinner-worthy charcuterie board (2024)
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