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Easy Cheese Boards & Appetizer Party Board Ideas
Step 1: Choose the Cheese
Choose cheeses from different milk sources-cow, goat and sheep-and with a variety of textures-soft, semisoft, hard. Start with at least two selections for small get-togethers and up to six or more for big parties. If you’re serving three cheeses or fewer, plan on about 1½ to 2 ounces of each cheese per person. If you’re serving more than three cheeses, allot about 1 ounce of each per person. Mix and match your cheeses using this texture guide:
Semihard cheeses
Gruyère, Comté, Cheddar, Manchego, aged Gouda
(This is the largest category of cheeses, so consider selecting more than one cheese from it for a larger board.)
Hard cheeses
Parmigiano-Reggiano, Pecorino Romano, Grana Padano, aged Manchego
Soft-ripened cheeses
Brie, Camembert, Cambazola
Blue cheeses
Stilton, Gorgonzola
Semisoft cheeses
Young Gouda, Havarti, Fontina
Fresh, creamy cheeses
Goat cheese (chèvre), ricotta, fromage blanc
Washed-rind cheeses
Limburger, Taleggio, Epoisses de Bourgogne
Cheese Selections Shown Above:
Face Rock Creamery Clothbound Cheddar (semihard cheese)
Gorgonzola Cremificato (blue cheese)
Roth Grand Cru Surchoix (semihard cheese)
Brillat-Savarin (soft-ripened cheese)
Cypress Grove PsycheDillic (fresh cheese)
Aged Spanish Manchego (hard cheese)
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Once you’ve made your cheese selections, place them on a board (try wood, marble or slate for beautiful presentation) an equal distance apart (don’t worry about the empty space, it will fill up quickly in the steps to come). For three cheeses, set one in each third of the board; for four, use quarters; and so on. Don’t forget to set the cheese out first, so it can come to the perfect temperature before serving—too cold and the flavors will be muted. Too warm and they’ll be muddled or melt off your board. For that just-right temperature, take the cheeses out of the fridge about a half hour before serving them. Harder cheeses take longer to warm up because they’re denser, so give them about an hour to temper.
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Step 2: Pick Some Pairings
While stand-alone cheese can be the best way to enjoy it, it’s always nice to have some vehicles for eating cheese—especially for soft cheese. Add someneutral-flavored crackersto your board near hard, semihard and semisoft cheeses. Then add slices ofplain country-style breadorbaguettenear soft and fresh, creamy cheeses. If you want your cheese to really shine, skip flavored crackers or bread (you don’t want them to interfere with the flavors in the cheese).
Step 3: Fill the Holes with Extras
Fill in bigger holes on the board withfruit(try grapes, apple slices, fresh figs and dried fruit, such as apricots),jam,olive tapenade,olivesand/ordried/cured meats(such as salami, prosciutto, pepperoni). Now fill in whatever space is left with crunchy extras likenutsandseeds(start with Marcona almonds, pistachios, spiced walnuts or pecans).
Step 4: Don’t Forget Utensils
Don’t leave your guests hanging! Make sure each element has a serving utensil where needed. Add small spoons or spreaders to bowls of jam, place toothpicks out for snatching up fruit and olives, and of course don’t forget the cheese knives! Serve each cheese with its own knife to keep flavors separate from one another. You don’t want your Brie tasting like blue cheese!
Not-Your-Grandma’s Pear-Pecan Cheese Ball
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