Ultimate Summer Fruit & Cheese Board

This easy cheese board features a bounty of seasonal vegetables and fresh fruits, which add color and complement the variety of cheeses. We've made cheese suggestions, but feel free to mix and match with your favorites. For the fresh produce, improvise based on what's available at your market and what's in season.

Prep Time:
30 mins
Additional Time:
15 mins
Total Time:
45 mins
Servings:
16
Yield:
16 servings

Effortless, casual entertaining in the summer wouldn't be complete without a bountiful cheese board highlighting the best of the season. Making a beautiful warm-weather cheese board is super-simple, as long as you keep a breezy, easy-going vibe when setting up the cheese and accompaniments.

When choosing ingredients, think about contrast in texture and flavor as well as visual contrasts and harmony. Feature lots of garden-fresh vegetables and fruit for pops of color, plus grilled bread and smoked sausage along with the usual cheese, olives and nuts. Improvising is always encouraged, but here are our favorite tips for making a perfect summer cheese board.

Focal point
Katie Webster

1. Start with a Central Focal Point

I like to think of a cheese board as having a center structure, which is usually the highest point. If the guests will be gathering around the board from all sides, you'll want it to be beautiful, interesting and balanced from all directions. If the cheese board will be on a stationary hors d'oeuvre buffet against a wall, then build the central focus at the back and center of the board.

In the summer, choose summer fruits and garden veggies to build your central structure. Play with various colors and textures to make it visually interesting. Whereas grapes and dried fruit would be a good choice in the fall or winter, in the summer peaches, plums and other stone fruit make a lovely focal point. I also love to pile on fresh berries. Both kids and adults appreciate nibbling on the sun-ripened berries. They contrast well with tangy cheeses.

Fresh vegetables from the garden, such as baby zucchini, peeled rainbow baby carrots and cherry tomatoes make nicely portioned additions to the central focus. I also love husk cherries (pineapple tomatillos) or a bowl of blistered shishito peppers.

Variety of cheeses
Katie Webster

2. Choose a Variety of Cheeses

When selecting cheeses to feature, consider choosing at least one of each: cow's-milk, goat's-milk and sheep's-milk. I also like to provide one soft-ripened cheese, a harder aged cheese and a fresh cheese. Blue cheese is always a nice addition as well; it provides a sharp contrast and goes particularly well with summer fruit.

An elegant way to elevate fresh goat cheese is to roll the cheese in freshly chopped herbs. Make a mix of two parts parsley to one part each chives, tarragon and chervil, and roll the cheese into the herbs to give it a bright green coating.

Goat cheese
Katie Webster

The cheese board pictured above features a hard sheep's-milk cheese, a sharp aged Cheddar, the herb-coated soft fresh chevre, a bloomy-rind cow's-milk cheese and a cow's-milk blue cheese.

Another way to select cheeses is to choose all from the same type of milk with different aging processes and from different areas of production. English Cheddar is surprisingly different from many domestic Cheddar cheeses. Generally speaking, the harder the cheese, the longer it has been aged. Bloomy-rind cheeses, such as Brie, have a shorter aging process (just a couple months) and are inoculated with specific cultures that create their familiar white outer rind. Hard cheeses, such as manchego, are aged for up to two years. It can be fun tasting the difference between a mild Cheddar, aged for two to three months, contrasted with sharp Cheddar aged for a year or more. The region where the cheeses are produced also would be something to consider focusing on for your theme. Highlighting all French cheeses, for instance, would be a great way to showcase many contrasting varieties.

Olives
Katie Webster

3. Add Marinated Olives

Basil adds a fresh, summery vibe to marinated olives. Drizzle 1 tablespoon olive oil and a generous pinch of crushed red pepper onto store-bought olives, along with chopped fresh basil, to make a simple marinated olive salad. Place the olives in a small decorative bowl directly on the cheese board for a visual contrast.

Cheese board with nuts
Katie Webster

4. Include Grilled Bread, Smoked Sausage and Nuts

In the summertime, adding hot grilled smoked sausage and grilled baguette to a cheese board is a welcome surprise. Grill smoked rope sausage according to package instructions over a medium-hot fire until it's browned and hot. Rest it for 3 minutes, then slice into bite-size pieces. I like to serve the sliced smoked sausage with bamboo toothpicks, available at party stores, kitchen and bath stores, on end caps in the supermarket or order them online.

A generous portion of salted nuts is a hearty, crunchy addition to consider. Just fill in the gaps among the cheeses, fruits and veggies to create a bountiful visual effect.

Grilled bread
Katie Webster

To grill the baguette, slice it and brush the cut slides with oil. Then grill the baguette for a minute or two over a medium-hot fire just until crisped.

Crackers
Katie Webster

5. Tuck in a Variety of Crackers

Whole-grain crackers are a healthy choice. Think beyond whole-wheat: crackers are now also made with quinoa, brown rice, whole rye, amaranth and more good-for-you whole grains. Try contrasting shapes of crackers to keep things visually interesting. Include gluten-free crackers if you or a guest is avoiding gluten. Just be sure to keep wheat-based and gluten-containing items on a separate board or platter from the rest of the food if cross-contamination is a concern. Avoid flavored crackers, which can overwhelm the flavors of your cheeses and also tend to be higher in sodium.

Cheese board with herbs
Katie Webster

6. Finish with Edible Flowers & Fresh Herbs from the Garden

A nice touch in the summer is to finish off the cheese board with freshly picked edible flowers. Early in the summer, violets and chive blossoms add pretty purple and blue accents, whereas later in the summer brightly colored nasturtiums add a peppery bite. Make sure your flowers are grown for eating, as those from flower shops are likely sprayed with pesticides. Finally, add a sprinkle of chopped herbs if you like. Mint and chopped flat-leaf parsley work well.

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Ingredients

  • 1 cup mixed green and black olives

  • 2 tablespoons olive oil, divided

  • 1 tablespoon chopped fresh basil

  • Pinch of crushed red pepper

  • 4 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley

  • 2 tablespoons chopped fresh chives, tarragon or chervil

  • 8 ounces fresh goat cheese (chèvre)

  • 8 ounces smoked rope sausage

  • 48 (1/2 inch) slices whole-grain baguette

  • 1 ½ cups berries, such as raspberries, blackberries and/or strawberries

  • 1 ½ cups sliced peaches, nectarines or plums

  • 1 cup baby zucchini

  • 1 cup baby carrots, preferably rainbow, peeled

  • 1 cup cherry tomatoes

  • 1 pound hard aged cheese, such as Cheddar, Gruyère and/or Manchego

  • 8 ounces soft ripened cheese, such as Camembert or Brie

  • 8 ounces blue-veined cheese, such as Roquefort, Stilton or Gorgonzola

  • 24 whole-grain crackers

  • 1 cup assorted roasted nuts, such as almonds, cashews and/or Brazil nuts

  • 2 tablespoons chopped fresh mint or parsley

  • 1 cup Edible flowers, such as violets, chive blossoms and/or nasturtiums

Directions

  1. Combine olives, 1 tablespoon oil, basil and crushed red pepper in a medium bowl; toss to coat. Transfer to a small serving bowl.

  2. Combine 4 tablespoons parsley and chives (or tarragon or chervil) on a small plate. Add goat cheese and roll to coat in the herb mixture.

  3. Preheat grill to medium-high. Grill sausage, turning once, until lightly browned and heated through, 6 to 7 minutes. Let rest for 3 minutes, then cut into bite-size pieces. Brush the remaining 1 tablespoon oil over both sides of baguette slices. Grill, turning once, just until crisped, 1 to 2 minutes.

  4. To assemble the cheese board: Arrange berries, peaches (or nectarines or plums), zucchini, carrots and cherry tomatoes in the center of the board. (If your guests will access the board from all sides, place fruit and vegetables in the center. If the board will be against a wall, place the fruit and vegetables toward the back of the board.) Arrange the cheeses around the fruit and vegetables. Arrange the sausage, grilled bread and crackers among the cheeses. Set the bowl of olives on the board. Fill in the gaps with nuts. Sprinkle with mint (or parsley) and garnish with edible flowers, if desired. Don't forget toothpicks for the sausage, and include cheese knives and a bowl for the olive pits.

    Ultimate Summer Fruit & Cheese Board
Originally appeared: EatingWell.com, August 2018

Nutrition Facts (per serving)

460 Calories
31g Fat
26g Carbs
24g Protein
Nutrition Facts
Servings Per Recipe 16
Serving Size 2 1/2 ounces cheese & 1/2 ounce smoked sausage, plus fruit, vegetables, olives & nuts
Calories 460
% Daily Value *
Total Carbohydrate 26g 9%
Dietary Fiber 6g 20%
Total Sugars 4g
Protein 24g 47%
Total Fat 31g 40%
Saturated Fat 15g 73%
Cholesterol 60mg 20%
Vitamin A 1492IU 30%
Vitamin C 8mg 9%
Folate 34mcg 8%
Sodium 908mg 39%
Calcium 297mg 23%
Iron 2mg 10%
Magnesium 51mg 12%
Potassium 256mg 5%

Nutrition information is calculated by a registered dietitian using an ingredient database but should be considered an estimate.

* Daily Values (DVs) are the recommended amounts of nutrients to consume each day. Percent Daily Value (%DV) found on nutrition labels tells you how much a serving of a particular food or recipe contributes to each of those total recommended amounts. Per the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the daily value is based on a standard 2,000 calorie diet. Depending on your calorie needs or if you have a health condition, you may need more or less of particular nutrients. (For example, it’s recommended that people following a heart-healthy diet eat less sodium on a daily basis compared to those following a standard diet.)

(-) Information is not currently available for this nutrient. If you are following a special diet for medical reasons, be sure to consult with your primary care provider or a registered dietitian to better understand your personal nutrition needs.

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