Excellent Worthy Thin Cut Fine Meats for a Charcuterie Board (2024)

Table of Contents

          • Tom Mueller
  • Best Thin and Finest Meats for a Charcuterie Board
    • What Meats go Well on a Charcuterie Board?
    • What kind of Salami is best for Charcuterie?
    • What Are the Essentials for a Charcuterie Board?
    • Tips for Making Amazing Charcuterie Boards
      • Color and Contrast
      • Don’t Over Fill the Charcuterie Board! I noticed in Italy antipasti and antipasto boards are not overfilled and do not look like the food is squashed tightly together on the wooden board.
      • Less is More
      • Tasting Platter
      • Cut the Fat with Acidic Foods
      • Matching Alcohol with Charcuterie
          • Tom Mueller

Tom Mueller

Writer / Enthusiast / Meat Curer / Forager / Harvester | About Tom

For decades, immersed in studying, working, learning, and teaching in the craft of meat curing, now sharing his passion with you through eat cured meat online resource.

Choosing the finest dry-cured charcuterie meat – in the Western world there are many options available.

I have a deep appreciation for the traditionally made long-term production of these dry-cured meats since I also make them myself.

Of course, there is a huge variation in what is available. I want to be as useful as possible and help you select the type of thin dry-cured charcuterie meats that will be excellent on your charcuterie board.

The dry cured meat is the showcase of the charcuterie board, or for that matter antipasti. It’s not the place for cheap supermarket salamis that take less than 1 week to produce. It’s for honored traditions and thousands of years of history to be showcased in the food (in my opinion).

Best Thin and Finest Meats for a Charcuterie Board

The finest thin meat you can get in the world is Prosciutto de Parma, Jamón ibérico, and Culatello. These fine cured meats come from quality animals, are expertly made, are protected by strict regulations, and take at least 12 months to produce.

Now there are always new ideas and products when it comes to dry cured meats, but the tradition and culture behind Prosciutto de Parma and Iberian Jamón go back many hundreds of years.

You could say they have been tested through time, don’t get me wrong, there are many new flavors and also small artisanal products that have become epic as cured meat for charcuterie boards.

I strongly suggest that you seek anything you can get that is local and reputable. However, the above-cured meats are also able to produce volume at a high quality.

There are different degrees of quality within each category, and I recommend you try them depending on your budget – for example, prosciutto is dried for one year up to five years.

These types of meats are wafer-thin because the salt content is higher to preserve and dry the meat. If you don’t have the meat see-through and wafer-thin, the saltiness can be overwhelming.

Either an expert with a prosciutto knife or a deli slicer (with a tolerance to cut less than 1mm) is necessary to get these very fine slices.

Excellent Worthy Thin Cut Fine Meats for a Charcuterie Board (2)

Base it on the Experts – Italian Antipasti/Antipasto

If you look at the classic Italian meat and cheese antipasti, charcuterie boards, good quality prosciutto from different regions of Italy is often the showcase meat.

What Meats go Well on a Charcuterie Board?

Classic meats for charcuterie boards take months if not years to dry. Cured meats like prosciutto or Jamon have proteins that are broken down over the long drying process of dry-cured meats.

Some Italian university studies I read, have highlighted that this type of amino acid protein is more easily broken down in our digestive system. Therefore, this is a healthy way to consume protein.

What is often found with charcuterie meat that goes well in a charcuterie board is that the wafer-thin slices electrically melt in your mouth.

What most people don’t realize is that dry-cured charcuterie meat has lost more than 40% of its original weight, so it is a much-dense source of protein. It’s mainly the water inside the muscle that has been lost which will intensify any good quality meat.

This is one of the reasons why these epic charcuterie meats go so well on a charcuterie board.

What kind of Salami is best for Charcuterie?

Good quality salami types for charcuterie boards:

  • Genoa
  • Sopressatta
  • Felino

You’ll find most good dry-cured salamis contain pepper and garlic which have antiviral and anti-fungal antibacterial beneficial properties. Hundreds of years ago it made a lot of common sense to use things that had natural benefits to assist in the preservation of this preserved meat.

Sometimes good dry-cured salami that takes months to make becomes cold and hard. It has this firmness because it lost the water content as part of the drying process. This is for whole muscle and salami dry cured traditionally.

Carefully dried and the firm is the key.

Wafer thin when served.

What Are the Essentials for a Charcuterie Board?

I like to keep the charcuterie board essentials classic:

  • Quality Dry Cured Meat
  • Quality soft or sweet styles of cheese
  • Dry bubblies like Prosecco, or smooth young unoaked wines either red or white. I like to think a lighter wine.
  • olives – green not overpowering
  • fresh quality bread

Tips for Making Amazing Charcuterie Boards

  • Color and Contrast
  • Don’t Over Fill the Charcuterie Board
  • Less is More, Savor and Appreciate a Special Craft
  • Tasting Platter not a Full Course Meal
  • Cut the Fat with Acidic Foods

Color and Contrast

The red hue color of thinly sliced dry-cured charcuterie meat always contrasts well with the yellow pale colors of cheese, the green olives, and white-collar of bread.

Taking a lesson from Japanese cuisine, I have heard they like to serve dishes with at least five different colors on the plate.

I’ve even started thinking more about the actual wooden charcuterie board I’m placing my cured meats on. And using pale-colored wood to showcase the transparent red color of the charcuterie meat.

Don’t Over Fill the Charcuterie Board! I noticed in Italy antipasti and antipasto boards are not overfilled and do not look like the food is squashed tightly together on the wooden board.

Laying out the meat carefully with a small amount of overlap but keeping some gaps in between. In a way a kind of art form.

Less is More

I always try to remind myself that less is better than too much when it comes to a charcuterie board or any other type of food. So the lesson I learned as a consultant around fine dining restaurants – you always want people to get satisfied but not overly stuffed.

Take the same approach towards meat and cheese platters.

Tasting Platter

On the odd occasion, I have used a charcuterie board with all my cured meats as a main event. But really, as it is a small quantity of food it should be savored – that is my opinion!

After all, it is a celebration of meat that has taken months if not years to make!

Cut the Fat with Acidic Foods

Some kind of green olives, I find this a good contrast, it’s very common in many styles of food that you use acid to contrast the fat.

Having a little ceramic of extra-virgin olive oil, with some decent balsamic vinegar dribbled in the middle. It looks very presentable since the vinegar is separated from the oil as it is served. Then with freshly baked sourdough or some other type of delicious bread, you can tippet both olive oil and balsamic at the same time, delicious!

Excellent Worthy Thin Cut Fine Meats for a Charcuterie Board (3)

Matching Alcohol with Charcuterie

Here is a link to an article I wrote recently on this, in short, dry bubbly as mentioned.

Montepulciano or simple merlot, maybe easy dry Rieslings

Here is a link to the article.

Tom Mueller

Writer / Enthusiast / Meat Curer / Forager / Harvester | About Tom

For decades, immersed in studying, working, learning, and teaching in the craft of meat curing, now sharing his passion with you through eat cured meat online resource.

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Excellent Worthy Thin Cut Fine Meats for a Charcuterie Board (2024)

FAQs

What is the thin meat on a charcuterie board? ›

Dry-Cured Pork: Thin-sliced, fatty and salty — dry-cured pork is a must. Serrano ham, prosciutto, country ham, Iberico ham, capicola and speck are all readily available. Look for meat that is pink or red in hue (not brown or gray) with fat that is white (not transparent or opalescent).

What are the best meats to put on a charcuterie board? ›

Cured meats: Prosciutto, genoa salami, chorizo, sopressata, ham, and cured sausages are all classic choices for a charcuterie board. Cheese: Choose a variety of textures and flavors. A few options are soft brie, burrata and camembert. For firm cheese oprions try cheddar, manchego, Parmesan and gouda.

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

Creating Interest with the 3-3-3-3 Rule

Choose three cheeses, three meats, three starches, and three accompaniments for a perfect and balanced board, every time!

What are the leanest meats for charcuterie? ›

Meats/Protein- Keep your board packed with healthy, lean proteins like herb roasted chicken or turkey, grilled pork tenderloin, marinated tofu or a few hard boiled egg slices. Try to avoid processed, high nitrate/high salt luncheon meats.

What are 3 cheese for 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.

What are two main charcuterie items? ›

Here are the five key elements to a perfect charcuterie board:
  • Cheese. ~ You have limitless options in this category so you can not go wrong. ...
  • Sweet. ~ Cheese can pair well with sweet components like honey, fig jam, and/or a chutney. ...
  • Savory. ~ You need to have one or two savory elements to pair up to the meats. ...
  • Meat ~ ...
  • Bread.

What finger foods go on a charcuterie board? ›

Briny, pickled or marinated: olives, co*cktail onions, cornichons, dill pickles, pepperoncini. We love green olives stuffed with garlic or feta, and I also like including olive tapenade and bruschetta. Savory Dips and spreads: Whole ground mustard, hummus, ranch, balsamic dip. Veggies – cold cut, if desired.

What goes first on a charcuterie board? ›

Though there are many easy charcuterie board ideas out there, the process is somewhat formulaic. Start by adding structure with little dishes, then place your ingredients on the board starting with the largest elements like the cheeses and meats, followed by smaller items like crackers and fresh produce.

What is the trick to adding meat to a charcuterie board? ›

One of my favorite styling techniques is the quarter-fold. This works for many different types of meats of various sizes. Take a slice, fold it directly in half, then in half again to make a rough equilateral triangle with one rounded edge. With these quarters you can create a variety of textures on the cheese board.

What is the cheapest food for charcuterie? ›

Some of my favorite affordable ingredients include:
  • Colby-Jack pre-sliced cheese squares.
  • Grapes.
  • Honey roasted almonds.
  • Prosciutto.
  • Salami.
  • Bagel chips.

What is the best non pork meat for charcuterie? ›

Aim to use at least 3 variety of meats. I used Deli-style Shaved Turkey, Smoked Salmon and Vegan Ham here. I like including a pescatarian and vegan option. Fold meats in a variety of patterns and arrange them on the board.

What do you call the meat on a charcuterie board? ›

Charcuterie is just a fancy word for cured meat. The word derives from French origins in the 15th century, when people used every last bit of the meat and left nothing to waste. The meat was then put through a preservation process of curing and often formed into some sort of sausage or dry-aged meat.

What is coppa meat? ›

Sura: The “coppa” is a collection of muscles that is an extension of the loin that runs through the pork shoulder. When butchered, it has a barrel shape, and is best suited for charcuterie or slow roasting. Being in the shoulder, it has a lot of fat, and it is a muscle that gets used a lot, resulting in more flavor.

Do I need to cook salami? ›

Salami doesn't require cooking to be safe for consumption, but it can be cooked when used as an ingredient in other dishes. For example, it can be grilled when added as a filling to a sandwich, baked as a pizza topping, or pan-fried when added to pasta.

How do you display deli meat on a charcuterie board? ›

One of my favorite styling techniques is the quarter-fold. This works for many different types of meats of various sizes. Take a slice, fold it directly in half, then in half again to make a rough equilateral triangle with one rounded edge. With these quarters you can create a variety of textures on the cheese board.

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