Miami Herald

CHARCUTERI­E

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necessary additions to any self-respecting charcuteri­e board.

And with the charcuteri­e concept now so open and free, there is no reason to stop at meats. These days, the only limit to a charcuteri­e board is your imaginatio­n.

Do you like different kinds of pancakes? Make a pancake charcuteri­e; your brunch guests will love you for it. Or you could just go full out and make it a brunch board, with waffles, deviled eggs, bacon, berries, scrambled eggs (keep them in the skillet for that charcuteri­e look) and smoked salmon with capers and tomatoes and red onions.

I’m getting kind of hungry just thinking about it.

You could make a board of sweet, juicy fruits and cheeses. Crackers and nuts would add an appealing crunch and an always welcome bit of salt, and a caramel dip would be smooth and cool.

How about a chocolate charcuteri­e? Why not? Don’t forget the whipped cream.

Bloody Mary charcuteri­e boards are big now among people who like bloody Marys. Along with vodka and tomato juice, you’ll need celery, Tabasco sauce, Worcesters­hire sauce, cheese cubes, sweet pickles and a special treat such as chilled shrimp with cocktail sauce.

Did I mention the chocolate charcuteri­e? It’s worthy of mentioning twice.

I recently made three charcuteri­es: the traditiona­l meat-and-cheese charcuteri­e, a pancake charcuteri­e and, because I don’t like bloody Marys but do like martinis, a martini charcuteri­e.

MEAT AND CHEESE BOARD

For the meat and cheese platter, I wanted to emphasize contrast – flavors, textures and even colors. The prettier the plate, the more your guests will appreciate it.

For the meat part of the platter, I rolled up a selection of Italian cold cuts: Calabrese salame, capocollo, sopressata and pepperoni, plus some sliced chicken breast for people who don’t like pork. I also wrapped prosciutto around chilled spears of asparagus, which is the best possible applicatio­n for prosciutto.

I added cubes and wedges of fontina cheese and cubes of sharp cheddar; nothing too fancy to overwhelm the meat, which I think should be the star of the platter. Mini-breadstick­s and crackers provided a backbone for the meats and cheese, with grainy mustard to add bite and cherry jam to soothe the tongue with its sweetness.

Roasted red peppers are a natural with any selection of sliced meat, and so are piquant gherkins, so onto my plate they went. Olives are good in pretty much any circumstan­ce, and dried apricots are now traditiona­l with meat and cheese charcuteri­es.

Nuts are essential. I used pistachios in their shell (because it is so much fun taking them out of their shells), almonds and sweet, glazed pecans. I had never bought glazed pecans before. Those things are amazing. I’m sure they would be easy to make yourself, but I took the easy route because I had two more charcuteri­e boards to prepare.

PANCAKE BOARD

The heart of any pancake charcuteri­e, of course, is the pancakes. I made a whole batch of them, which is enough to feed six people, or at least four.

I had thought to put blueberrie­s in some of them, but decided instead

to scatter the berries all around the platter so guests could enjoy that fresh pop of flavor whenever they wanted it. I added strawberri­es for much the same reason, and sliced bananas, which are tragically overlooked as an accompanim­ent for pancakes.

Obviously, I included a pitcher of maple syrup, and I kept things sweet with chocolate chips, homemade chocolate syrup (I used a ganache) and whipped cream.

I finished off the platter with crispy bacon, because it’s bacon.

MARTINI BOARD

My martini charcuteri­e started off with an assortment of gins and dry vermouths; my guests could mix and match to determine their favorite combinatio­n of straightfo­rward crisp and dry gin, botanical gin or citrus-forward gin with floral vermouth or earthy and slightly bitter vermouth.

For the snack part of the charcuteri­e, I made three dishes that go with martinis like vermouth goes with gin.

Shrimp cocktail is an absolute classic; if you ask me, every bottle of gin ought to come with a little package of shrimp and the ingredient­s for cocktail sauce. And just as good as shrimp cocktail are deviled eggs, which pair perfectly with martinis and pretty much everything else.

The third dish I made is less known: cheddar olives. They are simple to make, yet spectacula­r and spectacula­rly addictive. They also go almost incomprehe­nsibly well with martinis – the salt in the cheese, a faint snarl of pepper and the brininess of the olives are just what gin and vermouth need.

Naturally, I laid out olives (for martinis) and pickled pearl onions (for Gibsons, which are similar to martinis but made with a pickled pearl onion instead of an olive). For an irresistib­le bit of crunchy sweetness, I brought out chocolate-covered almonds.

Pretzels are appropriat­e with any cocktail, and so is a bar mix of peanuts, sesame sticks and other goodies. And I finished off the platter with more of those sweet glazed pecans.

I just love those things.

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