Cheese Platter
- For example: French Camembert, Le Chevrot (a sharp goat cheese), Rondin with herbs (a creamy goat cheese), and Montagnolo (a creamy blue cheese).
- Go to the best cheese shop in town and ask the person at the counter which cheeses are ready to serve.
- Taste everything; they expect you to.
- We all know that the Brie may look terrific, but it can be underripe and tough or overripe and ammoniated.
- You want only the freshest cheeses that are perfectly ripened.
- Take them home, refrigerate them, and then bring them to room temperature a few hours before serving.
- Second, be sure to have a platter or wooden board that is flat and large enough to hold the cheeses without crowding them.
- Arrange the cheeses with the cut sides facing out, and with several small cheese knives, maybe one for each type of cheese.
- Third, to finish the platter, add sliced breads or crackers, and green leaves.
- I use either lemon or galax leaves, which you can get from your florist.
- If you have a garden, any large flat leaf like hydrangea looks beautiful, but be sure they aren't poisonous and are pesticide-free!
- Overall, the simpler the design, the better the platter looks.
- Group each kind of cheese together and add one large bunch of green or red grapes in the center to create a visual focal point.
- Fill in the spaces with lots of crackers or small slices of bread.
example
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/ina-garten/cheese-platter-recipe.html (may not work)