A charcuterie board isn’t complicated. It’s a board, some food that doesn’t need a stove, and the willingness to arrange things so they look intentional.
How to Build a Bourbon and Charcuterie Board
Somehow that combination, board plus food plus a little intention, has become the centerpiece of every party that wants to look a little more put-together than a bag of chips on the counter. Add bourbon to the mix and the board stops being a snack table and starts being a pairing exercise, whether you meant it to or not.
The good news is you don’t need to overthink it. You need a decent board, a few smart choices about what goes on it, and a bourbon that actually fits what’s on the plate.
Pick Your Board First
The board itself does more work than people give it credit for. It’s the difference between food that looks assembled and food that looks like it happened to you.
If you want the simplest possible path, an all-in-one set solves the board, the slate, and the serving pieces in a single purchase. This one’s sized for a real gathering rather than a coffee table for two.
Charcuterie Board Cheese Tray Set with Stainless Steel Knives, Slates and Bowls
The board, the slate, and the serving pieces sorted in one purchase — sized for a real gathering.
View on Amazon →If you’re hosting a bigger crowd, or you just like having room to spread out, go bigger. A large bamboo board gives you the surface area to separate cheeses from meats from the sweet stuff, which matters more than it sounds like it would once the board actually fills up.
SMIRLY Large Bamboo Cheese Board Set
More surface area to keep cheeses, meats, and the sweet stuff from running into each other once the board fills up.
View on Amazon →And if this is a gift, or you just want something that looks like a piece of your kitchen rather than a party rental, a personalized acacia and marble board earns its keep well past the one occasion. Marble also happens to keep cheese cooler for longer, which is a nice bonus dressed up as a nice-looking board.
Personalized Charcuterie Board Gift Set, Acacia & Marble
Marble keeps cheese cooler longer, and the personalization makes it a keeper well past one occasion.
View on Amazon →Pick one. You don’t need all three, though I understand the temptation.
The Basic Pairing Logic
Sharp cheeses and cured meats are rich and fatty, so they want a higher-proof pour that won’t get lost next to them. Soft cheeses want something a little sweeter and gentler, so the bourbon doesn’t overpower the texture. That’s the whole framework, and it holds up fine on its own. But it gets a lot more useful once you attach it to actual bottles instead of abstractions, so let’s do that.
Bourbon by Flavor Profile: Four Real Examples
These are four bottles we’ve actually reviewed, chosen because they sit in different corners of the flavor map. Match your board to whichever one sounds like your bourbon, or use these as a shopping list next time you’re at the store.
Fruit-Forward & Rich
Conviction Straight Bourbon — Southern Grace Distilleries
Cherry cobbler and cinnamon on the nose, caramel and dark chocolate on the palate, finishing into leather and tobacco. 104 proof, enough backbone to stand up to something rich.
On the board: sharp aged cheddar and a square of bourbon barrel-aged chocolate or a few dried cherries. The fruit in the glass meets the fruit on the board.
Read the full review →Balanced & Everyday
Elijah Craig Small Batch — Heaven Hill
Corn sweetness and rye spice splitting the difference at 94 proof. Reliable, middle-of-the-road, the bourbon that works even if you didn’t plan the pairing in advance.
On the board: aged gouda, a handful of spiced or smoked nuts, a cured meat with a little black pepper in it.
Read the full review →Lean, Dry & Savory
Leather & Oak
Light and lean, grain and oak up front, a little green apple and lemon, a savory quality that reads like the memory of a well-seasoned cutting board. No big sugar here.
On the board: don’t put this next to anything sweet, it’ll get lost. Salami, prosciutto, olives, a hard cheese with some age on it.
Read the full review →Soft & Sweet
Green River Kentucky Straight Wheated Bourbon
Wheated instead of rye-forward, so it leans caramel, vanilla, and toffee, soft and rounded, with a little tobacco and coffee on the finish. Gentle by design.
On the board: brie or another soft, mild cheese, plus honey or dried apricot. Nothing here needs to compete with anything else.
Read the full review →Building It So It Actually Looks Like Something
Start with the anchors, the cheeses, spaced out so they’re not touching. Fill in around them with the meats, folded or rolled rather than laid flat, because it takes up less space and looks like you thought about it. Crackers go in a stack or a fan, not scattered. Everything else, the fruit, the nuts, the little sweet bits, fills the gaps.
A proper cheese knife set makes this easier and looks better doing it, since nobody wants to watch you saw at a wedge of cheddar with a butter knife.
Lunar 6-Piece Cheese Knife Set
Stainless steel set built for actually cutting cheese instead of fighting it with whatever’s in the drawer.
View on Amazon →And if you’re adding anything wet, honey, a good mustard, olives in brine, keep it off the board directly and into a small bowl instead. It keeps things from sliding into each other by the time your guests get to it.
BTaT Ramekins, Set of 8
Small porcelain bowls for honey, mustard, olives, or anything else that shouldn’t be sliding around loose on the board.
View on Amazon →Pour Alongside It, Not Instead of It
The board and the bourbon are doing the same job from two directions. Build the board first, then pick the bottle that fits it, or pick the bottle first and build toward it. Either way works, as long as you don’t build the board and then forget it’s sitting next to a glass that’s supposed to be talking to it.
The Pourch Verdict
A board is just food that agreed to look nice about it. Pick a board, match a bottle to what’s on it using the profiles above, and it stops being an appetizer and starts being the reason people stayed at the party longer than they meant to.
Affiliate Disclosure: Some links on this page are Amazon affiliate links. If you purchase through them, we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend gear we’d actually put on our own bar. We are never paid to recommend a specific product.




