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If youโ€™ve been seeking out some dessert charcuterie board ideas, look no further than this fantastic spread! Chocolates, cookies, fresh berries, and yes, even cheese, are all arranged on one gorgeous platter that requires zero cooking. Perfect for holiday gatherings, game day, or any celebration where you want to look like a hosting genius without the stress.

Overhead view of dessert charcuterie board with chocolates, cookies, fresh strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, cheese, honey, pretzels, and waffle cookies on wooden board.

See recipe card below for full list of measurements, ingredients, and instructions.

Why This Board is So Great

  • This charcuterie dessert board is a legit crowd-pleaser for every single person at your party! Youโ€™re covering anyone with a sweet tooth (to-die-for chocolates), and all your friends who prefer savory (they’ll go for the cheese and crackers). Kids lose their minds over cookies and gummies, and your sophisticated aunt who judges everything will be secretly impressed by that goat cheese-honey-chocolate combo she never knew she needed.
  • If you can arrange things on a board without setting anything on fire, you can make this. There’s no recipe to mess up, no timing to worry about, no stress-inducing stepsโ€”just shopping, arranging, and accepting compliments.
  • Depending on your party size, you can scale the board up or down without losing any of its wow factor. If youโ€™re making it for an intimate gathering, use a smaller board and fewer items. If youโ€™re hosting 30 people for Thanksgiving, double everything and use a massive platter!

What You Need to Know Before You Start

  • Place your largest items firstโ€”cheeses, bowls, and bigger clustersโ€”then fill in around them. Start with your cheese wheels and small bowls for dips positioned strategically around the board. These become your anchor points, and once you’ve got the big stuff placed, filling in gaps with berries and smaller items becomes incredibly easy.
  • Bring our your inner charcuterie board dessert skills out, and be creative with laying items out by stack three cookies here, lean five pirouettes there, pile seven truffles in a cluster. Even numbers look too symmetrical and formalโ€”we want that abundant, artfully casual look. Don’t lay everything flat eitherโ€”layer chocolates on top of each other, fan out cookies, stand some items up for dimension.
  • Cold cheese straight from the fridge has almost no flavor and won’t spread properly. Set it out for about 30 minutes while you’re gathering everything else. Same goes for chocolateโ€”it’s more aromatic and has better texture at room temp, which makes a huge difference in how everything tastes.
  • The secret to those jaw-dropping boards you see online is there’s no empty space! Use smaller items like berries, nuts, and candies to fill in any gaps between your larger items. Let different sections overlap slightly where they meetโ€”a sparse board looks sad, but a packed board looks generous and inviting.

Recipe Variations

Make it Holiday-Themed: Swap in seasonal treats like peppermint bark for a Christmas dessert charcuterie board, candy corn and chocolate pumpkins for Halloween, or conversation hearts for Valentine’s Day. Match your color scheme to the holidayโ€”red and green, orange and black, pink and red.

Top Up the Chocolate: Not everyone loves fruit, so double down on chocolate varieties. Add chocolate-covered almonds, dark chocolate bark, chocolate wafer cookies, chocolate-covered marshmallows, and different types of chocolate truffles. Keep one cheese for balance.

Try a Fruit-Focused Board: Flip the script and make fruit the star. Use more fresh fruit varieties (grapes, apple slices, pear slices), add dried fruit like apricots and figs, include fruit-based cookies like fig newtons or strawberry shortbread. Use fruit jams instead of chocolate dip.

Budget-Friendly Version: Skip the fancy chocolates and use chocolate chips in small bowls, swap Milano cookies for vanilla wafers, use regular Oreos instead of specialty cookies. The visual impact will still be there at half the cost.

Section of dessert board featuring dark chocolate pieces, chocolate truffles, chocolate-covered pretzels, chocolate sandwich cookies, honey bowl, caramels, pirouette cookies, and fresh strawberries.
Close-up view of dessert board showing Oreos, waffle cookies, fresh strawberries, raspberries, honey bowl with dipper, chocolate dip, marshmallows, and pink macarons on wooden platter.

Frequently Asked Questions

How far in advance can I make dessert charcuterie boards?

You can assemble this up to 2 hours ahead and keep it refrigerated, covered loosely with plastic wrap. Just remove it 15-20 minutes before serving so the cheese can come to room temperature. For best results, add any delicate items like meringues or gummy candies right before serving.

What size board do I need?

For 8-12 people, use a board that’s at least 16-18 inches in diameter or length. Bigger is usually betterโ€”you want enough space to create that abundant look without overcrowding. A large cutting board, serving platter, or even a clean baking sheet works great.

Can I make this nut-free for allergies?

Absolutely! Skip any nuts, pralines, or cookies with nuts. Check your chocolate labels (many contain tree nuts), and opt for nut-free cookies like Oreos, vanilla wafers, and graham crackers. There are plenty of delicious options that’ll still make a stunning board.

What’s the best chocolate dip to use?

Nutella is the easy crowd-pleaser, but melted chocolate ganache looks more elegant. You can also use chocolate hummus (yes, it’s a thing and it’s amazing), chocolate cream cheese dip, or even a store-bought chocolate fondue.

How do I keep fruit from looking brown or wilted?

Use the freshest berries possible and don’t wash them until right before assemblyโ€”water makes them deteriorate faster. If using apples or pears, slice them just before serving and brush with lemon juice. Skip bananas entirely; they brown too quickly.

Do I really need cheese on a dessert board?

You don’t need it, but trust me hereโ€”it’s a game-changer. The creamy, tangy flavor of goat cheese or brie balances all that sweetness and creates surprising flavor combinations that people absolutely love. Try it once and you’ll never skip it again.

Full dessert charcuterie board on wooden platter with wine glasses and strawberries in background, featuring chocolates, cookies, berries, cheese, honey, and assorted sweets.

More Sweet Holiday Party Recipes

Making changes to a recipe can result in recipe failure. Any substitutions or variations listed are simple changes that I believe will work in this recipe, but results are not guaranteed.

Recipe By: Cheryl Malik

Easy Dessert Charcuterie Board

Prep 20 minutes
Total 20 minutes
Talk about the best charcuterie dessert board ideas! This spread has chocolates, cookies, fresh berries, and yes, even cheese, are all arranged on one gorgeous platter that requires zero cooking. Perfect for holiday gatherings, game day, or any celebration youโ€™re hosting.
Cheryl MalikCheryl Malik
10

Equipment

  • Large wooden board, marble slab, or serving platter 16-18 inches minimum
  • Small serving bowls 2-3 for dips and honey
  • Cheese knife or spreaders
  • Honey dipper optional but nice
  • Small serving spoons

Ingredients

Cheeses (Choose 2)

  • 8 ounces goat cheese log
  • 8 ounces brie or camembert wheel
  • Alternative: 6 ounces manchego wedges

Dips and Liquids

  • ยฝ cup chocolate hazelnut spread Nutella or chocolate dip
  • ยผ cup honey
  • Optional: ยผ cup fruit jam

Cookies (Choose 3-4 Types)

  • 12 Milano cookies
  • 10-12 pirouette cookies rolled wafer cookies
  • 15-20 chocolate sandwich cookies Oreos or Thin Mints
  • 12-15 shortbread cookies or wedding cookies
  • 8-10 waffle cookies

Chocolates (Choose 2-3 Types)

  • 8 ounces chocolate truffles about 12-15 pieces
  • 6 ounces chocolate-covered caramels or nuts
  • 4 ounces dark chocolate bar broken into pieces
  • 6 ounces chocolate-covered pretzels

Fresh Fruit (Choose 2-3 Types)

  • 1 pound fresh strawberries some halved, some whole
  • 6 ounces fresh raspberries
  • 6 ounces fresh blackberries
  • 6 ounces fresh blueberries

Crackers

  • 8 ounces pretzel crisps or water crackers

Fun Extras (Optional: Choose 2-3)

  • 4 ounces meringue cookies
  • 3 ounces gummy candies
  • 4 ounces marshmallows
  • 3 ounces caramels
  • 2 ounces glazed or candied nuts

Instructions
 

  • Set out a large wooden board, marble slab, or serving platter. Gather all your ingredients and arrange them on your counter for easy access.
  • Place 8 ounces goat cheese and 8 ounces brie on opposite sides or corners of the board. Set small bowls on the board and fill one with ยฝ cup chocolate hazelnut spread and another with ยผ cup honey.
  • Arrange 8 ounces chocolate truffles, 6 ounces chocolate-covered caramels, and 4 ounces broken chocolate pieces in clusters near one cheese. Add 6 ounces chocolate-covered pretzels nearby, allowing sections to slightly overlap.
  • Fan out 12 Milano cookies in one section. Create a casual pile with 10-12 pirouette cookies. Arrange 15-20 chocolate sandwich cookies in another area. Add 12-15 shortbread cookies and 8-10 waffle cookies in remaining spaces, varying heights and arrangements.
  • Scatter 1 pound strawberries (some halved, some whole) throughout the board. Fill gaps with 6 ounces raspberries, 6 ounces blackberries, and 6 ounces blueberries, creating colorful pops between other items.
  • Add 8 ounces pretzel crisps or crackers near the cheeses. Tuck in optional extras like 4 ounces meringues, 3 ounces gummy candies, 4 ounces marshmallows, or 3 ounces caramels to fill any gaps.
  • Adjust items to create an abundant, overflowing look. Add a honey dipper to the honey bowl if desired. Serve immediately, or cover loosely and refrigerate for up to 2 hours. Remove from refrigerator 15 minutes before serving.
Make it Vegetarian: Many traditional soft cheeses like brie and camembert are made with animal rennet. Look for cheeses labeled “vegetarian” or made with microbial/vegetable rennet. Brands like BelGioioso, Organic Valley, and many store brands now offer vegetarian-friendly options.
Make it Gluten-Free: Use certified gluten-free cookies and crackers, and check all chocolate labels carefully. Many chocolates and candies are naturally gluten-free, but always verify the packaging to be safe.
Make it Nut-Free: Omit all nuts and nut-containing chocolates. Choose nut-free cookies like Oreos, vanilla wafers, and graham crackers. Always check chocolate labels for nut content or processing warnings.
Storage: Cover board with plastic wrap or transfer items to airtight containers. Cookies and chocolates last 2-3 weeks, cheese lasts 4-5 days refrigerated, fresh fruit should be eaten within 1-2 days.
Scaling: For smaller gatherings (4-6 people), cut all quantities in half. For larger parties (20+ people), double the recipe or create two separate boards.
Budget Tip: Use chocolate chips or Hersheyโ€™s Kisses in bowls instead of fancy chocolates, vanilla wafers instead of Milano cookies, and regular Oreos. You’ll cut costs by 40-50% while maintaining visual impact.
Seasonal Swaps: For Christmas, add peppermint bark and candy canes. For Halloween, include candy corn and chocolate pumpkins. For Valentine’s Day, use chocolate-covered strawberries and conversation hearts.

Approximate Information for One Serving

Net Carbs: 0g
Nutrition Disclaimers
Number of total servings shown is approximate. Actual number of servings will depend on your preferred portion sizes.
Nutritional values shown are general guidelines and reflect information for 1 serving using the ingredients listed, not including any optional ingredients. Actual macros may vary slightly depending on specific brands and types of ingredients used.
To determine the weight of one serving, prepare the recipe as instructed. Weigh the finished recipe, then divide the weight of the finished recipe (not including the weight of the container the food is in) by the desired number of servings. Result will be the weight of one serving.

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