How To Make a Brunch Board

How To Make a Brunch Board

Create a stunning spread: How To Make a Brunch Board for weekend guests with easy, stylish assembly.

Prep Time20 minutes
Cook Time25 minutes
Total Time45 minutes
Yield6

Ingredients

Instructions

Step 1: Reheat and finish proteins and starches

Warm the proteins and starchy components until each piece is at its best texture — crisp the bacon until it curls and shines with rendered fat, brown sausage links or patties until the exterior is deeply caramelized, reheat tater tots until their exterior is shatter-crisp and the interior is fluffy, and toast or reheat waffles/pancakes so their edges are golden and slightly crunchy while the centers stay tender. Cook or set the eggs to your chosen state (sunny-side-up with glossy yolks, soft-boiled with jammy centers, or mini frittatas set and slightly browned on top), then transfer every finished item onto small plates or holding bowls so nothing touches the bare surface while you assemble.

Step 2: Choose the board, bowls, and tools

Select a large rectangular wooden serving board as the hero vessel (a medium-worn maple or oak board placed on the painted white pine surface) and arrange a variety of small vessels to create layers: a matte grey ceramic ramekin for creamy spreads, two clear glass jam jars for syrups and jams, small white porcelain bowls for yogurt/granola and gravy, and a shallow wooden bowl for fruit. Add a couple of small spoons and a long bread knife — these active tools will stay with their bowls throughout the sequence for utensil persistence and visual continuity.

Step 3: Fill bowls and stage the condiments

Spoon thick-creamy whipped cream cheese into the grey ramekin, set amber maple syrup and berry jam into the clear jars with tiny spoons resting on their rims, and pack yogurt and granola into the white bowl so the granola remains visibly crunchy. Place gravy in a narrow white ramekin with a small ladle. Raise one or two of the smaller bowls on inverted saucers or a low glass to create tiered height, keeping all liquids contained in vessels and preserving clean edges on the painted surface.

Step 4: Arrange the main components on the board and create the composition

Start composing the board by anchoring a few central clusters: a stack of golden waffles, a neat fan of sliced deli ham and prosciutto, a small mound of crisp bacon, and a lined row of sausages or tater tots in a ramekin. Add a cluster of cooked eggs on a shallow dish and tuck cubes of cheese nearby. Keep the matte grey ramekin and the clear jam jars visible and steady — the scene at this moment is the primary visual milestone: the board largely populated with main items and bowls, ready for finishing touches.


Step 5: Fill negative spaces with breads, sweets, fruit, and crunchy bits

Tuck croissants, sliced bagels, mini doughnuts with glossy glaze, muffins, and toasted slices of sweet bread into the gaps, then add bright strawberries, blackberries, and a few cantaloupe wedges to punctuate color. Scatter cubed and sliced cheeses, crackers, and small clusters of granola for texture contrast. Use the raised bowls to allow denser items beneath them and keep the composition airy rather than crowded.

Step 6: Final styling, utensils, and present for serving

Lay out small serving spoons in jams and gravy, place a stack of white plates and cloth napkins nearby, and set a glass carafe of coffee and a flute of mimosa to the side — all vessels remain on the painted pine surface. Make sure the same matte grey ramekin and a clear jam jar remain in their original positions to preserve continuity. This is the final plated scene ready for an eye-level close-up of the completed brunch board.


Notes