As I was perusing the interwebs one evening, I came across someone showing how she used a pre-made small table round to create a food display board. There weren’t really instructions, she just held up the board and stated how she got it. I thought, “Cool, I can do that,” and then I set out to do it. I went to the hardware store and bought an unfinished table round similar to this and some food safe butcher block finish like this. I sanded the board down with sandpaper that I had at home and applied a few coats of the butcher block finish, sanding between coats after allowing them to dry.
A few days later Caroline came over with some steel wool and gave it a really good sanding, getting it much smoother. At this point, I turned the project over to her because I hate sanding things. Caroline likes sanding things, so it all worked out.
After letting the board dry for 72 hours after the last coat of finish, I washed and dried the board per the finish’s instructions. I’ve used it as a cutting board and as a food display board (what most people call “charcuterie” even though charcuterie traditionally means the assembling of cured meats and meat products like prosciutto, salami, rillettes, and/or mousse. If you put it in Google translate, it just says, “deli.” You might have a couple of other items on the board to accompany the meats, but the meat is the center show. Now everyone calls cheese boards and everything else “charcuterie,” which kind of gets on my nerves unless you’re saying it ironically, but I think that 99% of people truly believe that “charcuterie” means a catch all for “finger foods” and that really grinds my gears; thanks for coming to my TED Talk, whew.)
Anyway, you can see pictures of the process below, including the board being used to display food for one of our celebrations of the Sabbath. Caroline assembled it and it was pretty. And that smoked salmon from Costco was amazing.