Aldi Charcuterie Board Shopping List Under $50

3 hours ago 1

Rommie Analytics

The post Aldi Charcuterie Board Shopping List Under $50 appeared first on Penny Pinchin' Mom.

 complete guide showing meats, cheeses, and treats arranged on boards under $50.

You’ve bookmarked 47 charcuterie board photos on Pinterest, and you’re ready to shop at Aldi. You know exactly how you want your Aldi charcuterie board to look. But every time you walk into the store, you freeze: which cheese goes with which meat? How many crackers do you actually need? And why does everything cost $100 by the time you’re done?

I spent three years hosting monthly gatherings before I figured out the real problem: charcuterie boards fail at the store, not in the kitchen. The recipes tell you what looks pretty, but nobody hands you the actual shopping list with real products and prices. So you wing it, overspend on things you don’t need, and forget the one item that would’ve tied everything together.

This article solves that problem with three complete Aldi shopping lists: $30 for date night, $50 for a small gathering, and $75 for holiday parties. Every item includes the specific Aldi product name and current price range. No guessing which prosciutto to buy or whether you need three types of crackers (you don’t). Just grab your list, walk through Aldi in 20 minutes, and you’re done.

Each list is organized by charcuterie board section: cheese, meat, accompaniments, crackers, and fresh elements. I’ve tested these combinations dozens of times. They work together, they look impressive, and everything actually gets eaten.

The $30 Small Board: Date Night or 4-Person Gathering

This budget covers a 12×16 inch board for 2-4 people with 45-60 minutes of snacking. You’ll have 3 cheeses, 2 meats, and enough variety to look intentional without overwhelming your budget.

Cheese Section ($9-10)

Emporium Selection Brie wedge (7 oz) – $3.49 Happy Farms Sharp Cheddar block (8 oz) – $2.49 Emporium Selection Goat Cheese log (4 oz) – $2.99

Meat Section ($6-7)

Specially Selected Prosciutto (3 oz) – $3.49 Fremont Hard Salami (7 oz package, use half) – $2.99

Accompaniments ($7-8)

Specially Selected Fig Spread (8.8 oz jar) – $2.99 Southern Grove Mixed Nuts (5 oz) – $2.49 Benton’s Honey (12 oz squeeze bottle) – $1.99

Crackers ($3-4)

Savoritz Entertainment Crackers variety pack (9.7 oz) – $3.29

Fresh Elements ($4-5)

Red seedless grapes (1 lb bag) – $2.49 Fresh rosemary (small bunch) – $1.99

Total: $30-34

This tier gives you one soft cheese (Brie), one sharp hard cheese (cheddar), and one tangy option (goat cheese). The prosciutto provides a delicate meat that pairs with everything, while the salami adds a bolder flavor. You’ll have leftover salami, nuts, and crackers for future boards; factor that into your actual cost per gathering.

The $50 Standard Board: 6-8 People or Small Party

This is your workhorse budget. It feeds 6-8 people for 90 minutes, and it looks like you spent twice as much. You’ll add a fourth cheese, a third meat, olives, and a fresh fruit variety without duplicating flavors.

Cheese Section ($15-17)

Emporium Selection Brie wedge (7 oz) – $3.49 Specially Selected Aged White Cheddar (7 oz) – $3.99 Emporium Selection Goat Cheese log (4 oz) – $2.99 Emporium Selection Smoked Gouda wedge (7 oz) – $3.99

Meat Section ($11-12)

Specially Selected Prosciutto (3 oz) – $3.49 Specially Selected Soppressata (4 oz) – $3.99 Fremont Hard Salami (7 oz) – $2.99

Accompaniments ($10-11)

Specially Selected Fig Spread (8.8 oz) – $2.99 Southern Grove Deluxe Mixed Nuts (10 oz) – $3.99 Benton’s Honey (12 oz) – $1.99 Specially Selected Pitted Kalamata Olives (5.3 oz jar) – $1.99

Crackers ($5-6)

Savoritz Entertainment Crackers variety pack (9.7 oz) – $3.29 Specially Selected Artisan Crackers (5.3 oz, rosemary or olive oil flavor) – $2.49

Fresh Elements ($8-9)

Red seedless grapes (2 lb bag) – $4.49 Fresh blackberries (6 oz) – $2.49 Fresh rosemary (small bunch) – $1.99

Total: $49-55

The smoked Gouda and aged white cheddar elevate this from basic to memorable. Soppressata brings a spicy element that the other meats lack. Blackberries add color contrast that grapes alone can’t provide; this matters more than you’d think when guests pull out their phones to photograph your board.

Most families use this tier for Thanksgiving appetizers, book club meetings, or weekend gatherings. Everything gets eaten, and you’ll have minimal waste unless you overbuy the fresh fruit.

The $75 Holiday Board: 12-15 People or Party Centerpiece

This budget covers a full-size board (18×24 inches or larger) that serves as your party’s main attraction for 2-3 hours. You’ll add a fifth cheese, a fourth meat option, multiple spreads, dried fruit, and candied nuts. This is the only tier where you’ll need more than one package of crackers.

Cheese Section ($22-24)

Emporium Selection Brie wedge (7 oz) – $3.49 Specially Selected Aged White Cheddar (7 oz) – $3.99 Emporium Selection Goat Cheese log (4 oz) – $2.99 Emporium Selection Smoked Gouda wedge (7 oz) – $3.99 Specially Selected Manchego wedge (6 oz) – $4.99

Meat Section ($16-18)

Specially Selected Prosciutto (6 oz, buy 2 packages) – $6.98 Specially Selected Soppressata (4 oz) – $3.99 Fremont Hard Salami (7 oz) – $2.99 Specially Selected Chorizo (3.5 oz) – $3.49

Accompaniments ($15-17)

Specially Selected Fig Spread (8.8 oz) – $2.99 Specially Selected Apricot Preserves (12 oz) – $2.49 Benton’s Honey (12 oz) – $1.99 Southern Grove Deluxe Mixed Nuts (10 oz) – $3.99 Southern Grove Candied Pecans (5 oz) – $2.99 Specially Selected Pitted Kalamata Olives (5.3 oz) – $1.99 Specially Selected Cornichons (12.3 oz jar) – $2.49

Crackers ($10-11)

Savoritz Entertainment Crackers variety pack (9.7 oz, buy 2) – $6.58 Specially Selected Artisan Crackers (5.3 oz, rosemary) – $2.49 Specially Selected Water Crackers (4.4 oz) – $1.99

Fresh Elements ($12-14)

Red seedless grapes (2 lb bag) – $4.49 Fresh blackberries (12 oz, buy 2 containers) – $4.98 Cara Cara oranges or clementines (3 lb bag) – $3.99 Fresh rosemary (small bunch) – $1.99

Total: $75-84

Manchego adds a nutty, firm cheese that holds up for hours without getting soggy. Chorizo provides the spicy-smoky element that makes guests keep coming back. The candied pecans and cornichons fill gaps on a large board; they’re not essential for smaller tiers, but they matter when you’re covering a big surface and need textural variety.

For this tier, buy the two-pound grape bag instead of multiple one-pound bags. You’ll save $1-2 and ensure consistent color. The Cara Cara oranges (when in season, November-May) photograph better than standard oranges and taste sweeter, but regular clementines work fine year-round.

Cheese Counter: What to Buy and What to Skip

Aldi’s Emporium Selection and Specially Selected cheese lines rotate seasonally. If you can’t find Manchego, substitute Pecorino Romano ($4.49). If aged white cheddar isn’t available, regular sharp cheddar works; just cut it into thicker slices so it looks more intentional.

The goat cheese log often comes in herb or honey flavors during holidays; both work better than plain.

Temperature matters: Brie softens at room temperature. Leave it out for 30-45 minutes before serving, or it’ll be too firm to spread.

Skip pre-sliced cheese: The blocks and wedges stay fresh longer and look better. You’ll pay the same price per ounce whether you slice it yourself or buy it pre-cut.

Meat Selection: Package Sizes and Storage

Prosciutto, soppressata, and chorizo come pre-sliced in Aldi’s refrigerated section near the deli cheese. The packaging isn’t always consistent; sometimes prosciutto comes in 3 oz packages, other times 6 oz. Check the weight before you buy; the 3 oz size is usually $3.49, the 6 oz around $6.49.

Hard salami saves money: The 7-oz package ($2.99) needs slicing. Use a sharp knife and cut thin rounds. It’s cheaper than buying pre-sliced and lasts two weeks in the fridge after opening. For the $75 tier, slice half the package for your board and save the rest for sandwiches.

Skip summer sausage: It’s dense and fills people up too fast, which defeats the purpose of a grazing board.

Accompaniments: What Actually Gets Eaten

The fig spread disappears fastest, followed by honey. Guests ignore fancy mustards and chutneys more often than they use them. If you want to add a mustard, grab Burman’s Dijon ($1.49) and put out one tablespoon in a small bowl; you won’t use more than that.

Nuts need to be pre-shelled and lightly salted. The Southern Grove mixed nuts work better than single-variety options because people pick through them differently. Candied pecans are worth the splurge for holiday boards; regular pecans get ignored.

Olives divide rooms: Half your guests will love them, half won’t touch them. For the $30 tier, skip them. For $50+, include them, but don’t buy more than one small jar.

Cornichons (tiny pickles) matter for large boards because they cut through the richness of cheese and meat; on small boards, they’re unnecessary.

Cracker Quantities by Guest Count

One 9.7 oz variety pack covers 4-6 people. For 8+ people, buy two packs or add one specialty box.

Specialty crackers by flavor: The Specially Selected Artisan Crackers ($2.49) come in rosemary, olive oil, or cranberry flavors. Rosemary pairs best with most cheeses, but cranberries work for Thanksgiving and Christmas boards.

Water crackers sound boring, but they’re neutral enough to let cheese flavors shine. Buy one box for the $75 tier to give guests a plain option.

Don’t buy more than three cracker varieties total. Too many choices create decision paralysis, and half the boxes go stale before your next gathering.

Fresh Elements: Buying Timeline

Grapes: Last 5-7 days refrigerated, so buy them the day before if possible.

Blackberries: Expire within 2-3 days; buy these the day of your gathering or the night before.

Skip strawberries: They look pretty, but oxidize and leak juice within hours of being sliced. Skip them unless you’re assembling the board within 60 minutes of serving.

Fresh rosemary costs $1.99 and transforms how your board looks. Tuck small sprigs between cheese sections. Don’t use dried rosemary from a jar; it looks dusty, and guests will think it fell there by accident.

For holiday boards: Add pomegranate seeds (Aldi sells the pre-seeded cups for $3.99) during November-January. They photograph well, and people actually eat them, unlike decorative kale or flowers that show up in Pinterest photos.

Choose your budget tier based on guest count, not how much you want to impress people. A well-arranged $30 board beats a chaotic $75 board every time.

This week, walk through Aldi Wednesday-Friday mornings (8-10 am for best stock) with this list on your phone. Start at the cheese section, grab meats next, then crackers and accompaniments, finishing with produce. Total shopping time: 20 minutes. You’ll spend $30-75 depending on your tier.

Your next step: Print the list for your chosen tier, check off items as you go, and you’re done. Your next Aldi charcuterie board gathering just got 100% easier.

The post Aldi Charcuterie Board Shopping List Under $50 appeared first on Penny Pinchin' Mom.

Read Entire Article