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People
of The Institute
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Alumni
Profiles |
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| photo to come |
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Inez
Holderness |
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This
fall, ICE® graduate Inez Holderness opened On The
Square in her hometown of Tarboro, North Carolina.
The venture with fiancé Stephen Ribustello
is an ambitious one---to bring appreciation of fine
food and wine to this town of 11,000---but so far
Holderness has no complaints. The combination restaurant,
wine bar, wine store has been enthusiastically received
by the public and press, and Holderness finds her
customers open-minded and eager to learn more about
wine
Holderness attended the University of North Carolina-Chapel
Hill to study journalism, but, having fallen in
love with food along the way, she left for New York
after graduation to attended ICE®. The school's wine
program made a big impression on Holderness, and
her first job after graduation was at Best Cellars,
the ground-breaking, mid-priced wine store on Manhattan's
Upper East Side. During her time there she read
an article about Andrea Immer, sommelier at Windows
on the World, and impulsively called her, convinced
that Windows was the best place in New York to learn
about wine. Holderness lucked into a job as assistant
cellar master. "'Assistant cellar master' translated
to 'box mover,'" says Holderness good naturedly.
"So, I moved boxes for a year, and soaked up
everything I could."
Holderness moved briefly to California to "get
closer to the grapes," but four months later
Windows lured her back to New York, and she became
the restaurant's Beverage Director. After just a
year in the industry she was buyer for the largest
grossing restaurant in the North America, with $6
million in wine sales alone
Holderness and her fiancé Ribustello---who
had become the restaurant's sommelier---both survived
the collapse of the World Trade Center, and although
she went on to help open the new BlueFin restaurant
in the W Hotel-Times Square, the couple had already
decided that they wanted to open their own restaurant
outside New York
Holderness is extremely positive about the ownership
experience. "Because of our backgrounds, we're
totally prepared for what we're doing now,"
says Holderness of the venture. "Statistically,
the chance of failure is high, but we've had great
training, so in many ways it's not as hard as I
thought."
May, 2003 |
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