VISIT DALLAS: Can you share any memorable moments from your time at renowned venues like Caesars Palace, The Greenbrier and now Nuri Steakhouse that shaped your career?
BARB WERLEY: Actually, I didn't even think about wine. I was cooking. I went to college for culinary. I was working in D.C., and was in the kitchen at the Jockey Club at the Ritz Carlton, which was one of the premier places back in the day. I took over the director of purchasing position at the restaurant because the chef knew I could buy him exactly what food he wanted. At the time, nobody was ordering food or beverage and I asked the food and beverage director, “can I just do the list?” Because he didn't have time, he said “sure.” So, I started buying the wine tasting wine and putting all of this together. It was a great time in D.C. to learn as it was one of the preeminent wine drinking cities in the country – the highest per capita wine consumption. I had written about six or seven wine lists in the city, and I was invited to a mountain wine-growing symposium in California where I was pretty much the only person from the front of the house. Most attendees were vineyard managers, wine makers, or people from the agricultural side of wine. So I went to learn, and I met a gentleman named Ron Wiggins, who was there, who wrote a magazine called Restaurant Wine. He was the first person in the world to be both a Master of Wine and a Master of Sommelier. I told him about a very unique concept I was doing at the restaurant I was working with, and he said, “Why aren't you doing the master assembly a program?” I'm told him, “I don't know.” Back then there was no internet. You had to read or you had to know people. When I passed that program in ‘97 I was only the 35th American. When I started the exams in ‘92 there may have only been about 25 in the country. So I said, “Okay.” I took the intro exam in Chicago and the advanced course in Vail, Colorado. It really wasn't anything I thought about at the time. Nowadays there are a lot of people that say, “Oh, I want to be a sommelier.” A lot of people don't have a palette, and it's hard to do this if you don't have a palette. You can do it but everybody will know if you're making up stuff.