Cooking Up a New Career at Age 51 – Later Bloomer (2024)

My cousin’s daughter Carrie is starting Southern Oregon University, where she’ll major in Theatre and minor in Shakespeare Studies.She requested we make a special trip to see her off.

So my husband and I got on a plane for Santa Rosa’s Charles M. Schultz to visit Carrie and my family in Lake County, just over the border from Napa Valley.

Last year I sent Carrie my old Renaissance Faire costume (from the ’80s, ahem), but I hadn’t seen her since she was ten. I was so touched. And wine-tasting, of course, was on the itinerary.

Carrie sweetly volunteered to be our “designated driver” around Calistoga. I’d heard about the Castello di Amoroso, an authentic reproduction of a 12th c. Tuscan stronghold that produces sustainable wines. Carrie loves historical pageantry and we love wine, so it was a perfect pairing.

The Castello’s a wonder. It’s obvious that artisans lovingly crafted each stone, mural and piece of furniture, no expense spared.

The money came from Dario Sattui, great-grandson of pioneer California vinter Vittorio Sattui. Vittorio lost his winery to Prohibition but lived well into his 90s, long enough to give young Dario a magnificent dream.

In 1972, Dario got his MBA, raised $8000 and reopened old Vittorio’s winery after it’d been dormant for 50 years. V. Sattui Winery became one of Napa Valley’s phenomenal success stories, and let Dario indulge his passion for medieval Italian architecture.

But according to Castello detractors, it’s inauthentic, a tourist trap, and an insult to true wine connoisseurs. It’s easy to trash someone else’s magnificent dream, especially when they make it come true.

It’s kind of like trashing The Barefoot Contessa, Ina Garten (b. 1948), for being neither barefoot, nor a contessa, nor even Italian for that matter.

An Education Deferred For Love

Like her predecessor Julia Child, Ina started out as a civil servant. She analyzed nuclear policy for the Ford and Carter administrations. But even before that, she showed classic signs of late blooming.

Ina dropped out of college to marry her high school sweetheart, Jeffrey, who’d been drafted into the Vietnam War. After Jeffrey completed his tour of duty, the couple spent four months camping through France, where Ina (again, like Julia) discovered her passion for French cuisine.

Jeffrey found work in Washington, D.C. and Ina went back to school, earning her MBA from George Washington University. She took an entry-level government job and worked her way up to that nuclear analyst position for the Office of Management and Budget. She found it exciting, “but it wasn’t me at all.”

Long before blogger Julie Powell made Julia Child her inspiration, Ina “…learned how to cook by working my way through every recipe in both volumes of Julia Child’s The Art of French Cooking.” She adored giving dinner parties for her and Jeffrey’s government friends.

But by 1978, the excitement wore thin. Ina found herself thinking, “I’ve got to do something more creative.” She came across an ad for a specialty food store for sale in the Hamptons. “It was love at first sight.” She lowballed a figure and the owner accepted, to Ina’s shock.

Birth Of The Barefoot Contessa

The store was named The Barefoot Contessa, after a classic Bogart film. Ina kept the name because it was “elegant and earthy.”

She had no food business experience. Over the next 18 years, she learned by doing and transformed The Barefoot Contessa into a celebrated gourmet shop.

By 1996, Ina was ready to remake herself again. She sold the store to two employees, moved into an office above and started writing a cookbook. She published three years later, at age 51.

The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook turned out to be the most exciting thing I’ve ever done professionally and the response from readers has been absolutely overwhelming.”

More books followed, and The Food Network came knocking. Ina gave them the “only reasonable” answer (given her love of the quiet life in the Hamptons):

“‘Absolutely not!’ And they very kindly kept coming back every six months asking me if I would reconsider it.”

They took 18 months to convince her. The Barefoot Contessa show debuted in 2002, when Ina was 54.

Cooking Up a New Career at Age 51 – Later Bloomer (2)

To Build A Gourmet Shop Or A Wine Castle

Today, at age 63, Ina is a celebrity chef who never attended cooking school nor worked in a restaurant!

Like Dario Sattui, she used her MBA as a stepping stone to a magnificent dream. It gave her the job that gave her the funds to buy a brick-and-mortar store, but Ina taught herself to cook and to manage the business. She could have kept at it another 18 years, but she wanted to share her knowledge and passion by writing a book.

And then there’s my young cousin Carrie, off to study Theatre and Shakespeare. I’m know she’ll succeed in her magnificent dream. Not one adult in her sphere has asked, “What can you do with a theatre degree?”

But for those of us who didn’t get that kind of support, or who got degrees out of duty contrary to our dreams, Ina Garten reminds us a lifetime of passionate self-learning can commence at any age.

Or as Dario Sattui says, “It’s not about the wine, it’s about having a good time.”

Cooking Up a New Career at Age 51 – Later Bloomer (2024)

FAQs

Did Ina and Jeffrey get divorced? ›

Ina and Jeffrey Garten have been married for over 50 years, having tied the knot in 1968. Throughout their marriage, the couple have lived in many places together including Paris, Washington, D.C., Manhattan and East Hampton, New York.

Does Ina Garten have a college degree? ›

Ina Garten once worked in the White House and worked her way up, which eventually put her in charge of writing the nuclear budget for the United States. She also managed to earn her MBA from George Washington University at the same time. Despite her success, she decided she wanted a different life.

Does Ina Garten have children? ›

“But, he wanted me to be happy, and it was okay with him.” As a working woman in the '70s, Ina's choice to not have kids “wasn't a struggle at all,” she said. “I had no interest in having children. None.

What is Ina Garten best known for? ›

She is host of the Food Network program Barefoot Contessa, and was a former staff member of the Office of Management and Budget. Among her dishes are Perfect Roast Chicken, Weeknight Bolognese, French Apple Tart, and a simplified version of beef bourguignon.

Did Ina Garten have a bad childhood? ›

"I had a terrible childhood, and it was nothing I wanted to recreate. I think now looking back, I see my friends with their children and I understand what it could be, but when I was 20, I didn't want anything to do with it ... Maybe because when I was a kid, I didn't have any choices.

How much is Ina Garten's husband worth? ›

Ina husband, Jeffrey, is also a financial powerhouse. According to Celebritynetworth.com, Jeffrey is worth $100 million, mostly thanks to his former jobs as managing director of Lehman Brothers and Blackstone Group.

Is Ina Garten Religious? ›

Garten is Jewish by birth and heritage, as is her husband, but rarely refers to her religion and ethnicity, though they are showcased through the inclusion of classic Jewish cooking in her television show and cookbooks, when she makes such dishes as rugelach, challah, and brisket.

Does Ina Garten cook in her own home? ›

Several years ago, Garten built a second kitchen in a barn on her property so she could have somewhere to film episodes of Barefoot Contessa (she told Oprah Daily all about it in 2021). But Garten's home kitchen, where she still cooks meals for friends and family, has remained untouched for 25 years—at least until now.

How rich is Ina Garten? ›

According to Celebrity Net Worth, Ina Garten's net worth in 2024 is estimated at $60 million. When combined with that of her husband Jeffrey, that amount is estimated at a whopping $120 million.

What is Ina Garten's favorite meal? ›

The one meal Ina simply couldn't live without is roast chicken. She even cites it as one of the reasons her husband, Jeffrey, proposed marriage in 1968.

Who taught Ina Garten to cook? ›

Without a formal culinary education, she says, "Julia Child was my cooking school."

Why is she called Barefoot Contessa? ›

East Hampton, New York, U.S. The show's title, which comes from the Italian word for countess, was originally used by Garten in her best-selling cookbook, The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook (1999). The cookbook was in turn named after Garten's specialty food store, which she bought already named in 1978.

Does Jeffrey Garten still teach at Yale? ›

Garten. Jeffrey E. Garten is dean emeritus at the Yale School of Management, where he teaches courses on the global economy and crisis management.

What is Barefoot Contessa doing now? ›

I currently write a monthly column for Food Network magazine.

Who is TR on Barefoot Contessa? ›

T.R. Pescod, founder of TRP Design has been an international model and actor for over 2 decades. His modeling career has taken him around the world, promoting high end fashion and has also included many popular global commercial campaigns for clients like British Air, BMW, Porsche and Volvo.

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