Destination Golf - June 2017 * | Page 39

GK Q & A with Doug Blair, Executive Chef at Cassique at Kiawah Island Club, South Carolina, USA. Doug, I’m sure it’s been a long journey, but can you share how you became interested in food and some of your early experiences? I grew up visiting my grandparent’s farm in Illinois. It was the place where the entire family gathered for the holidays and other special occasions. We had large gardens and many chores, which was something I hated as a kid, but as a result, farming became something that was ingrained in me. In 1982, I started college at the University of Idaho. I changed my major many times and ended up choosing communications and did some bartending in my free time. The nightclub where I worked was called the Mirage, and they had decided to split the property into a nightclub on one side and an upscale dining restaurant on the other. It was owned and run by a young kid whose family was very wealthy. They gave him the business and flooded him with cash. It was a high-end operation, and it was my first exposure to a chef. Being a bartender, I walked into the kitchen all the time, and I became the chef’s nemesis. I would just graze on his mise en place, and I became so enamoured with the sauces and everything that he was making. I realized then that I really enjoyed the culinary field. I left college in my senior year before graduating and moved to Seattle with a bunch of college buddies. I had every intention of going to a hotel and restaurant school in Seattle with a great culinary program. I applied everywhere for jobs, but I didn’t have a reference for high-level cuisine experience. I was applying for jobs at places like Sizzler! I was 20 at the time, and I was totally naïve. I was just pounding the pavement. One thing I had learned in college was how to create a resume and how to network, so I spent weeks blitzing many areas of the city for employment. One day I walked into a place called Il Terrazzo Carmine. Carmine Smeraldo, who just passed away in 2012, was the owner. I remember the first time I walked into the restaurant, and as the kitchen doors opened, I could see that it was an open kitchen. I went in, and I left my resume which had nothing on it but bartending, a dishwasher job, and some time in a grocery store. They paid no attention to me. I walked in at 11:30 am which is right as lunch was starting! I was standing there at the pass, and the chef said: “Move along now; we are busy, and you can’t stay here.” I was so affected by the smells and the environment. From that moment on I just couldn’t get that out of my mind. I would go Volume 3 • Issue 39 39