wine bottle on the beach

Wine Entrepreneur Mary McAuley is Living the Ripe Life

When it comes to generating new ideas, it鈥檚 easy to feel like everything鈥檚 been done before. In the past few years, however, the food industry has had an influx of fresh, innovative concepts that challenge that old adage. Among the first-time entrepreneurs successfully disrupting the food market is ICE alum Mary McAuley, founder of .

Mary McAuley Ripe Life Wines

A former health care analyst, Mary鈥檚 story began like that of many ICE students. She felt unfulfilled in her career and spent her free time dreaming about opportunities in the restaurant business, but she wasn鈥檛 quite ready to make the professional leap.

Thanks to the flexible schedule options at ICE, Mary was able to enroll in the Culinary Management program while continuing to work full time. 鈥淚CE is such an accommodating school, and, because of that, I feel like we had all walks of life in the classroom鈥攅xecutives interested in restaurant management, people who were young, people working in PR, etc. For those who aren鈥檛 fully comfortable diving straight into the restaurant industry, it鈥檚 a great way to get your feet wet.鈥

During her time at ICE, Mary picked up shifts at Maialino, an Italian restaurant in Danny Meyer鈥檚 Union Square Hospitality Group. She eventually left her analyst job to work full-time as a server and expediter at Maialino, and, at the same time, began pursuing wine classes through ICE鈥檚 School of Recreational Cooking. Between her work at the restaurant鈥攚here Master Sommelier John Ragan oversees the beverage program鈥攁nd classes with ICE Director of Wine Studies Richard Vayda, Mary soon had a significant knowledge of varietals and winemaking styles.

Continuing her wine training with formal classes and rigorous extracurricular research, Mary earned a beverage director position under chefs Alex Raij and Eder Montero at acclaimed Brooklyn restaurant La Vara. It was during this period that Mary鈥檚 entrepreneurial vision began to take shape, inspired by a summer clambake in 2011 on the Jersey shore. 

As a sommelier, Mary was charged with picking out a wine for the event. 鈥淚 was trying to find something at an affordable price that would fit the seafood-centric menu for the event, and what I kept coming back to was a white Burgundy, which was much too expensive for this kind of casual dining. On the American side, things were more affordable, but all the options were over-oaked and inappropriate for seafood.鈥

Frustrated by the options available to her, Mary resolved to make her own wine for the next annual clambake, thinking she would simply develop a limited number of cases through an existing winery. Once the wine was developed, Mary kept hearing the same reaction from friends and family, 鈥淭his is great. You should do this professionally.鈥 鈥淚n an entrepreneur-heavy generation, I knew I wasn鈥檛 the only person encouraged to start a company by friends and family,鈥 says Mary.

鈥淏ut what started to persuade me was the market research. I realized there was a void that could be filled with this concept: craft, small-batch wines at an affordable price.鈥

Reaching out to the resources at her disposal, Mary shared her business plan with La Vara general manager Jason Aris. By that point, Mary had developed several wine concepts that stretched beyond her original idea for Clambake Chardonnay. 鈥淛ason looked at everything and gave me the best advice of my career: 鈥楽top launching all of these things at once. Focus on one, get it right and then focus on the next. You are Clambake鈥攕o start with that.鈥欌

Developing a new wine is hardly a simple process, but Mary鈥檚 experience in wine buying rendered her exceptionally prepared for the task at hand. 鈥淚 knew there was a question of approachability. For example, there are a lot of beach-themed wines (in terms of the name or label), but most of them are not high-quality products. By choosing the name 鈥楥lambake,鈥 I was keeping things approachable, but surprising people in a good way.鈥

That concept of surprise was something Mary learned at ICE. 鈥淚 remember [Dean of Culinary Management] Steve Zagor used to say, 鈥楴ever surprise people with mediocrity.鈥 In the wine industry, there is so much mediocrity out there, which is what makes buying wine an intimidating process. I took that idea to heart when I was developing my wine.鈥

Mary McAuley Ripe Life Wines

The first vintages of Mary鈥檚 chardonnay and limited edition ros茅 were a hit among restaurateurs and wine enthusiasts alike. 鈥淥ur mission is to make only single vineyard, single varietal bottles. That means the flavors may vary year-to-year, but they will always reflect the terroir and the climate of a given growing season. It鈥檚 a very European approach, and we鈥檙e not cutting any corners.鈥 It鈥檚 exactly this unexpected approach that has earned Mary acclaim within the winemaking market鈥攁nd .

She recently hired a new winemaker, Jason Driscoll, who has previously earned 96 points for his bottles on the Robert Parker/Wine Advocate rating system. 鈥淛ason was supposed to be a consultant, but once he realized we weren鈥檛 doing blends, his response was, 鈥楾his is gangster. I want this project.鈥欌 Mary is quick to add that her journey to entrepreneurial success hasn鈥檛 been all wine and ros茅s.

鈥淪tarting a business requires two entirely separate skill sets. One is to envision, imagine and deliver a product. The other is the day-to-day running of a business. Bookkeeping, taxes, hiring and firing鈥攖hat never comes to mind when you鈥檙e developing the product you want to place in the market. If you don鈥檛 have that skill set, it鈥檚 important to seek out professional training, mentorship or a partner with skills that complement yours.鈥

Eager to explore your entrepreneurial side? Click here for free information about ICE鈥檚 Culinary Management program.

Add new comment