Jump to content

Alpana Singh: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Added category
No edit summary
Line 18: Line 18:


==Personal life==
==Personal life==
In 2006, Singh married fiction writer [[Charles Blackstone]].<ref name=mastersomm />
In 2006, Singh married fiction writer [[Charles Blackstone]].<ref name=mastersomm /> whom she divorced in 2014


==Honors and accolades==
==Honors and accolades==

Revision as of 05:40, 19 April 2014

Alpana Singh (born November 1976) is a sommelier and local television personality in Chicago, Illinois.

Early life

Singh is a first-generation Indian American, born and raised in Monterey, California. Her parents are Fiji Indians who migrated from Fiji to California.[1] The family owned and ran an ethnic grocery store.[2] Her father was a chef for 30 years.[3]

Career

Singh's first job in the restaurant business (outside the family business) was as a waitress at Bakers Square.[3] After an aborted attempt to join the US Air Force (due to a failed medical exam), she applied for a job at a fine dining restaurant but needed better background on wines. She self-educated and re-applied for the job, impressing the interviewer who hired her and encouraged her to continue her studies.[3] She became a sales clerk at Nielsen Bros. Market in Carmel, California which further exposed her to the wine business.[2]

Singh passed the Court of Master Sommeliers' advanced certification test at age 21.[4] In 2003, she passed the final exam[1] to become the youngest woman ever to achieve the rank of Master Sommelier.[5] (The master sommelier exam has an approximate 3% pass rate.[4])

Beginning at age 23, she served as sommelier at Chicago's restaurant, Everest.[4] She later became Director of Wine and Spirits for Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises, a large Chicago-based chain of restaurants.[1]

Singh became especially well known for hosting the local Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) public television station WTTW's restaurant review show, Check, Please! and her regular appearances on Chicago Tonight for the "Ask Alpana" segment on Thursday evenings. She replaced the original host of Check, Please!, Amanda Puck, in October 2003[3] and remained in that role until 2013, when she was replaced by Catherine De Orio.[6]

Singh authored the 2006 book Alpana Pours: About Being a Woman, Loving Wine, and Having Great Relationships (ISBN 0-89733-546-5) and writes a column on wine for RedEye.

In 2012, Singh announced that she and her business partner would be creating The Boarding House, a five-story restaurant in Chicago.[7]

Personal life

In 2006, Singh married fiction writer Charles Blackstone.[1] whom she divorced in 2014

Honors and accolades

Notes

External links

Template:Persondata