North Louisiana has produced some of the best and brightest talent the world has to offer, and nothing is more exciting than when one of our own comes back home to build a life and share their gifts.
Chef Holly Moore Schreiber, culinary director and owner of Sainte Terre in Benton, is one of those stars.
After graduating from TCU and the French Culinary Institute in New York City, Schreiber spent years working in culinary media and production. She worked on-set for Bravo TV Network and helped develop cookbooks and recipes for “The Katie Brown Workshop,” “Country Living Magazine,” Master Chef Alain Ducasse and Emmy-winning Executive Producer Lauren Deen.
Schreiber has since returned home and opened her own event place, Sainte Terre.
The Sainte Terre property is comprised of several spaces, including a farmhouse, a chapel and a terrace, and sumptuous grounds for outdoor events. Special events open to the public by reservation have included a Friends and Lovers Valentine Dinner and a Drink the Harvest Cocktail Completion.
“At Sainte Terre,
we believe that there are some things that never go out of fashion,”
Schreiber said. “Friends sharing warm conversation around a good meal,
families celebrating the union of hearts. We believe that creating and
orchestrating life’s special moments is an art.”
Schreiber
grew up in Benton and had no idea she’d find a career in the culinary
arts. “I loved cooking, but I never realized that I could actually make
money doing that,” she said. “My first three years of college, I studied
interior design. I enjoyed it, but it wasn’t ‘that thing.’” “I was
actually paying my way through school cooking for people,” Schreiber
said. “Catering stuff on campus. My junior year in college the light
bulb went off, and I said, ‘What am I doing? I’m already making money
doing this. I love doing this. It doesn’t even feel like I’m working.’
So I switched gears and wound up doing nutrition and dietetics just so I
could graduate.”
After
college, Schreiber enrolled in the French Culinary Institute, where she
worked with some of the greatest culinary minds in the industry, such
as Chef Alain Sailhac.
“Sailhac
was one of the greatest French chefs ever to grace the U.S. shores,”
Schreiber said. He was at Le Cirque and the 21 Club. He was kind of my
first mentor. The restaurants on his resume’ were so high-end, but he’s
just so approachable. He had had amazing success, and he had such focus.
We’d sit in his office or go to lunch. I think that’s what inspired me
going down the road.”
Another
influences at that time was Dan Barber, chef and coowner of Blue Hill
in Manhattan and Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Pocantico Hills, N.Y.
“Barber spearheaded the whole farm-totable movement,” Schreiber said.
“He has a beautiful restaurant surrounded by a farm where he grows his
own produce and raises his own animals. He has worked with other farmers
and agriculture centers to grow vitamin-packed, nutrient-dense heirloom
varieties that had been lost.”
Schreiber
graduated from FCI and went on to work on cookbooks. “In fact, Alain
Sailhac’s cookbook was one of the first I worked on,” she said. “I was
so French heavy at the time because that was my background. He had done a
cookbook with a lady named Sophie, who is the French version of Martha
Stuart. They had done this book together to make cooking more accessible
to the home cook and to make high-end cooking accessible. Not only did
we have to translate that from French, we had to translate methods to an
American audience.”
Schreiber
stayed in New York and continued to work in food media. “I did recipe
testing, recipe development and food styling,” she explained. I got to
work with so many different chefs. I grew to love cookbooks because they
are for chefs what albums are for musicians.”
“The
most unusual cookbook I ever worked on was for Coolio the rapper,”
Schreiber said. “That was interesting because it was the first cookbook I
ever worked on that had explicit language.”
“I
also worked on a cookbook once that was the chef version of ‘last
meals.’ All these wonderful chefs got to imagine and develop what their
last meals would be. I’d personally have to have some oysters in there,
and some foie gras. I’d want some very good Neapolitan pizza, and of
course, some excellent bread with great butter.”
The
most unusual food Schreiber has ever tried to prepare was duck
testicles. “They had been a specialty on a menu at a restaurant we went
to in New York, and we were working through trying to re-create that
recipe for something else,” she said. “They were fried, and they didn’t
really taste like anything but the breading.”
Now,
Schreiber tries to encourage beginners to jump into cooking. “Don’t be
afraid,” she said. “The simplest ways of cooking are often the best. In
fact, food trends now are focusing on the importance of the ingredients –
knowing where they come from or who has raised them, even if it’s not
your local farmer. “ Fusion cooking that combines elements from
different cultures and culinary traditions is a style that Schreiber
currently finds exciting. “It’s a little mix of everything these days,”
she said. “The nice thing about where I am now at Sainte Terre is that I
get to do something different every week.”
Sainte
Terre is becoming one of the most popular wedding venues in North
Louisiana. “We also do wine dinners and cocktail dinners there,”
Schreiber said. “We do pairings and classes on top of that, but our main
thing is weddings. That’s been fun for me because we customize
everything. My husband does the bar and the front of the house. My
sister does the event design side of it.”
Schreiber
customizes a menu for each wedding. “I meet with the bride and groom
and try to do something and plan a menu that is reflective of them,” she
said. “One week we might be doing a whole bunch of Louisiana southern,
but coming up soon we’re going to be doing a whole traditional
Vietnamese menu. The whole family is coming over from Vietnam.”
That’s
where Schreiber’s work at Sainte Terre is coming full circle. “That
goes all the way back to my upbringing,” she said, “that same family
feeling of sitting together and eating. It’s the ritual of food and
life. It’s meaningful to me too so we try to recreate that with our
weddings.”
The
other unusual niche Sainte Terre is filling is good wine and food
pairings. “My go-to person for wine selection is a sommelier from
Alexandria, and she gets it,” Schreiber said. “We meet people who know a
lot about wine. On the restaurant side, when you have amazing food but
you don’t have the wine to match that, it really takes something away
from the experience.”
Tours
are available. Sainte Terre is located at 190 Nickel Lane in Benton.
For more information, visit the Web site at www. sainteterre.com, or
contact Schreiber at [email protected] or 936-9544.
– Susan Reeks