Episode #74
Ali Schlichter
Episode Title
From Chef Burnout to Chin Dribblin Sauces: Ali Schlichter on Fear, Flavor, and Building Something of Her Own
Episode Description
Ali Schlichter was eight years old when she was already making fresh pesto for her brother as a snack. Food was never just a job for her. It became the place where she learned, worked, created, pushed herself, and eventually built a career that touched nearly every corner of the kitchen—from pastry and butchery to dishwashing and leadership.
But after years in the food industry, Ali reached a breaking point. Burned out from being a head chef after COVID, she realized she had spent so much time pouring herself into other people’s kitchens and other people’s visions that she no longer recognized herself. A conversation with a friend became the turning point. She needed a new path. She needed something that belonged to her.
That is where Chin Dribblin Sauces began.
With $15,000 saved and very little business experience, Ali stepped into entrepreneurship fueled by passion, grit, and the willingness to learn through expensive mistakes. Along the way, she faced grief, fear, imposter syndrome, business challenges, and the reality of building a food brand in an industry where costs are high, resources are limited, and giving up can feel tempting.
Her story also includes unforgettable milestones: being discovered at a market, flying to London, pitching her product to Gordon Ramsay and Lisa Vanderpump, competing on a Gordon Ramsay show, and later being invited to compete at Aspen Food and Wine.
Ali’s journey is honest, funny, emotional, and deeply human. She talks about what it means to do it afraid, to slow down long enough to find clarity, and to keep moving even when the dream feels impossible. For any woman building something from scratch, recovering from burnout, or wondering whether fear gets the final word, Ali’s story offers a flavorful reminder: sometimes the life you are meant to build begins when you finally choose something that is yours.
Key Discussion Points
• 01:39 — Ali shares how her love of cooking began as a child watching the Food Channel and making fresh pesto by age eight.
• 02:13 — She reflects on spending 13 to 14 years in the food industry and doing “everything around the sun,” including pastry, butchery, and dishwashing.
• 02:47 — Ali explains that Chin Dribblin was born after burnout, exhaustion, and a need to rediscover who she was.
• 03:38 — She talks about saving $15,000, jumping into the business, and realizing she knew very little about entrepreneurship at the beginning.
• 04:45 — Ali describes how running a business became like “holding a mirror up to yourself every single day.”
• 05:38 — She shares how the loss of her mother, a major breakup, and losing one of her best friends changed her relationship with fear.
• 07:03 — Ali recalls that six months after hitting rock bottom, she was on a plane to London to compete on a Gordon Ramsay show.
• 07:25 — She tells the story of being discovered at a market and going through multiple rounds of applications before heading to London.
• 08:00 — Ali describes pitching her product Shark Tank-style to Gordon Ramsay and Lisa Vanderpump before officially getting on the show.
• 09:50 — She connects the Gordon Ramsay opportunity to her mom, who had always encouraged her to be on one of his shows.
• 10:51 — April and Ali talk about Chin Dribblin sauces, including the chimichurri and spicy pineapple peanut sauce.
• 12:05 — Ali reflects on major milestones, including her first order, getting her sauce in front of 9 million people, and competing at Aspen Food and Wine.
• 15:19 — She explains why this year has made her slow down, pull back, and focus on the avenues that can truly move the dream forward.
• 17:35 — Ali names expensive mistakes as one of her biggest obstacles and explains how setbacks became data.
• 19:28 — She shares how her family, especially her mom, dad, and brother, have supported her and helped her keep going.
Notable Quotes
“By like the age of eight, I was making fresh pesto for my brother as a snack.”
“It was just literally born out of exhaustion, burnout, and honestly a desperate need to rediscover who I was.”
“I think passion is the only thing that makes sense of the chaos because the business side of food is brutal.”
“On the other side of fear is a version of yourself that didn't exist.”
“Failing is always momentum for me. It's not the end, it's information, and it redirects you.”
“Unapologetically fusion isn't just a product description. It's literally how I operate.”
Takeaways
• Passion matters, especially when the practical side of a dream becomes difficult, expensive, or uncertain.
• Burnout can become a turning point when it reveals the need to build something that truly belongs to you.
• Fear may not disappear before the leap, but Ali’s story shows the importance of moving anyway.
• Expensive mistakes can become powerful teachers when you treat setbacks as information instead of defeat.
• Slowing down can create clarity, especially for dreamers who are used to constantly pushing forward.
• Support systems matter. Ali credits her family with helping her keep moving on the hardest days.
• Building outside the box can be a strength, especially when your brand, creativity, and personality are all part of the dream.
Connect with Guest
Website: https://chindribblin.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chindribblinllc
@chindribblinllc
Email: chindribblin@gmail.com
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