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Food Wine Jobs (NOW HIRING)

A well-established wholesale food, wine, soft drinks, and bottled water distributor that operates cash-and-carry warehouse locations supplying restaurants, bars, caterers, and other food businesses ...

A well-established wholesale food, wine, soft drinks, and bottled water distributor that operates cash-and-carry warehouse locations supplying restaurants, bars, caterers, and other food businesses ...

John's Food & Wine - Chicago, IL Employment Type: Full-Time About Us: John's Food & Wine is a neighborhood restaurant and wine destination in the heart of Chicago, driven by hospitality, seasonality ...

We are building a team of people who are passionate about food, wine, and creating memorable guest experiences. This is an ideal opportunity for a hospitality professional looking to grow beyond ...

Wine Merchandiser

Miami, FL · On-site

$52K/yr

Wine Merchandiser - Full-Time - Miami, Florida A leading wholesale food, wine, soft drinks, and bottled water distributor specializing in wine, beverages, and restaurant supplies for restaurants ...

Wine Merchandiser

Miami, FL · On-site

$52K/yr

Wine Merchandiser - Full-Time - Miami, Florida A leading wholesale food, wine, soft drinks, and bottled water distributor specializing in wine, beverages, and restaurant supplies for restaurants ...

Wine Merchandiser - Full-Time - Miami, Florida A leading wholesale food, wine, soft drinks, and bottled water distributor specializing in wine, beverages, and restaurant supplies for restaurants ...

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Food Wine information

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$10

$19

$28

How much do food wine jobs pay per hour?

As of Jun 13, 2026, the average hourly pay for food wine in the United States is $19.99, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $17.79 and $21.15 per hour, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What are some common challenges faced by professionals working in food and wine pairing roles within the hospitality industry?

Professionals specializing in food and wine pairing often encounter the challenge of keeping up with evolving culinary trends and diverse guest preferences. They must balance creativity with a deep understanding of flavor profiles to craft memorable dining experiences. Additionally, working closely with chefs, sommeliers, and service staff requires strong communication and adaptability, as menus and wine lists may change frequently. Staying informed about seasonal ingredients and sourcing quality wines is also essential for success in this role.

What are food and wine professionals?

Food and wine professionals are experts who specialize in the selection, pairing, preparation, and presentation of food and wines. Their roles can include sommeliers, chefs, food critics, wine educators, and restaurant managers. They often work in restaurants, wineries, hotels, or as consultants, helping clients experience the best combinations and understand the nuances of flavors. Their knowledge enhances dining experiences by recommending suitable wine pairings and educating guests about different cuisines and wine varieties.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive as a Food and Wine Specialist, and why are they important?

To thrive as a Food and Wine Specialist, you need deep knowledge of gastronomy, wine varietals, pairings, and typically formal training such as a sommelier certification or culinary degree. Familiarity with point-of-sale systems, inventory management software, and wine cellar technologies is often required. Excellent communication, customer service, and presentation skills help build rapport with clients and convey expert recommendations. These competencies are crucial for delivering exceptional dining experiences, driving sales, and maintaining high standards in food and beverage service environments.

What is the difference between Food Wine vs Sommelier?

AspectFood WineSommelier
CredentialsFood and wine pairing certifications, basic wine knowledgeAdvanced wine certifications (e.g., Court of Master Sommeliers), extensive wine expertise
Work EnvironmentRestaurants, catering, food festivalsUpscale restaurants, wine bars, hotels
Employer & IndustryFood service industry, hospitalityLuxury dining, wine retail, hospitality
Search & Comparison IntentUnderstanding roles related to food and wine pairingSpecialized wine service and expertise

Food Wine professionals focus on pairing food with wine, often with basic certifications and work in diverse food service settings. Sommeliers have advanced wine knowledge, certifications, and work primarily in upscale venues, providing expert wine service and recommendations. While both roles involve wine, sommeliers are more specialized and credentialed.

More about Food Wine jobs
What cities are hiring for Food Wine jobs? Cities with the most Food Wine job openings:
What states have the most Food Wine jobs? States with the most job openings for Food Wine jobs include:
What job categories do people searching Food Wine jobs look for? The top searched job categories for Food Wine jobs are:
Infographic showing various Food Wine job openings in the United States as of June 2026, with employment types broken down into 33% Full Time, and 67% Part Time. Highlights an 100% In-person job distribution, with an average salary of $41,583 per year, or $20 per hour.
Deputy Food & Wine Editor

Deputy Food & Wine Editor

Gulfshore Life

Bonita Springs, FL • On-site

Full-time

Medical, Dental, Vision, Life, Retirement, PTO

Posted 29 days ago


Job description

Gulfshore Life Magazine — Deputy Food & Wine Editor
(Deputy Editor, Food & Lifestyle)
Location: Bonita Springs, FL | Full-time, on-site
(Remote applicants will not be considered)
Who We Are
Gulfshore Life is Southwest Florida’s leading luxury lifestyle publication, covering the people, places and culture of Naples, Fort Myers, Sanibel Island and beyond for more than five decades. (Coverage area: Collier, Lee and Charlotte counties.)
We are a locally owned publication with stable, long-term ownership and a continued commitment to local journalism. In a media landscape where print is often contracting, the magazine remains our flagship, supported by thoughtful digital and event extensions.
We produce 12 monthly issues and multiple special editions each year, delivering reported, high-level lifestyle journalism for a discerning, engaged readership—with a strong emphasis on taste, context and visual authority. Creativity and editorial quality are our cornerstones.
Food is a central pillar of our publication and community. As the region’s dining landscape continues to grow and evolve, this role helps shape how people understand and engage with the food scene. The Deputy Food & Wine Editor leads the magazine’s coverage with authority, access and a clear editorial point of view. This editor is also a key collaborator across the magazine, contributing to structure, editorial quality and writer development beyond the food pages.
This is a full-time, in-office role based in Bonita Springs, Florida. Familiarity with the Southwest Florida market is strongly preferred.
The Role
Gulfshore Life’s Deputy Food & Wine Editor combines beat leadership with senior editorial responsibility.
You’ll lead and shape food and wine coverage across print and digital, while also serving as a trusted editor across the magazine. The work calls for judgment, taste and real-world experience: you know when to push for depth, when to pull back and how to package stories so they land with authority.
For an editor who cares about food journalism, visual storytelling and storytelling that’s rooted in its community, this is a chance to do meaningful, high-level work in a growing market.
Who You Are
You’re a seasoned food editor with strong editorial judgment, real access and a deep understanding of dining culture. You balance reporting instincts with the ability to shape, edit and package stories across platforms for an audience attuned to quality.
You:
  • Have established relationships in the food world and know how to cultivate sources that lead to genuine insight, not surface-level coverage
     
  • Bring strong knowledge of food beyond restaurants, including sourcing, technique, winemaking and the forces that shape the industry
     
  • Have senior-level editing experience and are comfortable guiding contributors, shaping structure and elevating drafts
     
  • Think strategically about story framing and development, with a clear sense of what feels fresh, relevant and worth readers’ time
     
  • Have experience shaping digital-forward editorial, including web stories, newsletters, social content and simple video concepts
     
  • Possess a strong visual sensibility and understand what makes food stories compelling on the page
     
  • Are comfortable working across long-lead print cycles and faster digital timelines, with sound judgment about what works best in each format
     
  • Either bring strong local knowledge of Southwest Florida or know how to build it quickly and thoughtfully
     
What Sets You Apart
  • You pay attention to the larger picture—trends, shifts and industry currents—and know how to translate them into editorial ideas.
     
  • You use access responsibly, building trust and turning it into deeper, more revealing stories.
     
  • You have range, from fine dining to neighborhood standouts, soulful foodways and unexpected finds.
     
  • You consistently surface strong angles and help shape the regional conversation around food.
     
  • You edit with authority and care, elevating work rather than overpowering it.
What You’ll DoGuide the Food & Wine vertical’s editorial vision
  • Shape the magazine’s food coverage with a clear, high-level editorial lens, ensuring stories are conceived for both print and digital pathways and reflect the magazine’s aspirational, design-conscious sensibility
     
Be a senior presence in the food community
  • Build and maintain relationships with chefs, restaurateurs, sommeliers and makers, staying deeply connected to what’s happening now and what’s next
     
Assign, edit and develop contributors
  • Brief freelancers thoughtfully, guide stories from pitch through RFL with clear, confident editing, and cultivate a strong bench of writers and photographers
     
Pitch, write and edit at a high level
  • Produce original reported features, service stories and insider moments that meet the magazine’s standards for authority and sophistication
     
  • Help assign and edit stories across sections, beyond food
     
Lead digital extensions of food coverage
  • Build original content for the food and wine vertical online, shape how print stories translate digitally, produce the biweekly Taste newsletter, and develop repeatable concepts for web, social and simple video formats
     
Oversee the Dining Guide
  • Manage the 150+ restaurant Dining Guide and related materials with consistency, accuracy and strong editorial oversight
     
Own major food-related initiatives
  • Take a leading role on food annuals and special publications, including Salut and the Naples Winter Wine Festival magazine
     
Collaborate cross-departmentally
  • Work closely with design, digital and events teams to extend food content across platforms
Requirements
  • 7+ years of food journalism or high-level lifestyle journalism, with senior-level editing responsibility and significant food and wine experience
     
  • Demonstrated ability to shape structure, sharpen angles and elevate writers
     
  • Experience leading or anchoring a beat with original reporting
     
  • Strong organizational and time-management skills
     
  • Experience developing and managing junior editors and freelancers
     
  • Strong visual sense and experience working alongside art and photo teams
     
  • Digital fluency and comfort thinking across formats and platforms
     
  • A well-developed food network
     
  • Willingness to work on-site and attend evening/weekend events as needed
     
  • Comfort operating under a high editorial bar and engaging in thoughtful, collaborative editorial work
     
Why This Role
  • You’ll play a leading role in shaping food journalism in a fast-evolving luxury market.
     
  • You’ll work on ambitious, well-packaged stories that balance reporting, service and visual storytelling.
     
  • You’ll work closely with a committed creative team, producing ambitious lifestyle journalism.
     
  • You’ll contribute to a trusted regional brand with a long-standing editorial legacy.
     
  • You’ll work in a place where editorial judgment, visual storytelling and longform are central.
     
Physical Requirements:
 
  • Ability to sit or stand for extended periods and use hands for typing and editing.
  • Ability to lift up to 20 pounds occasionally.
  • Visual and auditory ability to review content and attend meetings.
  • Occasional travel may be required.
     
Benefits:
Full-time new hires: Eligible to participate in all Company benefit plans, including:
  • Health, Dental, Vision Insurance, and HSA 
    • 1st of the month after 30 days of employment
    • Subject to plan terms
  • Eligibility for company-paid benefits such as life insurance & EAP and employee-paid benefits such as short-term disability
  • PTO – Earned on Accrual Basis
  • Company-Paid Holidays
  • 401(k)
How to Apply
Please submit a PDF resume, cover letter and 3–5 clips (or a portfolio link).
*Please no phone calls or emails regarding this position
#LI-onsite
 

Southwest Florida is often praised as being one of the healthiest and happiest places in the world with miles of white-sand beaches and a dynamic community. Broadcast Center is an Equal Opportunity Employer and we are a drug-free and smoke-free environment.

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