Michael Steinberger

Michael Steinberger is an American author and journalist, and was the wine columnist of the internet magazine Slate from 2002 to 2011.[1] He has been described as "one of the greatest wine writers on the planet",[2] and to possess a "blessedly trustworthy voice and palate".[3] Steinberger has himself stated his palate is Euro-centric, having been cultivated on French wine, with the wine from Bordeaux and Burgundy being his "touchstones".[4] He currently resides in Hockessin, Delaware with his wife and two kids.

Career

Steinberger has previously worked as a Hong Kong correspondent for Maclean's.[5] He has also contributed to publications such as The New York Times,[6][7] Saveur, Financial Times,[8] The Economist, Food & Wine,[9] New York Magazine, Wine Spectator,[10] The World of Fine Wine,[11] and Sommelier Journal.[12] Steinberger's Slate column that had run since June, 2002 was terminated as a result of layoffs by Slate parent company The Washington Post Company in August, 2011.[1][13]

Steinberger's book Au Revoir to All That was published in June, 2009.

Controversy

One of Steinberger's articles published by Slate in 2002, "Grape Rot: The New Wine Spectator's Distinct Aroma of Fishiness",[14] led to a harsh response by Wine Spectator executive editor Tom Matthews. Steinberger's articles were no longer published in Wine Spectator after the article, and Matthews demanded a retraction of the article, while recommending that Slate "no longer accept Steinberger's unprofessional and potentially libelous contributions".

An article that revealed Steinberger's distaste for the Sauvignon blanc grape, "White Lies: Why Sauvignon Blanc is Overrated",[15] was widely met with surprise by the wine writers' community.[16][17]

In a Slate article titled "Change We Can Taste", written concerning an interview with White House food and beverage operations usher Daniel Shanks published on Bloomberg.com,[18] Steinberger called for a new "wine policy" for the Obama presidency.[19] Coining the term "Shafer-gate", in reference to the serving of bottles of "extravagant" 2003 Shafer Hillside Select, costing around $250 a bottle, at a November 2008 emergency economic summit, the article described the Bush era tactics of "shock and awe" in terms of wine policy, achieved with what Steinberger calls "fruit bombs"; he wrote that the White House wine service had been "hostage to a profoundly misguided strategy", and pointed to Obama's opportunity "to act swiftly and boldly on the wine front".[19] When the article was described by Decanter.com to have "slammed the White House wine policy",[20] its contents were quoted and reiterated without any element of satire.

gollark: The thing is, I can write reasonably working stuff in Node way faster than I can in a saner language like Rust.
gollark: Apparently my simple Node.js webapp with just 712 dependencies uses 176MB idling.
gollark: I mean, on the one hand, if it's 7 letters alphanumeric then that's 3521614606208 possibilities, *but* something something birthday paradox.
gollark: A *self*bot, and I'm not sure that's true.
gollark: Though I think it's more of an issue with the search/crawl logic itself than JS.

See also

References

  1. Colman, Tyler, drvino.com (August 25, 2011). The budgetary ax cuts Slate’s wine column
  2. Colman, Tyler, drvino.com (February 14, 2008). "Great wine, great writing: the 1947 Cheval Blanc and Mike Steinberger".
  3. Feiring, Alison, alicefeiring.com (April 8, 2008). "Michael Steinberger on the Future (of wine writing)". Archived from the original on April 12, 2008.
  4. Steinberger, Mike, The Washington Post (June 19, 2008). Discussions: Fine Wines, and Wines That Are Fine
  5. Booklounge.ca Author spotlight: Michael Steinberger
  6. Steinberger, Michael, The New York Times (October 22, 2006). "Drinking Deeply".
  7. Steinberger, Michael, The New York Times (November 4, 2007). "What Would Bacchus Do?".
  8. Steinberger, Mike, Financial Times (August 8, 2003). "New voice on the grapevine".
  9. Steinberger, Michael, Food & Wine (February 2007). "Become a Wine Expert in 28 Days".
  10. Steinberger, Michael, Wine Spectator (October 15, 2002). "Triumph at Taillevent".
  11. Steinberger, Mike, The World of Fine Wine (March 2008). "Everyone a Critic. The Future of Wine Writing" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-05-19.
  12. Steinberger, Mike, Sommelier Journal (February 2009). "The Ultimate Service of a Sommelier May Be Through Education". Archived from the original on 2011-07-16.
  13. Hagey, Keach, Politico.com (August 24, 2011). Slate lays off four, including Jack Shafer
  14. Steinberger, Mike, Slate (December 26, 2002). "Grape Rot: The New Wine Spectator's Distinct Aroma of Fishiness; Wine Spectator defends its Honor".
  15. Steinberger, Mike, Slate (April 18, 2006). "White Lies: Why Sauvignon Blanc is Overrated".
  16. Asimov, Eric, The New York Times: The Pour (July 22, 2008). "Easygoing Califonians".
  17. Yarrow, Alder, Vinography.com (April 22, 2006). "Why Slander a Grape?".
  18. McCoy, Elin, Bloomberg.com (September 18, 2008). White House Wine Jeeves Picks Bottles for 'Presence'
  19. Steinberger, Mike, Slate (January 14, 2009). "Change We Can Taste".
  20. Shaw, Lucy, Decanter.com (January 28, 2009). "Obama urged to change White House wine policy".
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