- Robert Steinberg (chocolate maker)
Robert Wayne Steinberg (
March 4 ,1947 –September 17 ,2008 ) was an Americanphysician who co-foundedScharffen Berger Chocolate Maker in 1996 withJohn Scharffenberger , his friend and formerpatient . cite news |first=Dennis |last=Hevesi |title=Robert Steinberg, Chocolate Maker, Dies at 61 |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/19/business/19steinberg.html?scp=1&sq=Robert%20Steinberg,%20&st=cse|work=New York Times |publisher=|date=2008-09-18 |accessdate=2008-09-28] cite news |first=Valerie J.|last=Nelson |title=Robert Steinberg dies at 61; founded chocolatier Scharffen Berger |url=http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-steinberg28-2008sep28,0,2673362.story|work=Los Angeles Times |publisher=|date=2008-09-28 |accessdate=2008-10-03]Early life
Robert Steinberg was born on
March 4 ,1947 , inBoston, Massachusetts , to parents Arthur and Selma Levinson Steinberg. His mother was anelementary school teacher while his father was aclinical psychologist . Steinberg's father died ofHodgkin's disease when he was a child.Steinberg received his
bachelor's degree in 1969 fromHarvard University . He later earned hismedical degree from theUniversity of Connecticut in 1974. He first moved toSan Francisco as part of a medicalinternship . He remained in the area and ran his ownfamily practice for approximately twenty years in San Francisco andUkiah, California .Scharffen Berger Chocolate Maker
Steinberg was diagnosed in 1989 with
lymphatic cancer , a disease which he would battle for nearly twenty years. At the time, Steinberg was given a a 50% chance of succumbing to the disease within ten years of his daignosis. He realized that his full time profession as a physician would be difficult with the necessary medical treatment. As a result of his diagnosis, Steinberg began exploring his own interests and alternative career paths.A friend of Steinberg's introduced him to chocolate making and gave him a 600-page book on the "science of chocolate making. Steinberg, who was a self-proclaimed
foodie , had been interested in food andcooking since he was a child. The concept of makingchocolate caught Steinberg's attention. Following his diagnosis, Steinberg travelled toLyon, France , in 1993, where he became anapprentice at a small family-owned chocolate maker called Bernachon for a few weeks. His new interest in chocolate would later take him to a number of cacao growing nations includingTrinidad and Tobago andVenezuela .Steinberg returned from Lyons to California following the end of his Bernachon
internship . He soon ran into his neighbor and former patient, John Scharffenberger. Scharffenberger was in the process of selling hiswinery , called Scharffenberger Cellars, at the time. Steinberg gave Scharffenberger a sample of the Bernachon French chocolates. The chocolate had been in Steinberg's pocket for a long time, but Scharffenberger described it as "tasted better than anything I'd ever had." The two soon began talking about joining forces as partners.Steinberg and Scharffenberger set up a test kitchen in Steinberg's home kitchen to experiment with approximately thirty different varieties of chocolate and their potential recipes. The tools they used in Steinberg's kitchen to develope the future Scharffen Berger brand chocolate included a
mortar and pestle , acoffee grinder and ahair dryer , which they used to keep the chocolate'sviscosity .In 1996, Steinberg and Scharffenberger opened a small
choclate factory andfactory store in southern San Francisco, where they produced their first chocolate products for sale in the marketplace. cite news |first=Carolyn|last=Jones|title=Physician, chocolatier Robert Steinberg dies |url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/09/23/BARP132SR3.DTL|work=San Francisco Chronicle |publisher=|date=2008-09-23 |accessdate=2008-10-03] The employed several antique German chocolate machines to make their products in small batches The newsmall business was calledScharffen Berger Chocolate Maker , which took advantage of John Scharffenberger's name recognition in the San Francisco Bay Area. (Scharffenberger had previously been in thewinemaker ).Scharffen Berger Chocolate hit the
San Francisco Bay Area markets at a time when Americans were becoming interested in consuming higher quality, speciality foods such aswine ,coffee or chocolate. Scharffen Berger chocolate bars, which were known for abittersweet chocolate with intense fruitynote s, quickly gained a following as their products became available in supermarkets and speciality stores in the Bay Area.Consumer demand led Scharffen Berger Chocolate Maker to relocate to a larger factory in 2001, complete with a
cafe andgift shop , inBerkeley, California . The company also expanded itsproduct portfolio fromchocolate bars to includeganache ,caramel ,mints ,hot cocoa and chocolate-dipped fruit.Scharffen Berger was acquired by
The Hershey Company . Hershey's began marketing and distributing Scharffen Berger Chocolate as itshigh end product line .Death
Robert Steinberg died on
September 17 ,2008 oflymphatic cancer at the age of 61. He was survived by his mother, Selma Levinson Steinberg, sister, Nancy Steinberg, and stepsister, Judith Margolin.References
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