2009-8-19, 10:08 am
Recently I had the opportunity to participate as an official taster at a wine challenge. There were 158
wines to be rated within about three hours and since there is always the question how it is possible to
taste and reasonably judge more than a handful of wines, I will provide a quick record on how this can
be done. (written by Andreas Schreiner)
Let's start with the environment. The tasting has to be blind of course which means that the tasters only
know about the wines what they really have to (vintage, grape variety) but never about which winery a
specific wine comes from. To separate all tasters and thereby preventing them from distracting each others
ofthen a tasting cabin is used that can only house a single person. All these measures are aimed at reaching
tasting results that are as neutral and fair as possible altough that is not considered equally important
all over the world. But this is a different story altogether.
What the tasters then need are
glasses, fresh water, some bread to neutralize the taste and the tasting can start. The wines are poured in
quick succession, tasted and the tasters write down their personal ratings. Here lies the most important
fact of all professional tastings! The tasters already have to know beforehand what the wines should taste
like, what is good wine and what's bad. This can only be learned by a lot of tasting experience and
therefore it's common that only persons that are familiar with the wines in the challenge are invited for
the tasting. Nevertheless, after about 40-50 samples it is enough for everyone and even with very focused
attention it becomes difficult to differentiate the fine nuances of the wines. This means it is time for a
couple minutes break which is used mostly to relax your brain because a tasting is mainly a matter of very
focused attention where someone has to recognize and process all impressions from the wine.
Picture: Personal and offical notes taken by the taster.
The rating follows one of many available scoring systems, some use 100 points as the theoretical
maximum, some use 20 and some use something completely different. Most commonly more points are better, but
sometimes its exactly the opposite. That means that the tasters have to be familiar with the scoring system
in use to be able to provide reliable results but this can of course also be learned and trained.
Nevertheless it is not uncommon to taste a couple wines in the open beforehand to harmonize the tasters
ratings a bit. During the tasting there are some wines offered more than once wich makes it possible to
recognize if a taster provides constant ratings during the tasting.
Picture:
Offical scoring paper
Finally the ratings of all tasters are evaluated, for example by
simply calculating their average score. There are more sophisticated methods available as well to exclude
misjudgements where one excellent wine could for example reach only a medicore placement in the challange
because of one false very bad rating. But all this are details, the important message is that it is possible
to taste around 150 wines in a very short time but only by adhering to a very strict tasting procedure that
the tasters are also well familiar with. Such a tasting is extremely interesting and instructive as well,
especially if the tasters can afterwards compare their personal ratings to the final results. It is on the
other hand also exhausting and not exactly an fun tasting experience. For this I also prefer to concentrate
on only a few wines and take much, much more time for every one of them.
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