Blind wine tasting

Blinded wine tasting is wine tasting undertaken in circumstances in which the tasters are kept unaware of the wines' identities. The blind approach is routine for wine professionals (wine tasters, sommeliers and others) who wish to ensure impartiality in the judgment of the quality of wine during wine competitions or in the evaluation of a sommelier for professional certification. More recently wine scientists (physiologists, psychologists, food chemists and others) have used blinded tastings to explore the objective parameters of the human olfactory system as they apply to the ability of wine drinkers (both wine professionals and ordinary consumers) to identify and characterize the extraordinary variety of compounds that contribute to a wine’s aroma. Similarly, economists testing hypotheses relating to the wine market have used the technique in their research.[1] Some blinded trials among wine consumers have indicated that people can find nothing in a wine's aroma or taste to distinguish between ordinary and pricey brands.[2] Academic research on blinded wine tastings have also cast doubt on the ability of professional tasters to judge wines consistently.[3]

  1. ^ Ashenfelter, Orley; Richard Quandt (1999). "Analyzing a Wine Tasting Statistically". Chance. 12 (3): 16–20. doi:10.1080/09332480.1999.10542152.
  2. ^ Georgiou, Maroulla, "Expensive and inexpensive wines taste the same, research shows", PhysOrg.com (April 15, 2011).
  3. ^ Derbyshire, David (22 June 2013). "Wine-tasting: it's junk science". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 February 2020.