
As background, MOST of my tastings (whether Port or otherwise) are done ‘single blind’ which means we know the wines – but not the order they’re poured in. And in smaller groups they are totally blind. That’s just the way we’ve become used to doing it.
But at the Gala all the wines were ‘known’ – so my issue is whether seeing the label affects the score assigned. (Another aside: at our home tastings we assign rankings of 1 through 8 (say) rather than using an average of scores).
Reviewing my overall ratings of the 60+ fortified wines consumed I am now wondering if knowledge of the identity has influenced my ratings.
Early on, as part of the discussion, I identified 1966 as being my favourite vintage (for Port of course) – so when the flight of 66’s arrived I gave it my highest average score of any flight served. Was I merely being prescient about the quality of 66’s – or was I justifying my prior statement?
And reviewing my ratings across flights, I notice that Taylor and Graham performed particularly well (compared to my scores in blind tastings) whereas Warre and Dow were less successful. (Fonseca was inconsistent – sometimes doing better than usual and sometimes worse). So did I ‘adjust’ the scores for those houses, based on reputation?
Or did my ratings merely reflect actual performance on that day at that time.
Anybody else have thoughts on whether a glance at the label is worth a few extra (or fewer) points in the rating?