The previous posts in this thread explain the Great Olive Oil Tasting (a/k/a GOOT) pretty well. To spell it out in a little more detail, I want to explain more carefully what we did and why and how the tasting itself was conducted--and what resulted.
To welcome everyone and get palates whetted, we offered some appetizers or
vorspeisen. We thought a selection of olives would help discussion get started and we provided five kinds: Cerignola, Castelvetrano, and Gaeta (all Italian), Arbequina (Spanish), and Picholine (a French olive but likely an American version). All were purchased at Sam’s Wine & Spirits. There was also a chub of Molinari salami (a garlicky Genoa style sausage) from San Francisco and two cheeses: a mild chevre called Humboldt Fog (from Humboldt County, California) and an aged Parmegiano Reggiano. The Humboldt Fog disappeared. We also served a Sangiovese and a Vouvray, though many opted for water.
We tasted eight oils, probably a few more than advisable. It’s very difficult to keep track of so many. We learned a number of things in the course of this little exercise, including that using small pieces of bread while marvelous as a vehicle, has other drawbacks. You fill up pretty fast. And even with “neutral” bread (we had LaBrea Bakery baguettes), the taste of the bread intervenes. Most, I think, found it extremely difficult to get a true sense of the flavor of the oils because of the bread.
One of our many lessons is that next time I think we would use small plastic (i.e., disposable) spoons. That way one can savor small quantities without any other flavors getting in the way of tasting the oil itself. Drinking olive oil from wine glasses and spitting is just way too much trouble for the home host, no matter how much it may be common among professional tasters.
Our eight oils were all extra virgin oils and were (in alphabetical order):
Carapelli (Italy)
Carlini (Italy)
Colavita (Italy)
DeCecco (Italy)
L’Estornell (Spain)
Horio (Greece)
Kolymvari (Crete)
Martinis (Greece)
We provided modified score sheets. There is a wide variety of score sheets available on the Internet and some of these are highly professional. Most sheets break the scoring into three categories: aroma/olfactory; palate/gustatory; overall. These categories are sometimes broken down into subcategories and scoring methodologies vary enormously. I think most of us would have agreed that we fourteen tasters simply aren’t that sophisticated (yet). Lovely Dining Companion and I also provided a page of adjectives from a formal tasting “wheel” I found on the net. We made it available to everyone more to offer suggestions for sensations and tastes one might have without having a formal tasting vocabulary in place. The range of terms is extraordinary. For those who are interested, you can find the wheel
here and yet another similar wheel
here. And
here is a sample of various olive oil descriptors.
As it turned out, some tried to score every oil, some gave up early on. I scored the oils, for example, but don’t have great confidence in my scoring. And I have complete and total sympathy with those who did not feel they could score. As a result, therefore, we cannot offer definitive rankings. Instead, my comments will be based on the sheets themselves: so had complete scores, some had partial scores, some had none. Most had comments. At the end of the tasting, after the oils had been identified, I took an informal poll.
As Cathy2 noted above, there were many who nodded in agreement when she said that it was easier to identify those oils that were disliked than those that were. Perhaps that reflects on the relatively mediocre quality of the major brands like Colavita, Carapelli, and DeCecco—although, as I will note later, each brand had at least two who listed it as one of their top choices.
There was, not surprisingly, general agreement about the opposite ends of the spectrum. Two oils were named by five (of fourteen) people as in their top few. (Only one person named both “top” oils—me.) I didn’t ask people to name their top oil. That would have been too hard. Instead, I asked for everyone to name their “favorites,” leaving to them how many they wanted to single out. All (save one), received at least two mentions. The top two were L’Estornell and Kolymvari, neither exactly a household regular (at least judging from what’s available at Jewel and Dominick’s).
The Kolymvari from Crete earned comments such as “fruity,” “bland, inoffensive,” “green,” “slight bitter finish” (bitter, it is to be noted, is uniformly considered a positive characteristic and was mentioned in connection with this oil several times), “buttery,” “earthy,” and, “weak.” Still, it was singled out by five tasters and seemed, subjectively speaking, to have the greatest consensus behind it. At least three of those who actually scored all the oils ranked it number one.
The L’Estornell is a Spanish oil made from arbequina olives (of which we had a sample at the outset). Comments on it included “smooth,” “flowery, pleasant” “tasted most like olive.” Someone found it “very light,” and then the comments slid to “oily” and “pungent, vomit.” Kind of a range there.
There was greatest consensus on Carlini, the Aldi house brand. It was the only oil to receive no mentions. Its descriptors included “harsh, chemical,” “really bitter,” “metal,” “industrial,” “harsh, definitely bitter” and the catch-all “blech.” The remaining oils all had their partisans, but few felt particularly strongly. And, according to my notes, no other oil was mentioned by name by more than two people. Among the descriptions of these various oils were:
“well-balanced,” “peppery,” and “very bland” (of DeCecco)
“bland, peppery,” “stale walnut,” and “very neutral” (of Horio)
“unpleasant,” “metallic,” and “fresh, grassy” (of Martinis)
“metallic, harsh,” “astringent,” “medicinal” (of Colavita)
“smooth,” “weak, slightly bitter,” “nice in a bland way” (of Carapelli)
I want to mention one other point: somone (Hellodali, if memory serves) pointed out that we shouldn’t ignore the built-in “recognition” factor for a familiar taste, for better or worse. We mostly brought the oils we use and so, perhaps only subconsciously, may have been predisposed to them.
Lots of things to think about in any tasting. Since we had never conducted one (or even attended one), we've learned a lot.
And look forward to the next one! Thanks to all who attended for making it such a success.
Gypsy Boy
"I am not a glutton--I am an explorer of food." (Erma Bombeck)