Enter keywords and hit Go →

These Olive Varieties Earn the Highest Scores from Judges

The hidden scores I alone can see don't mean much on their own, but patterns might emerge when we zoom out to nine years of data.
Abstract artwork featuring intersecting lines in green and yellow hues on a light background. - Olive Oil Times
By Curtis Cord
Jul. 12, 2021 20:31 UTC
Summary Summary

The NYIOOC World Olive Oil Competition does not reveal scores given by judges due to the sub­jec­tive nature of scor­ing, with fac­tors like tim­ing and per­sonal pref­er­ences affect­ing the results. While the com­pe­ti­tion aims to rec­og­nize high-qual­ity olive oils and edu­cate the pub­lic, the scores alone do not hold much sig­nif­i­cance, but pat­terns may emerge when ana­lyz­ing data over mul­ti­ple years.

There are a few rea­sons we don’t reveal the scores our judges attribute to entries in the NYIOOC World Olive Oil Competition, but it boils down to the fact that they should­n’t be inter­preted at face value.

Let’s admit it. One taster’s 84 is anoth­er’s 86. A judge might assign higher scores ear­lier in the tast­ing than later in the morn­ing. Some might lean toward cer­tain sen­sory char­ac­ter­is­tics than oth­ers do.

They are renowned experts who form a panel rep­re­sent­ing the ulti­mate means to deter­mine extra vir­gin olive oil qual­ity. But they are human.

A few years ago, I decided to dis­con­tinue the Best in Class Award at the NYIOOC – which was bestowed on entries with the high­est score in their respec­tive cat­e­gory– due to my con­vic­tion that the scores are not suf­fi­ciently pre­cise to make that call. One excel­lent olive oil should­n’t be declared bet­ter” than another excel­lent olive oil.

(Some enter­pris­ing folks nev­er­the­less felt a need to build a rank­ing based on how many awards from var­i­ous com­pe­ti­tions a brand gar­nered in a given year as if that mea­sured any­thing but the com­pa­nies’ pro­mo­tional bud­gets. But the web­sites for those rank­ings get almost no traf­fic accord­ing to met­rics tools, reveal­ing that the pub­lic does­n’t care more than I do.)

In our con­test, scores are used only to deter­mine if an oil earns an award or not – and whether it’s a Silver or Gold, and I’m not crazy about that either.

One entry could get a score of 79.8 to earn a Silver, while another gets 80.1 to win Gold. If it is tasted again a few min­utes later, the results might edge the other way around.

Olive oil com­pe­ti­tions are imper­fect, but they are the most effec­tive way to rec­og­nize pro­duc­ers for their hero­ics and edu­cate the pub­lic on qual­ity and value (though plenty of olive oil com­pe­ti­tions do nei­ther of those things).

The hid­den scores I alone can see don’t mean much on their own, but pat­terns might emerge when we zoom out to nine years of data we’ve col­lected in what amounts to the most com­pre­hen­sive sen­sory analy­sis of the world’s olive oils.

Like it or love it.

Among the award-win­ning oils, which mono­va­ri­etals made tasters swoon?

When ana­lyz­ing an entry, NYIOOC judges use the soft­ware we devel­oped that prompts them to attribute sub-scores to indi­vid­ual com­po­nents that make up the over­all result.

Things like gus­ta­tory and olfac­tory sen­sa­tions, bal­ance and har­mony, fruiti­ness, bit­ter­ness and pun­gency con­tribute to the final num­ber.

When a score reaches the 90s, it’s fair to say a beau­ti­ful oil blew the panel away. Scores in the low 70s barely made the cut­off.

Here are the aver­age scores of award-win­ning oils for the most com­mon cul­ti­vars over the last nine years. I also included the aver­age score for award-win­ning blends:

Of course, we have much more data for Picual, Arbequina and Koroneiki than for Casaliva or Tonda Iblea. Here are only the cul­ti­vars I felt had enough results to pro­duce a mean­ing­ful aver­age. More than 200 vari­eties with smaller sam­plings were omit­ted.

A cor­rectly crafted oil will con­sis­tently achieve bet­ter results than one with prob­lem­atic sen­sory char­ac­ter­is­tics, no mat­ter the vari­ety.

It also needs to be said that some cul­ti­vars are more lim­ited to regions with less vari­abil­ity in fac­tors like ter­roir, pro­duc­tion meth­ods, and qual­ity stan­dards than, for exam­ple, Arbequina, which grows world­wide.

Maybe the graph reveals spe­cific cul­ti­vars that, with the right con­di­tions and skilled pro­duc­ers, more con­sis­tently show signs of great­ness.

Or, per­haps the data sug­gests some vari­eties with sen­sory char­ac­ter­is­tics that judges have yet to appre­ci­ate fully.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Related Articles