Hi guys, I'm glad you all have received your medals and feedback from the judges!
I've been reading the comments here and I have what I hope are some answers for your questions.
I've been judging at the US Amateur for over 15 years now. One thing I am so pleased to see is that the overall quality of the wines that are submitted today are far, far, above those submitted 15 years ago.
We are all continuing to improve, and that is fantastic!
Hopefully the comments from the judges, who in the US Amateur are almost always either home winemakers or spouses of home winemakers, are helpful in improving our winemaking skills.
Regarding judging, scores, and medals. We strive to ensure that all of the judges are as consistent as possible. However, the pesky truth is that judges are human and that means training judges is somewhat like training cats.
In particular, we all have individual tastes and aromas that we are particularly sensitive to or insensitive to.
For example, I have had very few wines with the classic "barnyard" brettanomyces infection, and therefor I still struggle with finding it in a wine. However, friends of mine who drink a lot of French wines can smell brett from across the room. On the other hand, for some reason, my wife and I (unfortunately for us) are finely attuned to corked wines and even the slightest amount of TCA ruins the entire bottle for us.
Those are just a couple examples, but judging wine in a competition where one of the main goals is to give feedback to help winemakers improve, requires that the judges focus on finding the problems, the "faults," in a wine. So a some judges will pick up faults that other judges on the same panel are not as attuned to, leading to some variance in scores.
If there are noticeable faults in a wine, the faults should be discussed in the comment section by the judge.
Also, our judges are put on panels according to their strengths. White wine drinkers judge white wines. Beer makers judge the beer-involved entries. Judges who are originally from the east coast and have a lot of experience with east coast varietals, judge them. Fruit winemakers judge the fruit wines. Etc., etc.
Additionally, all of the US Amateur judges go through multiple training sessions. And if a judge has been around for a number of years, as most of them have been, they've often been through dozens of training sessions.
Lastly, as you can see on the judging forms, there are multiple judges on each panel and each judge initially scores the wine individually. Then the panel - as a whole - agrees on the final Medal award.
So while I know the score and the medals are important to us all, hopefully the comments are the real "gold" and will give us all some guidance in how to continue to improve our craft.
Anyway, I thank you all for participating, and I look forward to seeing how much better the homewines are 15 years from now!
Best,
Andy Coradeschi