Admiral makes a great point here - if you can find someone whose pallete matches yours then likely their recommendations will match yours as well. For me, I know that if Jay Miller or Robert Parker rate a Syrah/Shiraz in a positive light then chances are Iwill like it as well. One of the problems I had with the Wine Spectator is the recommendations are completely hit or miss as they are supposedly based on a variety of people's tastes. That doesn't work for me, but for some of my friends it's solid. Wine rating and wine competitions are subjective by their very nature. I think wineries use the base publicity rules in terms of these contests - if someone gives you a gold medal then you are a gold-medal producing winery. In the case of people like Al and the-poster-formerly-known-as-Appleman, if this helps people come in and buy bottles than so be it. For us hobbyist winemakers, the satisfaction rests in our bottles more than the opinions of people we may never meet or share a glass of wine with.
It's also impossible for someone not to have a "taste memory" of a previous wine tasted.For the sake of my own medals, I hope that the wine the judge tasted right before mine sucked. *grins*
- Jim