- Color – The chili should look appetizing.
- Aroma – The chili should smell good. The smell should be a good indicator of the taste.
- Consistency - Chili should have a good meat to sauce ratio. It should not be too thick, watery, grainy, lumpy, or greasy.
- Taste – The chili should taste, well, like chili. And, it should taste good. This is THE most important factor. The taste should consist of the combination of the meat, spices, etc. with no particular ingredient being dominate. And, contrary to what most Texans believe, it should not be so hot that you cannot taste the other flavors.
- Aftertaste - The aftertaste or bite is the heat created by the various types of spices and or peppers.
The following insights might be helpful in selecting your favorite chili or on the off chance you are ever asked to judge an informal cookie bake-off in your friend’s kitchen or ribs at your neighborhood cookout.
- Consider taking a Gastric Acid Secretion Inhibitor. Many OTC antiflatulents (e.g., Beano, Gas-X, Zantac) need to be taken in advance of eating so be sure to read the label carefully.
- Eat Before You Judge. This sounds counterintuitive, but it is easy to confuse being famished with genuinely liking something. Have a light breakfast or lunch before the judging begins.
- Pace Yourself. This is easier said than done. Take a small bite of each entry. If it is forgettable with no chance of making it to the winner’s circle, abandon ship and move on to the next. Judge each chili on its own merit.
- Cleanse your palate. After each tasting take a sip of water, beer, or milk (best for neutralizing the effects of capsicum in chilies). Plain saltine crackers are good cleansers as well.
- Be candid, be consistent, and be decisive. Don’t be ashamed to be honest. You were selected to be a judge, so your opinion counts. Make notes in the margin to help you remember if needed. No one else is going to see them accept the score counter.