- We tried 24 different varieties of Oreo cookies and ranked them all from worst to best according to how accurately they each delivered on flavor.
- While personal taste differs among cookie enthusiasts, there are some Oreos that are not what they seem on the package — in both surprisingly good and bad ways. Regardless, they all went well with milk.
- Out of all the Oreo Thins we tasted, we thought Lemon was the best and Latte was the worst.
- The best Oreo with a Golden cookie was the Lemon Thin, and the worst was the original Golden Oreo.
- When it came to the novelty flavors — not including those on Golden cookies — Carrot Cake came in first place and Dark Chocolate came in last.
- And for the four different takes on the original that we tried, we crowned Double Stuf the winner and Reduced-Fat the loser.
- Here's the ranking and a review of each flavor.
- Visit Insider's homepage for more stories.
There have been countless Oreo flavors released in history, and the company told Insider that 10 are currently listed as permanently available today.
We were able to get our hands on 24 different Oreo varieties including limited-edition flavors of the moment, Oreo Thins — Oreos made with thinner cookies and a lighter layer of creme — and Fudge Covered cookies.
In a quest to find the ultimate best Oreo, we tasted all 24 cookies and ranked them from worst to best based on how well the flavor delivers on its promise.
The absolute worst variety we tried was the Reduced-Fat Oreo. Its glue-like creme makes the sandwich cookie difficult to open ...
... and the poor taste and simply inaccurate Oreo flavor made it fall to the bottom of the pile, earning the dead-last ranking of No. 24.
We thought it would taste the same as an original Oreo, but as soon as we got a good look at it, we knew there was something off. After trying it, tasters asked, "What's the point?"
We decided we'd rather not have an Oreo at all than have the reduced-fat variety.
The Golden Oreo is a close second-to-worst at No. 23. It's ridiculously sweet all-around — from the cookie to the creme — and not something we'd want when reaching for a plainly-flavored cookie.
It's sweet without having an identifiable flavor, and for that reason, it falls behind every other too-sweet flavor we tried.
Slightly better than Golden was the Mega Stuf, which ranks at No. 22.
The amount of creme on this sandwich cookie is overwhelming. "It seemed like it would be too much for anyone who's not seven years old," one taster said. "It's just a lot."
When we separated the sandwich, the creme was so heavy and wet that it started to peel off the cookie.
In just a matter of seconds, it had fallen right off!
The surplus of creme rendered this cookie unfinishable by several tasters.
Only slightly better than the Mega Stuf is the Latte Oreo Thin at No. 21. Tasters were split on whether they liked the flavor ...
... but we felt that it tasted obviously artificial and more like butterscotch than a latte — anyone buying these hoping for a coffee flavor would be disappointed.
Similarly, Dark Chocolate isn't the worst cookie, but it's less than stellar. It comes in at No. 20.
There is a decent amount of creme in the center, and the color is spot-on for dark chocolate ...
... but the flavor just isn't there. Some tasters did think it had the richness of dark chocolate, though, so it isn't a total miss.
Red Velvet ranks at No. 19 on this list. The packaging promises a cream cheese-flavored creme in the center, but the creme fails to deliver.
As soon as we opened the package we were hit with the familiar smell of red velvety cake.
The colors are right, with a rich-looking, chocolatey red cookie and an off-white creme ...
... but the creme could have tasted a lot more like an actual cream cheese frosting.
Some tasters said it was "way too sweet" while others accepted that the flavor itself is naturally pretty sweet.
The Pistachio Thins aren't great — they rank at No. 18. The flavor of the creme is extremely aromatic and offensive on the nose.
But, the more we ate it, the more we got used to the intensity.
The Chocolate creme flavor comes next at No. 17 — it's fine. It's a regular chocolate cookie with a milk chocolate color creme inside.
The flavor is boring, but it most resembled the original Oreo. The creme doesn't taste deliciously chocolatey, but it tastes chocolatey nonetheless.
The latest Mystery flavor ranks No. 16 on this list.
We tasted the Mystery flavor without knowing what it was, which made us a bit nervous going into it. What if Oreo pulled a Jelly Belly and made a booger flavor?
Thankfully, it actually tastes pretty good. Tasters guessed flavors like pumpkin spice latte, cinnamon, and Teddy Graham — Oreo revealed the flavor in late 2019: churro.
Source: USA Today