If you are serious about "trusting your ears", then you should always insist on "blind" listening. After all, one hears with one's ears, not one's eyes. Yet many of the people who chant the mantra, "trust your ears" insist on only listening when they already know what it is they are hearing because they can see it!
Additionally, with the listening that you are doing with the two discs, the two can be at a different level, and that can make one sound better than the other. The reason for this is the fact that human hearing is non-linear. When you turn down the volume, the bass and treble subjectively appear to diminish more rapidly than the midrange. This is why most vintage receivers have "loudness compensation" switches on them, so that they can boost the bass and treble for low volume listening to compensate for this aspect of human hearing. Additionally, of course, if two sources are very slightly different only in volume, not only is there a subjective tonal difference (just described above in this paragraph), one also naturally can hear more detail in the one that is slightly louder, because, obviously, being slightly louder, the soft parts are now louder and can be more easily heard. So, getting the volumes nearly perfectly matched is essential for one's subjective preference to have any significance whatsoever.
As I stated above in this thread:
So, with your listening, you have decided that you prefer one mix over another. That does not tell us about the relative merits of the different formats. You would have to know absolutely that the two had precisely the same mix to be able to compare them in a manner to accurately judge the formats.