Sea Smoke
Named for the fog that rolls over its hillside, Sea Smoke makes some of the most coveted Pinot Noir in America, grown entirely on one estate and sold almost entirely by allocation.
“Sea smoke” is the local name for the thick marine fog that pours off the Pacific and settles over the western Sta. Rita Hills on summer mornings. One steep, south-facing vineyard above the Santa Ynez River took the name, and turned it into one of the most sought-after labels in California.
One estate, fiercely guarded
Sea Smoke was founded in 1999, when its owner planted a single dramatic vineyard on the cold, fog-washed slopes at the western edge of the Sta. Rita Hills, ground most growers still considered too cold and too risky. The bet paid off spectacularly. Within a few vintages Sea Smoke became a cult name, its Pinot Noir traded and hunted like a rare object. The model is unusual and deliberate: nearly everything is grown on the estate and made in tiny quantities, then carefully allocated to a waiting list rather than sold on shelves. Farming is holistic and meticulous, with what the winery calls quiet precision in the cellar.
Most of these wines never reach a store. You get on the list, and you wait.
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Sea Smoke is built on three estate wines. ‘Ten’ is the flagship Pinot Noir, named for the ten clones of the grape originally blended into it, a dark, powerful, structured wine built to age. ‘Southing’ is its sibling, a touch more open and aromatic. The Estate Chardonnay is rich and built on the same cold-climate intensity. After a decade-long pause, the winery also revived Botella, a more approachable Sta. Rita Hills bottling drawn from exceptional neighboring vineyards.
Sea Smoke began in 1999, when Bob Davids bought a former horse farm along the Santa Ynez River in what would soon become the Sta. Rita Hills. Davids was an industrial designer and entrepreneur, the man behind the toy company Radica Games, and a serious Burgundy collector who wanted a California site with the structure he loved in the Cote de Nuits. The first commercial vintage came in 2001, the same year the Sta. Rita Hills won AVA status, and within a few years Sea Smoke was Santa Barbara County’s first true cult wine.
What sets the estate apart is its exposure. Most Sta. Rita Hills vineyards face west, straight into the marine corridor, but Sea Smoke’s best slopes face south and catch more sun. That gives the wines their signature combination: the riper, more structured fruit of a warm site with the bright acidity of a cold one. The estate-grown Pinot Noir bottlings, Southing, Botella, and the flagship Ten, sit alongside an estate Chardonnay program, all grown on the property rather than bought in.
Almost all of it is sold straight to the people who drink it. Roughly 80 percent goes out through the mailing list, the waiting list runs into the thousands, and there is no public tasting room, so the wines are famously hard to find at retail. In May 2024 Davids sold the estate to Constellation Brands, though the cult model and the south-facing fruit that built the name remain the point.
What to drink it with
This is bigger, darker Pinot Noir than most of the Sta. Rita Hills, so it can stand up to serious food. Pour ‘Ten’ or ‘Southing’ with seared duck breast, roast lamb, or a mushroom and short-rib ragu, where the wine’s structure meets the richness of the dish and its dark fruit echoes the sauce. The Estate Chardonnay, full and golden, is a natural with lobster or Dungeness crab in butter, congruent richness on both sides of the table.
How to buy and taste
Sea Smoke does not run a public tasting room. Because production is small and almost entirely estate-grown, the wines are allocated through the winery’s mailing list, known as The List. Joining is the way in: members get first access to each new release before it sells out.
Chase the fog
Sea Smoke sells out fast and direct. Join The List for first access to each estate release.
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