Balletto Vineyards
A family-owned estate winery that turned 700 acres of vegetable farmland into one of the Russian River Valley’s most respected Pinot Noir and Chardonnay programs.
Balletto Vineyards sits on Occidental Road in Santa Rosa, on land the Balletto family farmed long before they ever grew a single grape vine. John Balletto converted his family’s vegetable operation into an estate vineyard in the late 1990s, and the first Balletto wines — 391 cases of Chardonnay and 689 cases of Pinot Noir — came from the 2001 vintage. The winery has been growing steadily ever since, now producing 20,000 to 25,000 cases annually from entirely estate-grown fruit.
From vegetables to vines: the Balletto story
John Balletto took over his family farm in 1977 at age 17 after the sudden death of his father. Over the following two decades, he and his wife Terri built that five-acre operation into the largest vegetable farm in Northern California, farming more than 700 acres and moving over two million cases of mixed vegetables per year at peak production.
The transition to wine grapes came through a combination of foresight and necessity. Neighboring farmer Warren Dutton suggested grapevines as a lower-water alternative to vegetables, and John and Terri began planting Pinot Noir and Chardonnay in the western Sebastopol hills in 1995. By the early 2000s, after El Nino storms and trade pressures had complicated the vegetable business, the family converted their entire remaining acreage to estate vineyards. The first Balletto wines were released from the 2001 vintage.
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Start the quizEstate vineyards across three distinct growing zones
Balletto farms three distinct vineyard blocks within the Russian River Valley, each with its own soil profile and microclimate. Sebastopol Hills sits in the coolest, foggiest part of the appellation, closest to the Pacific influence. Santa Rosa Plains experiences slightly warmer afternoons with better drainage. Laguna Ridge adds a third terroir expression, combining the fog protection of the hills with different soil composition.
All fruit used for Balletto wines comes from these estate blocks. The family uses 10 percent of total grape production for the Balletto label, selecting the highest-quality fruit from each block. The remaining 90 percent is sold to other producers, which means the vineyards themselves have a broad reputation in Sonoma County independent of the wine label.
Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, and sparkling from estate fruit
Pinot Noir anchors the portfolio. Balletto produces a Russian River Valley bottling alongside several single-vineyard expressions, each pulling from a specific estate block to show how soil and canopy management shift the final wine. The style leans toward bright acidity and red fruit with a savory earthiness underneath — cool-climate Russian River character without over-extraction.
Chardonnay shows the same discipline. The 2023 Russian River Chardonnay is described by the winery as complex and elegant, showing cool-climate heritage with concentrated flavors and the texture that comes from careful farming rather than heavy winemaking intervention. The lineup also includes a Brut Rose, adding a sparkling option for visitors who want something celebratory from an estate fruit source.
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Find your pairingPairing Balletto wines with food
Russian River Valley Pinot Noir pairs well with food because acidity is doing most of the work rather than tannin. High acid in the wine interacts with fat in the food to create a physical sensation of richness without weight — the wine cuts through, resets the palate, and makes the next bite taste better than it would without it. For Balletto Pinot, think roasted salmon, duck confit, mushroom-based pasta, or dishes built on umami. The earthy undertone in the wine echoes the savory depth of those ingredients.
Chardonnay with genuine acidity handles the same role on the white side of the table. Grilled fish, roasted chicken with herbs, pasta in cream sauce — the wine has enough richness to meet the dish and enough freshness to keep the pairing lively. The Brut Rose works well before dinner as an aperitif, or with lighter starters like charcuterie or mild cheese, where the carbonation and acidity cut cleanly through fat without competing with more dominant flavors.
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