DeLoach Vineyards
The Russian River original — a pioneering Pinot Noir estate on the Olivet Bench that helped put the Russian River Valley AVA on the map, now farmed biodynamically under the Boisset family.
DeLoach Vineyards sits on the Olivet Bench in Santa Rosa, on land that has been growing Pinot Noir since 1973. That makes DeLoach one of the earliest proponents of Pinot Noir in the Russian River Valley, and the first winery to put “Russian River Valley” as an appellation designation on its labels — before the region even had official AVA status. The AVA was granted in 1983, in part through the work of Christine DeLoach and fellow Sonoma County Vintners who petitioned the TTB to recognize the region.
The Russian River original: 50 years on the Olivet Bench
Cecil and Christine DeLoach planted Pinot Noir on the Olivet Bench in 1973, at a time when the Russian River Valley was not yet a recognized wine region and Pinot Noir was an unconventional choice for California. Their conviction that the fog-cooled benchland could produce serious wine proved correct, and DeLoach spent the following decades building a reputation for estate-grown Pinot Noir and Chardonnay that reflected the character of the place.
In 2003 Jean-Charles Boisset of the Boisset family purchased DeLoach and undertook a transformation of the estate. The winery was certified organic by the CCOF in 2008, and Demeter awarded Biodynamic certification in 2009 for both the estate vineyards and the on-site garden. The winemaking shifted toward Burgundian techniques: open-top wood fermenters, native yeast fermentations, and hand punch-downs during primary fermentation. DeLoach has been named a Top 100 Winery by Wine and Spirits Magazine twelve times.
We set out to create one of the most extraordinary estates for Pinot Noir and Chardonnay and DeLoach has become the jewel of the Russian River Valley.
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Start the quizThe Olivet Bench: soil, fog, and a distinct microclimate
The DeLoach estate covers 20 acres on the Olivet Bench in the Russian River Valley, with 17 acres planted to vine. The soil is Huichica Loam — a clay loam with volcanic ash derived from ancient activity at Mount St. Helena. That combination gives the soil good drainage, deep root penetration, and a minerality that shows up in the wines.
The Olivet Bench sits at roughly 100 feet of elevation and receives cooling fog that ebbs and flows through channels cut by waterways. Fog typically arrives in the evening and retreats in the morning, providing a daily temperature regulation that slows ripening and builds complexity. The estate is divided into named blocks — La Bienvenue, Les Parcelles Cachees, and Les Blancs — each planted with distinct Pinot Noir and Chardonnay clones that ripen at different times and contribute different character to the final wines.
The wines: Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, Zinfandel, and more
Pinot Noir anchors the portfolio. The Estate Russian River Valley bottling is the appellation wine; above it sit La Bienvenue and Les Parcelles Cachees, single-block expressions that show how two pieces of the same estate can taste quite different. La Bienvenue vines grow on deeper topsoil and ripen later, producing richer, more intense Pinot Noir. Les Parcelles Cachees sits on shallow, well-drained soil in the west corner of the estate, delivering vibrant red fruit and mineral-driven structure.
Chardonnay from Les Blancs — the central block surrounding the biodynamic knoll — shows Asian pear, mandarin orange, and honeysuckle from three clones including the famed Montrachet selection. Zinfandel, a nod to the broader Sonoma County heritage, rounds out the range alongside Rosé and the estate Pinot Noir Blanc.
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Find your pairingPairing DeLoach wines with food
Biodynamic farming produces wines with texture and energy that respond well at the table. The estate Pinot Noir carries the hallmarks of cool-climate Russian River fruit — bright acidity, red cherry, dried herb, and earthy depth — that make it a natural partner for dishes where you want the wine to sharpen rather than dominate. Duck confit, mushroom risotto, roasted salmon, or a simple herb-rubbed chicken all bring out the savory dimension of the wine without competing with it.
Chardonnay from the Olivet Bench works best with dishes that carry some weight but do not need a heavy wine behind them. Roasted fish, pasta in light cream sauce, and soft cheeses give the wine something to push against while the natural acidity keeps the pairing clean. For Zinfandel, think dishes built on deeper flavors: braised short rib, lamb, or smoky grilled meats where the richness of the wine meets the richness of the food.
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