Pedroncelli Winery
Giovanni and Julia Pedroncelli bought a hillside property west of Geyserville in 1927 that included 25 acres of Zinfandel vines and a former winery converted to a barn during Prohibition. Four generations later, Pedroncelli remains one of the oldest and most historically continuous family wineries in Dry Creek Valley.
Pedroncelli Winery sits on Canyon Road west of Geyserville, on a hillside property that Giovanni and Julia Pedroncelli purchased in 1927. The property included 25 acres of Zinfandel vines and a former winery building that had been repurposed as a barn during Prohibition. The Pedroncellis restored the winemaking operation after Repeal, and four generations of the family have operated the winery continuously since — making Pedroncelli one of the oldest family-owned wineries in Dry Creek Valley.
Giovanni and Julia Pedroncelli: a Prohibition purchase and a lasting legacy
In 1927, near the end of Prohibition, Giovanni and Julia Pedroncelli purchased a hillside property west of Geyserville with 25 acres of old Zinfandel vines. The former winery building on the property had been converted to a barn to comply with Prohibition regulations — a common adaptation among Sonoma County growers who continued farming their vines through legal channels such as sacramental wine production and home winemaking allowances.
The Pedroncelli family saw the opportunity in the property: established vines, an existing structure, and positioning in what they recognized as excellent Zinfandel country. When Prohibition ended in 1933, the restoration of the winemaking operation was straightforward. Pedroncelli Winery resumed commercial production and has never stopped. The continuity of family ownership and the stability of the estate have made Pedroncelli one of the most historically reliable reference points in the story of Dry Creek Valley winemaking.
Nearly 100 years of Dry Creek Valley winemaking by one family, starting with a Prohibition-era barn and 25 acres of Zinfandel.
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Start the quizCanyon Road, Geyserville, and the Dry Creek Valley hillside
The Pedroncelli property on Canyon Road occupies hillside terrain west of Geyserville, at the northern end of the Dry Creek Valley AVA. This position places the estate vineyards at elevations above the valley floor, where drainage is faster and temperature variation between day and night is more extreme than on the flats below. Those conditions tend to produce Zinfandel with more structure and better natural acidity than valley-floor fruit — characteristics that support aging and pair well with food.
The Dry Creek Valley AVA was formally designated in 1983, but the characteristics that define it were understood by growers like the Pedroncellis long before the formal designation. The combination of warm summer days, cool nights driven by marine air from the Pacific, and the well-drained alluvial and volcanic soils of the hillside benchland produces the structure and concentration that distinguishes Dry Creek Zinfandel from warmer-climate versions.
Four generations and the Pedroncelli wine program
Four generations of the Pedroncelli family have operated the winery, with the third and fourth generations now working together to maintain the estate. The wine program has expanded from its original Zinfandel focus to include Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, and several other Sonoma County varieties, but Zinfandel remains the foundation and the wine most closely identified with the winery’s identity.
Pedroncelli has a reputation for producing wines at accessible price points without compromising on quality or the estate character that comes from nearly a century of vineyard farming. The winery takes a deliberate position in the market: serious Dry Creek Valley wine that does not require a significant financial commitment to experience. That approach has built a loyal following among consumers who value value without sacrificing quality.
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Find your pairingPairing Pedroncelli wines with food
Pedroncelli Zinfandel from the Canyon Road hillside estate carries the structural character of Dry Creek Valley fruit: ripe and concentrated but with the acidity and tannin definition that comes from elevation and well-drained soils. That structure makes it one of the more food-compatible styles of California Zinfandel, able to handle preparations with real weight without becoming cloying or overwhelming.
Grilled sausages, lamb chops, slow-braised pork with herbs, and aged cow’s-milk cheeses all work with Pedroncelli Zinfandel. The ripe fruit concentration needs food that can meet it at its weight class — lighter preparations risk being overwhelmed. The Cabernet Sauvignon, with firmer tannin, calls for the same category of preparation: roasted red meats, braised short rib, strong hard cheeses. The Pinot Noir, if from Russian River Valley-influenced fruit, pairs with the lighter preparations that cool-climate Sonoma Pinot handles best: salmon, duck, mushroom dishes.
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