Gary Farrell Winery
Four decades of single-vineyard Pinot Noir and Chardonnay rooted in the fog-cooled hills of the Russian River Valley.
Gary Farrell Winery sits on Westside Road in Healdsburg, right in the heart of the Russian River Valley. Since 1982 the winery has focused on one idea: let the land guide the wine. That philosophy shaped some of the most respected Pinot Noir and Chardonnay to come out of Sonoma County, and it still drives every decision made here today.
A compass set in 1982
Gary Farrell founded the winery in 1982 with a clear point of view. Long before single-vineyard bottlings became a marketing phrase, he was walking vineyards block by block, tracking soil shifts and morning fog patterns, and making wines that reflected exactly what he found. He was not chasing market trends. He was following his palate and trusting the land.
In 2005 Gary chose to pass the torch. Winemaker Brent McKoy, who Gary had hired as a cellar foreman that same year, eventually took the reins. The sensibility Gary built into the operation — restraint in the cellar, respect for the vineyard, patience in every step — remained embedded in how the winery works. Different hands. Same compass.
The name on the bottle reflects where we came from. The wines in the glass reflect who we are now.
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Start the quizWestside Road and the Russian River Valley
The winery sits on Westside Road, one of the most storied stretches of vineyard land in California. The Russian River Valley AVA covers a broad channel of Pacific-cooled air that funnels through the Petaluma Gap. By afternoon that fog burns off, but mornings stay cold long enough to slow ripening dramatically. The result is Pinot Noir with bright natural acidity and layered red fruit, and Chardonnay with precision and lift that separates it from warmer-climate versions of the grape.
Gary Farrell works with vineyard partners across the appellation rather than farming a single estate block. That approach lets the winemaking team select parcels that consistently produce the character they are looking for, and it keeps the range honest to the AVA as a whole rather than tied to a single piece of ground.
The wines: Pinot Noir and Chardonnay from the cool edge of California
Pinot Noir is the flagship. The Russian River Valley version leads the lineup — a wine built on dark cherry, dried herb, and earthy undertones with the kind of supple structure that makes it work at the dinner table rather than just on a tasting note. Single-vineyard bottlings go deeper, pulling from specific blocks with distinct soil profiles and vine age.
Chardonnay here reads as cool-climate from the first sip. The wines are textured without being heavy, with stone fruit and citrus in the foreground and a mineral finish that points back to the foggy mornings that shaped the growing season. Neither wine shouts. Both hold attention.
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Find your pairingWhat to pour with Gary Farrell wines
Russian River Pinot Noir and Chardonnay are some of the most food-friendly wines made in California, and the chemistry explains why. Pinot Noir carries enough acidity to cut through fat without the tannin weight that would overpower delicate proteins. That makes it the right call alongside salmon, duck breast, mushroom risotto, or anything in the umami range — the acidity sharpens the savory notes on both sides.
Chardonnay with real acidity works the same way from the white side. It has enough richness to meet cream sauces and roasted chicken, and enough brightness to keep the pairing feeling clean. Use the acid in the wine to do the lifting. Both wines reward pairing over sipping alone — they sharpen with food in a way that sets them apart from warmer-climate alternatives.
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