Williams Selyem Winery
The winery Burt Williams and Ed Selyem built from a dairy tank in 1979 became the gold standard for Russian River Pinot Noir, a mailing-list legend that still defines what cool-climate California Pinot can be.
Williams Selyem is not a marketing story. It is a wine story: two friends, a garage, an antique dairy tank, and a stubborn conviction that the Russian River Valley could produce Pinot Noir as profound as anything in Burgundy. Four-plus decades later, that conviction has been proven right so many times that Wine Spectator named a Williams Selyem Pinot Noir one of its Top 10 Wines of 2025.
From garage wine to California icon
Burt Williams and Ed Selyem started making wine in 1979 with no formal training, a secondhand dairy tank, and fruit from growers along Westside Road in Healdsburg. They bottled under the label Hacienda del Rio at first, then Williams Selyem, selling wine out of the back of a car and building a mailing list that collectors treated like a lottery ticket.
The winery operated on radical simplicity: find the best grapes, stay out of the way, and let the Russian River Valley do the talking. By the early 1990s, critics had taken notice. The 1994 Rochioli Vineyard Pinot Noir earned a perfect 100 from Wine Spectator, the first California Pinot Noir to achieve that score. The founders sold to Jess Jackson in 1998, who preserved the ethos intact. Winemaker Jeff Mangahas continues the tradition today, releasing 50-plus vineyard-designate wines each year by allocation only.
Burt Williams started making wine in 1979 in a garage with a dairy tank and wound up changing what California Pinot Noir could be.
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Start the quizThe Russian River Valley and what makes it different
The Russian River Valley AVA in western Sonoma County sits where Pacific marine air funnels inland each morning through the Petaluma Gap, dropping temperatures dramatically compared to warmer inland valleys. The fog that blankets the valley floor through late morning delays ripening by weeks, allowing grapes to build acidity and aromatic complexity that warmer sites cannot replicate.
Williams Selyem draws from multiple blocks across the valley: Goldridge sandy loam on the valley floor forces vine roots to reach deep for moisture; hillside sites with clay and iron-rich subsoils contribute deeper color and firmer structure. No two vineyard-designate wines taste alike because no two blocks produce the same fruit.
What is in the bottle
Pinot Noir is the soul of Williams Selyem. The lineup spans single-vineyard designates from legendary blocks including Allen Vineyard, Rochioli Vineyard, Precious Mountain, and Eastside Road Neighbors. Each expresses a distinct character of Russian River terrain. Chardonnay is produced with the same vineyard-specific focus. Zinfandel from old dry-farmed blocks connects the label back to Sonoma County agricultural roots.
All wines are sold exclusively through the WS List, the mailing list that has been the only route to buying Williams Selyem wines for decades. Walk-in tastings are not available. Visits are by appointment, intimate by design, and focused entirely on the wines.
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Russian River Pinot Noir is built for the table. Its moderate tannins bind with protein in duck and lamb without overwhelming delicate proteins in salmon or chicken. The bright acidity that defines this AVA cuts through fat and richness, refreshing the palate after each bite. Pair Williams Selyem Pinot Noir with roasted duck breast, Pacific salmon with a pinot reduction, mushroom risotto, or herb-crusted lamb chops. Shared earthy aromatics between Pinot Noir and mushrooms come from overlapping compounds — the wine extends the dish rather than competing with it.
The Chardonnay pairs best with lobster, scallops, or roast chicken in cream sauce. Wine acidity brightens fat while the texture matches the richness of the protein.
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