The Legacy of Burt Williams & Williams & Selyem Pinot Noir Keeps on Giving
Burt Williams had an extraordinary intuition for crafting Pinot Noir. He was enamored with wine by his late
teens, bought his first case of wine, a Pedroncelli Zinfandel at the age of 20, and made his first wine in 1964 at
the age of 24 at his house in Forestville. The location of the house in “Hacienda Del Rio,” would grace the label
of the first wines Williams crafted with neighbor, friend, partner and fellow winemaker Ed Selyem.
Williams enjoyed Russian River Valley Zinfandel, and although he dabbled in Burgundy and was attracted to it,
he considered it too expensive. In fact, the escalating cost of Burgundy was one of the reasons he and Ed
Selyem decided to start their own winery. They never set out to make a splash or become rich, but rather
wanted to make good Pinot Noir they could drink at home. Burt would recall, “I had no big plan. I wanted to buy
grapes and turn them into good wine. We weren’t trying to conquer the world or make millions of dollars. We
were trying to make the best wine we could and enjoy it ourselves. If enough was left over, we could sell it. We
never imagined that we would become a cult winery capable of selling everything we made.”
When Burt and Ed started out in 1979, consistently fine California Pinot Noir was nowhere to be found. Blessed
with a superb palate and possessing a self-taught keen understanding of how Pinot Noir should be crafted,
Williams realized there was a place for world-class Pinot Noir in California, a “niche” for something that no one
had ever done before. Williams read every book on wine and winemaking he could get his hands on and
visited many local Russian River Valley winemakers who offered practical advice and encouragement. Burt
attended many Burgundy tastings in the Bay Area, but never set foot in Burgundy because of his admitted
reluctance to fly.
The Williams Selyem Pinot Noirs had a powerful charisma that turned on many devoted followers. A customer
wrote, “Please hurry up with your next release because I missed the last one and my friends have stopped
coming over.” The quirky garagiste origins of the wines added to their mystique with their scarcity contributing
to the appeal, but the truth was these were flat-out some of the greatest California Pinot Noirs of their time. The
wines even appeared on restaurant lists in Burgundy!
Williams was forever humbled by the public’s attraction to his wines. He was encouraged that consumers
enjoyed his wines, but was more concerned with making wines that pleased himself.
The Williams Selyem Pinot Noirs were charming and complex when young, but they would turn out to age
better than many California Pinot Noirs crafted at the time. People thought that they were so delicious when
young, they couldn’t possibly age. Their age ability has proven itself over time, in part due to moderate alcohols
and well-honed acidity, as well as impeccable balance. Balance was very important to Williams who explained,
“Wine needs to be transparent and to be transparent, it must be balanced. Over ripe, over blown wines do not
reflect the site.”
Williams Selyem was sold in 1998 and Burt was asked to consult for a few years after the sale, but he could
never put his heart in it and soon left permanently. The last vintage he vinified at Williams Selyem was 1997.
After the winery was sold, Burt bought a 40-acre property in Anderson Valley and planted 13 acres of Pinot Noir
at what was named Morning Dew Ranch. He crafted two vintages from this vineyard, 2008 and 2009, and then
retired completely from winemaking.
Ed Selyem was an equal partner in Williams Selyem and although he did much of the business accounting and
management, and came up with the idea of allocating the wines through a mailing list, he was also involved in
the winemaking. Since selling the winery, he has shunned the limelight and press, and cherished his
retirement.
Fortunately, the wines of Williams Selyem have continued to offer remarkable longevity, and well-cellared
examples are still drinking beautifully. The legacy continues.
Recently I had the good fortune to drink two older vintages of Williams Selyem Pinot Noir: 1993 Williams
Selyem Cohn Vineyard Sonoma County Pinot Noir and 1995 Williams Selyem Allen Vineyard Russian
River Valley Pinot Noir.
Cohn Vineyard, now an estate vineyard of Benovia Winery, entered Burt’s radar through a winemaker friend at
Hop Kiln Winery that was sourcing grapes from Cohn Vineyard beginning in 1981. When the Hop Kiln Winery
contract expired in 1987, Williams Selyem began sourcing grapes from Cohn Vineyard, usually blending them
into the Russian River Valley and Sonoma County bottlings. A vineyard designated Cohn Vineyard Pinot Noir
was produced in only two vintages: 1988 and 1993. Burt dropped the vineyard in 1995 when owner Arne Cohn
put in drip irrigation and over-watered the vineyard.
I was able to acquire a pristine bottle of 1993 Cohn Vineyard Pinot Noir from a collector and recently shared it
with winemakers Michael Sullivan of Benovia Winery and Rod Berglund of Joseph Swan Vineyards. The wine
had astonishing freshness and color, infused with aromas of incense, spice, Bing cherry and rose petal that
held up for an hour while the bottle was consumed. Tasted blind, it would have been impossible to identify this
wine as 23 years old. The balance was impeccable, the oak thoroughly immersed, and the tannins gossamer in
nature. It was without doubt one of the greatest, if not the greatest, old California Pinot Noir I have ever tasted
in over 40 years of tasting Pinot Noir.
Grape sources were critical for the success of Williams Selyem and Allen Vineyard become one of the
cornerstone sources of Pinot Noir for the winery. Since Burt and Ed had spent a significant part of their lives in
the Russian River Valley, they knew where the good vineyards were located. In 1987, Joe Rochioli introduced
Burt and Ed to Howard Allen who owned a vineyard farmed by Joe Rochioli that was located directly across
from Rochioli Vineyard on Westside Road. Not every vineyard met Williams Selyem’s high standards and only
the best were deemed able to stand on their own as a vineyard designate. Allen Vineyard was consistently one
of the favored vineyards in the Williams Selyem vineyard designate program.
The 1995 Williams Selyem Allen Vineyard Pinot Noir that I opened recently was a delight. The color had turned
a brickish red and was hazy (unfiltered). Upon opening, aromas of spice, leather, woodland and cherry zoomed
from the glass, but faded over time. The wine was still fascinating to drink, offering ever changing nuances of
flavor including cherry, strawberry, orange-infused cranberry, orange pekoe tea, and brown spice. At 13.7%
alcohol, the wine was easy to drink, with resolved tannins and a sappy richness still persisting on a surprisingly
long finish. Not epiphanic like the Cohn bottling, but still engaging.
More examples of aged Williams Selyem Pinot Noir were reviewed in 2014 here: www.princeofpinot.com/
article/1487/.