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Preston Farm and Winery Preston Farm and Winery

Food & Farm

Farming is a complex endeavor. So much more than cultivating the soil and growing crops, we know it as a weaving of scientific, ecological, social and spiritual dimensions. From 1973 when we adopted this beautiful land in Dry Creek Valley we have become part of that tapestry, both making it our own and indeed becoming one of its crops.

When you look at this farm you will see both chaos and order. There are the vineyards and fruit trees side by side. Native and exotic hedgerows guarding vegetable-growing areas and pastured livestock, small fields of grain hiding birds, squirrels and coyotes, and rushing creeks protecting spawning salmon. Wines inspired by our Italian antecedents and the more recently adopted Rhone-style blends lend breadth to our practice of farming. Having a variety of crops reduces our land’s exposure to disease and pests common to monoculture farming, and it insures the balance of nature that makes organic techniques work.

The job we take most seriously is soil building, with the regular planting of cover crops and the addition of Organic composts to stimulate life under the soil surface. We honor the coexistence of both cultivated and wild areas through the restoration of native habitat along our creeks and by keeping pockets of our acreage rugged and untamed. We utilize the integrative contribution of livestock when it can replace human interference. Philosophically and practically our approach is that less is more: less disturbance, less cultivation, fewer “inputs” or imported materials, and less intrusive procedures.

CSA

Our Winter 2025 – 2026 CSA sign ups are now open! Winter is a beautiful time on the farm and despite the wind and rain, we do not stop growing food during these months. In fact, some of our favorite crops thrive in the dark, chilly dampness: broccoli, kale, chard, carrots, turnips, cauliflower, carrots, leeks, Asian greens, spinach, and hearty lettuces. Not to mention the citrus! The oranges, limes, and kumquats look abundant this year. With our local farmers’ market ending mid- December and our wholesale orders slowing down for the season, we feel a shift inward, toward home and community. By bringing together families and foodies alike, everyone can experience the fullness of winter on the farm by connecting over food, wine, and our natural world; threads that connect us all. 

 

The Winter CSA goal is to provide our community with a consistent supply of healthy, organic, and regenerative food. We are certified organic by CCOF, practice sustainable growing methods, and produce highly nutrient dense food with a low carbon footprint. By subscribing to our CSA program, you are pledging to support your local food system and in return, receiving a direct connection to your family farm. It would be our privilege to provide you and your family with fresh, healthy food all winter. 

 

While the world may feel tumultuous and chaotic at times, there is a steady beat on the farm. A natural rhythm that calms, centers, and offers clarity. The radishes emerge, the peas flower, the broccoli buds, the tomatoes blush, and the grapes ripen. Every year, without fail, even if the harvest window swings wide. No matter what happens out there, we will still be here to guide you through with grace, humor, and connection. We’re all the best hope we have, so I encourage you to sign up for a box of community support this winter season! 

 

Details, Benefits, and Additional Purchases:

 

Our 12 week season will run from Friday December 5th, 2025 through Friday March 6th, 2026. 

 

12 week Whole Share pickups will be held the following weekends:

12/5, 12/12, 12/19, *SKIP* 1/9, 1/16, 1/23, 1/30, 2/6, 2/13, 2/20, 2/27, and 3/6

 

7 week Half Share pickups will be held the following weekends:

12/5, 12/19, *SKIP* 1/9, 1/23, 2/6, 2/20, and 3/6

*We will skip the week of Christmas (Friday 12/26 – Sunday 1/4 2026) and will resume again Friday January 9th, 2026*  

 

Each subscription will contain an assortment of eight to ten seasonally appropriate fruits and vegetables. We will try to keep it balanced between roots, fruits, and leafy greens. An example box might contain leeks, cabbage, broccoli, Meyer lemons, kale, and one bunch of carrots. One box should feed a family of two to four people, depending on how avid you are about consuming vegetables! 

 

When you pick up your box, we have many other additional items for purchase in our Farm Store including our estate olive oil and sourdough bread made with grains grown, milled, and baked on our farm. Our cured olives, freshly milled polenta, and other dried goods can be found in the Farm Store as well. Wine and cider are for sale in our Tasting Room. 

 

As a CSA member, you will have first access to crops like spring strawberries, our limited citrus (kumquats, blood oranges, and Meyer lemons), fresh spring garlic, and bulk prices on cabbage for sauerkraut. You will also be able to reserve complementary picnic times at the winery. Picnic reservations can be made at https://prestonfarmandwinery.com/visit. We are hosting a CSA/Wine Club pick up pizza party on a Saturday in late February. I will let you know the date as we get closer and hopefully you can make it and enjoy the bounty of winter vegetables on delicious pizza and sample our wines! We will also be continuing our Jug Sunday events this winter on the first Sunday of every month, so if the weather is nice, bring a picnic and enjoy the warm winter sun on the lawn.

 

Pick Up Details:

Pick up will be offered every Friday from 1 pm – 4 pm; Saturday, and Sunday from 10 am – 4 pm at Preston Farm and Winery. Please let me know which day you will be coming to pick up your box. You can also pick up your box at the Saturday Healdsburg Farmers’ Market on 12/6 and 12/12. We will not be at the last market on 12/19.

 

Cost and Length of Membership:

Full 12 week subscription: $360 

Half 7 week subscription (pick up every other week or for 7 consecutive weeks): $210  

When you place your order, please specify which schedule works for you (every other week or 7 consecutive weeks). Please notify us by Friday if you will be unable to pick up your box that weekend.  

 

Once you sign up, I’ll send you a confirmation email to let you know your order was received. The Monday before the first week’s pick up, I will send a big welcome email with lots of details and a list of what to expect in your box that week. 

 

*Gift a membership! If you are unable to pick up your box at any time, you may “gift” the box to anyone and they can have your share. Email kristin@prestonfarmandwinery.com by the Friday of that week. Boxes not picked up by Monday morning will be donated to our local food pantry.

Order CSA Here

Crops & Orchards

We began our Dry Creek farming enterprise with an emphasis on vineyards. This singular focus changed over time to include food crops that complemented the wines we made and conversed with the soils and climate of the local region. There were examples galore on our property when we arrived: the apple trees along the road next to the barn, walnut trees throwing shade on the hot south-facing side of the house, olive trees overgrown behind the chicken coop. Today our farm sports 25 varieties of heirloom apples for eating and cider, peach trees, pears, figs, plums, pomegranates, quince and more. Newer varieties of walnut join the 100 year old heritage trees, 3 acres of annual row crops dance in rotation with 15 acres of pasture, and 1500 olive trees feed the local olive mill. Visitors perambulating our grounds will discover the known, the exotic, the tasty and the fragrant. And there is always a happy abundance of food to be enjoyed and purchased in our farm store.

Bread & Grain

Susan introduced Lou to the family food traditions of her Italian ancestors which included her Nonna baking in a brick forno. Unsurprisingly, Lou took on the art of bread baking in the 1990s the way he tackled winemaking in the 70s. Beginning with yeasted loaves, he soon moved on to the fermentation challenge of sourdough, fueled by inspiration from contemporary artisans and authors. A simple adobe oven in the winery gardens led eventually to a meeting with the legendary Alan Scott, who built an authentic old-world wood-fired brick oven on the premises.

We first became known for our “Country White,” a holey sourdough loaf that blends whole grains from the farm with organic white flour from an equally obsessed provisioner, Keith Giusto’s Flours. In more recent years we have begun growing grain ourselves, so that our breads will also express the terroir of the farm. Each year we test different heirloom wheats, ryes and barleys.

Olives & Oil

An impromptu visit in the late 1980s to a wine and oil exhibition in Modena, Italy, jumpstarted an olive oil project that has since become an important feature of the farm. In his suitcase Lou brought back a handful of nursery trees that started it all: Leccino, Pendolino, Casaliva and Grignano. Today our scattered orchards include 1500 trees and 10 different varieties, all farmed organically. We produce an Extra Virgin Olive Oil; gastronomic pundits liken it to a spicy, fruity Tuscan olive oil. We celebrate it as a natural complement to the other foods we grow here on the farm, and as the perfect dipper for our freshly baked breads.

Livestock

Following the example of the Cavallo family whose home we gained as our own in the early 70s, we raised backyard hens when our girls were young. But it wasn’t until we began the commitment to organic management in the early 2000s that we made the shift to species diversity. With the presence of sheep and chickens our land has taken on the glow of life that these creatures bring to it. Our livestock nurture our soil, provide us with sustenance and help us to further understand the vital importance of a holistically unified farm. And of course it gives us an additional crop! You will find pastured eggs in our farm store along with ground lamb and sausage when available.

Community

Growing food is a collaborative project. Carlo Petrini, founder of Slow Food, referred to the patrons of a farm as “co-producers,” alluding to the mutual support, sharing and conviviality of thoughtful farming.

Our community is multi-faceted. It includes fellow farmers with whom we exchange challenges and techniques, successes and failures. Locals who share a common township bond. Food enthusiasts who never miss the local farmer’s market, who come to trade stories as much as to buy strawberries. City folk longing for a time-tested connection with the land. And of course the local chefs, artistic wizards of taste who conjure up dreams from our fruits and vegetables. We reach out to all of these as collaborators, supporters and partners.

Our produce can be found at local restaurants, the Healdsburg Farmer’s Market and the Cloverdale Farmer’s Market. Our Farmstore is open daily from 11 to 4:30 and also features our produce along with our pasture-laid eggs and pasture-raised ground lamb.

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    Preston Farm and Winery
    9282 West Dry Creek Road
    Healdsburg, CA 95448
    mail@prestonvineyards.com
    707-433-3372

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