Au Bon Climat

Au Bon Climat is a Santa Barbara winery holding a Pearl 3 Star Prestige rating (2025), recognized as one of the Central Coast's most consequential producers of Burgundian varieties. Operating from its Anacapa Street address, the winery has built a reputation on restraint-led Pinot Noir and Chardonnay that speak directly to the cool-climate character of Santa Barbara County's inland valleys.

Santa Barbara's Burgundian Vocation
California's Central Coast has spent decades sorting itself into identity tiers. Napa anchors the conversation with Cabernet; Paso Robles has claimed bold, sun-driven reds; and Santa Barbara County, owing almost entirely to a geological accident, has carved out a separate lane for cool-climate Burgundian varieties. The county's east-west transverse valleys — the Santa Ynez, Santa Maria, and Santa Rita Hills among them — pull cold Pacific air directly inland, dropping growing-season temperatures in ways that north-south coastal ranges do not allow elsewhere in California. The result is a growing season long enough for phenolic maturity but cool enough to hold the acidity and structural tension that Pinot Noir and Chardonnay demand. Au Bon Climat, working from 813 Anacapa Street in downtown Santa Barbara, sits at the center of that argument.
The winery earned a Pearl 3 Star Prestige rating in 2025, a recognition that places it among a narrow cohort of California producers whose work consistently reflects place rather than winemaking intervention. That distinction matters in a county where the reputation for Burgundian-style wine was built incrementally, winery by winery, over roughly four decades. Au Bon Climat has been part of that architecture from the early period of Santa Barbara's fine wine identity.
What the Land Delivers
Terroir expression in Santa Barbara County is inseparable from the fog patterns that move through the transverse valleys each morning. In the Santa Rita Hills, a designated American Viticultural Area established in 2001, diurnal temperature swings frequently exceed 50 degrees Fahrenheit between the warmest afternoon hour and the coolest pre-dawn reading. That range preserves natural acidity in grapes that, in warmer California appellations, would ripen toward high alcohol and softened structure. Chardonnay grown under these conditions retains the tartaric backbone that winemakers in intervention-heavy programs artificially reintroduce through acidification.
Pinot Noir is even more sensitive to these temperature signals. The variety's thin skin and early phenolic ripening make it prone to jammy, over-extracted results in warm climates; in Santa Barbara's cooler pockets, the same variety produces wines with red-fruit concentration, mineral lift, and a tensile quality that extends the finish without requiring new-oak architecture to manufacture weight. Au Bon Climat's position in the Santa Barbara wine scene has always been anchored to this argument: that the county's climate is structurally suited to producing Pinot and Chardonnay that do not need to imitate Burgundy because the land's conditions make the comparison organic.
Producers like Melville Vineyards and Winery and Sanguis Winery work within the same county framework, each interpreting the available terroir through a different set of choices about vine sourcing, extraction, and élevage. The diversity of outputs from a single county is itself evidence that Santa Barbara's terroir is responsive rather than monolithic: it rewards specificity, and producers who understand the individual vineyard blocks within it make markedly different wines from those who source broadly.
A Winery in Its Competitive Context
Within the Santa Barbara fine wine tier, Au Bon Climat occupies a position shaped by longevity and the Pearl 3 Star Prestige credential. That rating aligns it with a peer set defined less by price point and more by critical recognition and the consistency of terroir expression over multiple vintages. Santa Barbara Winery, one of the county's oldest producers, operates in the same civic geography and demonstrates how a downtown Santa Barbara address can serve as both tasting-room destination and production identity. Carr Vineyards and Winery similarly anchors itself to the urban tasting-room format that has become a defining feature of Santa Barbara's wine tourism infrastructure.
That infrastructure matters because it shapes how visitors engage with Santa Barbara wine in a way that, say, Napa Valley's appointment-only estate model does not. The density of tasting rooms within walking distance of each other on and around Anacapa and State Streets has created a circuit that allows comparison tasting across producers in a single afternoon. Au Bon Climat's address at 813 Anacapa Street places it within that circuit, making a visit combinable with stops at multiple producers without requiring a car between them.
For spirits rather than wine, Cutler's Artisan Spirits represents a different strand of Santa Barbara's craft-production scene, and its presence in the same general tasting-room district reflects how the category has broadened beyond wine-only itineraries in the county over the past decade.
Santa Barbara Wine in Broader California Context
California's restraint-led Pinot Noir and Chardonnay producers operate as a smaller, more specialized cohort within a state whose fine wine identity defaults to Napa Cabernet. The comparison is not simply stylistic: it reflects a different relationship to terroir, where the winemaker's role is primarily to avoid obscuring what the vineyard provides rather than to construct a wine toward a market expectation. Au Bon Climat's Pearl 3 Star Prestige rating in 2025 is a marker of where it sits within this cohort , not at the entry level of Central Coast production, but in the tier where vineyard specificity and vintage sensitivity are the primary editorial subjects.
Producers outside California operating in a similar philosophical register include Adelaida Vineyards in Paso Robles, which works with a cooler, limestone-influenced site than its county neighbors, and Adelsheim Vineyard in Newberg, Oregon, where Willamette Valley Pinot Noir provides a Pacific Northwest reference point for the same Burgundian conversation. For Napa-based producers working in the allocated, prestige-focused tier, Accendo Cellars in St. Helena represents a different set of production priorities that illustrates how varied California's upper wine tier is by region and variety. For international context, Abadía Retuerta in Sardón de Duero and Aberlour in Aberlour each demonstrate how terroir-committed production operates across radically different climates and traditions, a useful reminder that the underlying discipline at Au Bon Climat is not California-specific but belongs to a wider argument about what fine wine is for.
Planning a Visit
Au Bon Climat is located at 813 Anacapa Street, Suite 5b, in downtown Santa Barbara. The address places it within the city's compact tasting-room district, accessible on foot from the main hotel and restaurant corridor along State Street. For visitors planning a fuller day in Santa Barbara's wine scene, the EP Club Santa Barbara wineries guide covers the county's full producer range, from urban tasting rooms to vineyard estate visits in the Santa Ynez Valley. Those building a wider Santa Barbara itinerary should also consult the Santa Barbara restaurants guide, the Santa Barbara hotels guide, the Santa Barbara bars guide, and the Santa Barbara experiences guide to fill out the visit beyond wine.
Phone and hours data are not currently held in the EP Club database for Au Bon Climat; confirm current opening times and tasting formats directly with the winery before visiting, particularly if traveling outside peak season when hours at smaller producers often shift.
Frequently Asked Questions
What wines is Au Bon Climat known for?
Au Bon Climat is associated primarily with Pinot Noir and Chardonnay sourced from Santa Barbara County's cool-climate appellations, particularly the Santa Maria Valley and Santa Rita Hills. These are the two varieties that the county's transverse-valley geography suits structurally: long, cool growing seasons with high diurnal temperature variation produce wines with the acidity and phenolic detail that distinguish Santa Barbara Pinot and Chardonnay from warmer California expressions of the same grapes. The winery's Pearl 3 Star Prestige rating in 2025 reflects a track record of producing these varieties at a level recognized by independent critical assessment.
What is the standout thing about Au Bon Climat?
Among Santa Barbara County's Burgundian producers, Au Bon Climat's combination of longevity and the 2025 Pearl 3 Star Prestige recognition places it in a specific tier: producers whose work has been consistently evaluated at the prestige level across multiple vintages rather than on the strength of a single release. Located in downtown Santa Barbara rather than at a vineyard estate, the winery makes its wines accessible within the city's tasting-room circuit without requiring the full wine-country drive, which is a practical distinction for visitors whose itineraries are split between the coast and the inland valleys. Price data is not currently available in the EP Club record, so visitors should confirm current tasting fees and format directly with the winery.
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