Lost Lantern’s Spring Collection Celebrates the Midwest

Seven new bottles showcase the finest rye, wheat and bourbon whiskeys from the heartland

Lost Lantern Spring 2024 Midwest Collection

The 7 bottles in Lost Lantern's Spring 2024 Midwest Collection

By Kirk Miller

What we’re drinking: Lost Lantern Spring 2024 Collection

Where it’s from: Co-founded by Nora Ganley-Roper and Adam Polonski, this independent bottler from Vermont offers unique, limited-edition releases from American craft distilleries, all under one label (we’re fans). The expressions are cask strength, non-chill-filtered and with no color added. 

Why we’re drinking these: For their inaugural foray into a regional collection, Lost Lantern is focusing on the Midwest. “That area has been one of the unsung heroes of American whiskey,” Polonski says. “Texas and the Pacific Northwest are getting attention, but what we’ve found is that really high-quality stuff is coming out of the Midwest. There are some consistent flavors across the region because of the climate.”

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“There’s a mouthfeel in these whiskeys, a creaminess of the palate from the cooler climate that we’ve seen across the distilleries,” Ganley-Roper says. 

The release features seven bottlings, including Far-Flung Rye, a multi-distillery blend of rye whiskies from across the Midwest and six single casks from distilleries across the region. The collection includes Lost Lantern’s first-ever whiskies from Wisconsin and Illinois.

“I find a lot of people from the Midwest don’t tend to go out and talk about how everything they’re doing is incredible,” Polonski says. “They’re just quietly making amazing whiskey. So we wanted to go out and champion them.”

Lost Lantern Far-Flung Rye, a standout of the Midwest collection
Lost Lantern

How they taste:

Fun fact: While some Lost Lantern releases sell out in a day or as little as an hour (like their Tequila Matured Balcones Single Malt), a few of their esoteric releases take longer to find an audience. “We did a Westward Whiskey that was a chardonnay-finished single malt,” Ganely-Roper says. “I loved it, but I think it scared some people.”

Where to buy: The Midwest collection will be available at the new Lost Lantern Tasting Room in Vergennes, VT, and online at LostLanternWhiskey.com and Seelbachs.com beginning March 27. It’s also available at select retailers in New York and California.

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