Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Baltimore Spirits taps history and innovation in every bottle

- By Lisa Futterman

I recently had drinks with Max Lents, of the Baltimore Spirits Co., to taste through his innovative lineup of spirits that the distillery is rolling out around the country. First Max ordered us a Negroni made from his Shot Tower Gin, replacing the traditiona­l Campari with his Szechuan amaro. It sipped floral and aromatic, with barely a hint of the peppercorn sharpness I expected. Next we tried an up-drink of Fumus Pumila, his smoked apple brandy, with lime and orange liqueur.

Said Lents, “This one straddles the line between daiquiri and margarita” — it showed off the mezcal qualities and deep fruitiness of the unique spirit. I was all-in.

Lents launched the distillery with his old friends Eli Breitburg-Smith and Ian Newton in 2014, when the craft distillery scene in Maryland was pretty barren. They started with the aforementi­oned gin, playing around in a 10-liter moonshinin­g still in Max’s kitchen. The result shows a floral style with a delicate, green tea finish at a forceful 100 proof.

“We make Shot Tower with a compacted proof designed to open up in cocktails — which also ups its value in the bottle,” Lents explains. After hitting the gin profile they wanted, the team created a ninemonth “barrel rested” version that zaps those delicate flower notes and brings out the typical vanilla flavors found in oak-aged spirits.

Next they set out to conquer amari, the Italian bitter after-dinner liqueurs, eventually landing on three variations of Baltamaro that create a handsome set. Overproofe­d Fernet (Volume 1), made with rhubarb root, is the most herbal, Alpine version, with a bracing eucalyptus flavor and a whiskeylik­e finish. The Szechuan (Volume 2) grew from playing with a three peppercorn liqueur — the Szechuan berry shows its citrusy side with caramel notes and heat at the end. The dark aspect of coffee comes out in Volume 3, rich with citrus peel, star anise and cascara, the husk of the coffee berry.

Though the distillery’s copper pot stills are “slow and inefficien­t,” they create the best result, Lents says.

The line includes the aforementi­oned Fumus Pumila, “the world’s only mezcal-style apple brandy,” made from raw juice fermented with smoked apple peels to mimic the traditiona­l spirit made from roasted agaves. Their New World spirits reflect Baltimore Spirits Co.’s ability to embrace history and innovation in every bottle.

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