Online raffle has five sets of rare Kentucky bourbons: Blanton’s, Weller, Four Roses

There are bourbon raffles with rare bottles and raffles with a flight of rare bottles. And now there’s one with multiple flights.

The Spirits of Kentucky Rare Bourbon Raffle, which is a fundraiser for God’s Pantry Food Bank, will draw for five packages, including the grand prize of a collection of E.H. Taylor, Jr. including Barrel Proof, Amaranth Grain of Gods, Four Grain and 18 Year Marriage.

Second prize is a six-bottle collection of W.L. Weller: Single Barrel, CYPB, Full Proof, 12, Antique and Special Reserve.

Third prize is a bundle of Blanton’s including a full set of the collectible stoppers.

Fourth prize is a four-bottle Four Roses package including Single Barrel, 2021 Limited Edition Small Batch, 2022 Limited Edition Small Batch and 130th Anniversary Limited Edition Small Batch.

Fifth prize (fifth!) winner gets a Buffalo Trace package including W.L. Weller Special Reserve, Blanton’s Single Barrel, E.H. Taylor Small Batch, Eagle Rare and Buffalo Trace.

Blanton’s Straight From The Barrel, an uncut unfiltered version of its sought-after premium bourbon with a suggested retail price of about $150, is one of the many bourbons in the God’s Pantry raffle.
Blanton’s Straight From The Barrel, an uncut unfiltered version of its sought-after premium bourbon with a suggested retail price of about $150, is one of the many bourbons in the God’s Pantry raffle.

How to enter God’s Pantry bourbon raffle

Tickets for the raffle are $100 each and only 1,000 will be sold. Ticket sales begin 9 a.m. Oct. 20 and you must be over 21 to buy tickets. Go online to godspantry.org/events/bourbonraffle/. Deadline for purchase is Nov. 27 at 9 p.m.

All the proceeds from the raffle will benefit God’s Pantry, which works with more than 475 food pantries and meal programs in 50 counties across Central and Eastern Kentucky. Last year, God’s Pantry distributed more than 40 million pounds of food to nearly 240,000 people. The food bank also has focused on helping Eastern Kentucky recover from catastrophic flooding.

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