It may not be an eigenstate of $\hat L_z$ but, if the system is in a pure state, it will be an eigenstate of $\hat L_{\hat n}=\hat n\cdot \vec L$, i.e. it will be an eigenvector of the projection of angular momentum in some direction $\hat n$.
It may be tricky to find this direction but one way might be to make a beam that travels through weak magnetic field and reorient the field gradient until one gets a single spot on a screen, i.e. until all particles are deflected in the same direction by the same amount.
Since $L_z$, together with $\vec L\cdot\vec L$ are a set of commuting hermitian operators, we are guaranteed their eigenvectors form a complete set, i.e. that any state can be expanded in these eigenvectors.
In our particular case, it’s not hard to write the eigenvectors of $\hat L_{\hat n}$ as a linear combination of eigenvectors of $\hat L_z$: just find the rotation ${\cal R}$ that takes $\hat z$ to $\hat n$ and rotate the eigenstates of $\hat L_z$ accordingly.