Skip to main content

High on Hops: A Visit to Wicked Weed’s Funkatorium

The transformation of the adventurous drinker’s palate is one of the most interesting side effects of consuming a lot of beer.

The common path for many beer drinkers begins with lighter fare like sweet lagers and orange-tinted wheat beers. Hoppier brews are next, with pale and India pale ales adding bitterness and resin to the taste buds. That non-threatening start leads into darker porters and stouts and then veers toward more extreme interpretations of base styles that introduce complexity and boundary-expanding experiences.

Recommended Videos

Beyond that pinnacle of technical mastery lies a category of more experimental brews commonly referred to as sours.

Tasting your first sour beer can be an unsettling overload of the senses. It’s not out of the ordinary to experience a slightly painful pucker as your mouth attempts to deal with the intense flavors brought on by barrel aging, wild yeast strains or fruit additions. But once you develop a fondness for sours, you’ll only want to try more.

For fans of tart flavors, fringe Belgian styles, wood aging and the general unexpected, there is a haven for your ilk: Wicked Weed Brewing’s Funkatorium in Asheville, North Carolina.

Related Post: Explore Asheville N.C.’s Vibrant Beer Scene

The Funkatorium is home to Wicked Weed’s most unconventional beers. Located a few short blocks from the main brewery, it provides storage for their massive collection of barrels, a tasting room and outdoor patio.

In addition to getting sample pours and buying bottles, the tasting room also provides tables and a small but tightly curated menu of small plates, snacks and sandwiches that are just as odd as the beer list.

Canned eel, intensely garlicky popcorn and thick-toast peanut butter and jelly are offered to pair beside a handful of Wicked Weed’s core beers and an extended variety of specialty wild, sour ales crafted for the Funkatorium’s discerning audience.

These are beers that are worthy of your travels. The Genesis Blonde Sour evokes bitter apple and tropical fruit with a sweet-tart twist. Oblivion Sour Red is in the traditional Flanders style but brings in the flavors of blackberries and dates. It’s easy to drink, giving ample opportunity to explore its intricacies.

Wicked Weed’s Red Angel sour ale is so beloved that it has earned its own bottle release day festivities, where patrons line up for the chance to bring a taste home. It’s a transcendent burst of sour raspberries with a paint-peeling aroma that makes your teeth hurt before the first sip. But after it takes your breath away, it then steals your heart. Red Angel is an amazing feat of brewing, combined with an expertly managed aging process.

Asheville is home to dozens of craft breweries and has rightfully earned its honorary title of Beer City, USA. But no beer lover’s visit to Asheville would be complete without a side trip to Wicked Weed Brewing’s Funkatorium to get a taste for the next level in brewing extremes with its impressive collection of sour, funky, small batch wild ales.

Lee Heidel
Lee Heidel is the managing editor of Brew/Drink/Run, a website and podcast that promotes brewing your own beer, consuming the…
From rooftop pasta bars to iconic delis, here’s where to dine in Beverly Hills
A famous LA hood is full of good food
Beverly Hills.

There's no denying the glitz of Beverly Hills. The Los Angeles neighborhood is home to everything from Rolls Royces on most street corners and high-end shops to gigantic mansions. But it's also home to some stellar bars and restaurants that offer a taste of the place without necessarily damaging your bank account.

Sure, wander through Rodeo Drive and see how many celebrities you can spot. But don't depart without getting in a few fine dining experiences. Here's where to eat and drink in Beverly Hills.
Culina

Read more
Make yourself a grown up cognac cocktail for National Lemonade Day
Lemons

The first Saturday in May each year is dedicated to National Lemonade Day, as the weather warms up and the demand for cool drinks soars. Kids are encouraged to try their hands at entrepreneurship by setting up their own lemonade stands, and everyone gets to enjoy a refreshing beverage. And as a European, even I must admit that American lemonade, with its sharp flavors from fresh lemons, is truly a cut above the soda-like beverage which we call lemonade on our side of the pond.

If you're looking for a more adult take on a lemonade, though, then you can always try out a cocktail. While there are plenty of classic cocktails which feature lemon juice -- most notably, the whole family of sours, which consist of lemon juice, a little sugar syrup, and a spirit -- there are fewer which take advantage of lemonade. With its bold flavors and plentiful sweetness, lemonade can be overpowering to some ingredients, so you need to use a spirit with plenty of body and flavor such as a cognac.

Read more
Bagels by day, sushi by night: The era of the wildly adaptable restaurant
The trend means exciting new opportunities for diners
The Counter at Odell's Bagel

Restaurants are some of the most adaptable animals on the planet. When conditions shift, whether it be a lesser economy or a pandemic, they go chameleon. America's best restaurants simply have to; it's a means of survival.

Adaptability is very much on the current list of restaurant trends. Rising costs — both in terms of products and rent — are making things incredibly challenging for the industry at large. Couple that with trade wars and an uncertain future, and you've got a recipe for, well, significant pivots.

Read more