(Press Release)
NEW YORK and ASHEVILLE, N.C.–Wicked Weed Brewing, one of Asheville’s most creative and fastest-growing craft breweries will be joining The High End, Anheuser-Busch’s business unit focused on its craft and import brands.
Wicked Weed, founded in Asheville in 2012 by Walt and Luke Dickinson and lifelong friends Ryan, Rick and Denise Guthy, has created over 500 different beers since it opened almost five years ago. Starting with clean West Coast IPAs and authentic Belgian ales, Wicked Weed has progressively moved into creating sours. Now, Wicked Weed is widely known for their west coast style IPA’s including GABF silver medal winners Pernicious IPA, Lunatic Belgian Blonde as well as a wide range of award winning barrel-aged sour and farmhouse ales.
“This is an exciting time for the entire brewing team,” said co-founder Walt Dickinson. “Our ability to create a wide range of really well executed beers that are focused on creativity, quality and drinkability is what makes Wicked Weed great. We have chosen to partner with The High End to position ourselves to make Wicked Weed what we imagined it could be when we first sat at a craft beer bar and talked about opening a brewery. As a brewer, giving our team more resources to continue innovating our portfolio and the ability to reach more craft drinkers, allows us to keep putting the beer and the people first.”
Wicked Weed Brewing owns and operates four facilities in Asheville: their original Downtown brewpub where they produce over 150 different beers a year, the “Funkatorium,” the first dedicated sour beer taproom and barrel house on the East Coast, a 50-barrel production brewery in West Asheville, and the “Funk House and company headquarters,” a custom-designed brewhouse and training facility.
“Asheville has been our home for almost thirty years, and we believe this partnership will benefit our entire community, which has a deeply rooted passion for beer,” added co-founder Rick Guthy. “With our team’s heightened ability to innovate our hoppy and sour styles using the highest-quality ingredients around, we hope more and more beer drinkers will flock to Asheville to taste what we have to offer. Our pub and Funkatorium will stay focused on producing creative beers and will be part of Asheville’s beer tourism for years to come.”
“We are excited to welcome Walt, Luke, Ryan, Rick, Denise, and the entire Wicked Weed team into our High End family, said Felipe Szpigel, president, The High End. “It’s clear to me Wicked Weed is redefining what sophistication in beer can mean, with their amazing offerings being relevant in a wide variety of occasions. Their ability to brew the highest quality beers, in a variety of styles, along with their exciting barrel program, leads me to be optimistic about what our futures hold together.”
Anheuser-Busch’s partnership with Wicked Weed is subject to regulatory approval. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed.
About Wicked Weed Brewing
Wicked Weed Brewing is based in Asheville, North Carolina. Founded in December 2012, the original brewpub consistently hosts 25+ beers on tap including hop-forward, West Coast-style ales, open fermented Belgians, and barrel-aged beers. With the opening of the second location, The Funkatorium, in October 2013, Wicked Weed is striving to become one of the leading producers of barrel-aged sour and wild beers in the Southeastern United States.
Wicked Weed Brewing was awarded a gold medal for both 100% Brettanomyces Serenity in 2013, Mompara Honey Ale in 2014, a silver medal for Pernicious IPA in 2015, and a silver medal for Lunatic Belgian Blonde at the Great American Beer Festival. The brewery also received a bronze medal for Tyrant Double Red IPA in 2014, a bronze medal for La Bonté Pear in 2016 and a bronze medal for Red Angel in 2016 at the World Beer Cup. Wicked Weed continued its expansion in summer 2015 with a 50-barrel production brewery allowing for a wider distribution footprint in select states, and added a sour and wild dedicated brewery and barrel-house in South Asheville in fall 2016. Learn more at www.wickedweedbrewing.com
About Anheuser-Busch
For more than 160 years, Anheuser-Busch and its world-class brewmasters have carried on a legacy of brewing America’s most-popular beers. Starting with the finest ingredients sourced from Anheuser-Busch’s family of growers, every batch is crafted using the same exacting standards and time-honored traditions passed down through generations of proud Anheuser-Busch brewmasters and employees. Anheuser-Busch owns and operates 19 breweries, 21 distributorships and 22 agricultural and packaging facilities, employing more than 16,000 people across the United States. For more information, visit www.anheuser-busch.com.
About The High End
The High End is a business unit of Anheuser-Busch, created to provide its unique craft and European import brands with autonomy and support for growth, while fostering a collaborative environment for the brightest brewers in the beer community. The High End brings dedicated resources to support the growth of its brands, create successful partnerships and deliver more variety to consumers. Established in 2015, The High End includes brands such as Stella Artois and Shock Top, along with craft partners Goose Island, Blue Point, 10 Barrel, Elysian, Golden Road, Virtue Cider, Four Peaks, Breckenridge Brewery, Devils Backbone, SpikedSeltzer and Karbach Brewing Co.
What a shame. You’d think Wicked Weed would know not to sell out to big beer. Yet another craft beer I will not drink.
I concur. The big name brew crap is finding a way to make sure our wonderful NC breweries can’t make over 24,999 barrels of beer a year!!! Never would’ve thought WW would sell out
Agreed
Just say no to BudWeed. No more weed for me.
Truly a shame…sellout !!!
That’s a pretty silly reason to not drink a beer. If they are able to maintain the quality of their product, drink it. Plus you don’t know how much money they just made. Everyone has a price.
I guess Wicked Weed won’t have to worry about legislation enabling them to increase their capacity. They just sold out to the very entities that paid lobbyists to kill that legislation. Big beer makes it virtually impossible for craft brewers to gain shelf space in supermarkets unless the craft brewers pay a hefty fee to get good position. No Lunatic Bud for me.
In this response lies the answer
It would be pretty silly for me to send my money to the big beer behemoths when there a large number of great beers being brewed by small, local brewers who would appreciate my business.
Y’know, big business is NOT the enemy of craft brewing. Every time I hear the, “I’m not drinking that crap anymore because they sold out” argument, I want to sit down with the hippie next to me and talk about the facts of life. As long as their products don’t fundamentally change, you’re still drinking local beer, brewed by local people that, BTW, you’ve enjoyed for years.
More money means MORE BEER! I still appreciate start-ups like Scofflaw, Wild Heaven, Wedge and Hi Wire, but I would drink even more if I could buy it when and wherever I want. I also still drink Ballast Point, Sweetwater and Terrapin…because it’s great beer! I also listen to Nirvana, REM and the Killers. They’re big stars because they’re awesome…which is why the universe has allowed them to become rich doing what they love.
All I’m saying is there’s nothing wrong with being profitable. Integrity and cash flow are sometimes related…don’t hate success just got the sake of appreciating the little guy.
While it is sad to see another local brewery get swallowed up, I am happy for them, if that’s what they want for their business. If you owned an internet company and Google or Apple showed up on your door step with a HUGE check, what would you do???
Sad 🙁 used to be my favorite
Would you turn down the $$$$$$ if it was you? Don’t be hypocrites people.
http://goodbeerhunting.com/blog/2017/5/5/watch-the-hands-not-the-cards-the-magic-of-megabrew?platform=hootsuite
Part of me says ‘Sell Out’ but the business side of me says GOOD GOING WW! I mean…if it were my business..I’d have done it.