Introducing Amass

Introducing Amass! A convivial new addition to our Funk Dungeon range of mixed fermentation beers, with a focus on community and good cheer.
The first release of Amass is a mixed fermentation heritage saison, aged in English red wine barrels and “wet hopped” during conditioning with freshly picked UK Cascade, grown in our designer James’ Yorkshire garden in the peaceful suburbs of Boston Spa. Light and refreshing with a zesty aroma and notes of oak and marmalade, rounded off in a delicately funky finish. We’ve put this in the yellow region of our special International Goat Unit (IGU) scale, reflecting that the “farmyard” character of this particular funky fellow is apparent without being too overwhelming – a relatively accessible beer with a nicely tart pH of 3.4.
The base beer is constructed using the preferred blend of malt and hops that has come to be known as the house style of the Funk Dungeon, using a hefty dose of heritage malt Plumage Archer alongside our house grain (Maris Otter), wheat, rye and a hint of crystal malt, with a sizeable addition of English grown hops. A variation of this base beer has formed the core of many of the Funk Dungeon releases over the years.
The difference with Amass is that we’re looking to use ingredients found within and collected by our local community to finish these releases, establishing an ethos of making best use of abundance and celebrating by sharing the rewards reaped from our collective endeavour!
Our designer James started growing his Cascade hops in West Leeds after getting involved with a local brewery’s hop-growing scheme in 2019. Despite moving across the city in the spring of 2023 when the hops had started to regrow after their winter dormancy, he managed to keep them alive with the help of his neighbour who was a professional gardener. In sunny Boston Spa, the hops have gone from strength to strength, doubling their yield each year since – culminating in the 2025 haul making its way into our very first Amass release. Commenting on the process, James said “It’s a really pleasurable experience growing hops – they’re fairly easy to manage and the speed at which they grow means you get to see progress throughout the summer – with numerous green leaves and bines shooting skywards joined later by the hop cones that produce that pleasant aroma. As long as they’re watered, managed and get access to whatever sunlight we are afforded – they make a great addition to a garden of any size. I encourage anyone with an interest in beer to look into growing hops themselves in whatever space they have available.”
Whilst this year’s release of Amass – Green Hop Saison features hops from a single garden, for future releases we hope to introduce a “forage to funk” scheme, in keeping with our pub, The Rising Sun, who operate a “field to fork” initiative whereby local growers can swap their surplus homegrown produce for beer tokens! We plan to offer drop off dates in September at our taproom (COMING SOON!) once the growing season is coming to an end. There’ll be opportunity to pick the hops ready for production with your fellow growers (we’ll provide the refreshments) and an event for the release of the beer with a free drink for hop growers – quality control is very important! The names of all contributors will be added to the bottle label too. So, if you already have hops with a home in your garden, or if you’re feeling inspired by James’ story above, keep your eyes peeled for details of how to get involved in time for this year’s harvest.
Amass is available now in 750ml bottles, both to trade customers and via our own shop (you can pick one up online, or pop into the shop to see us!). Just 5 kegs exist, which are already all spoken for! A couple are saved for some super special secret projects (more on that soon!) but look out for it on keg at the Draughtsman Alehouse, The Selden Arms in Worthing 10-12 April, and at our tap takeover at the King’s Arms in London on April 16th.
Join us in celebrating the finest of English terroir!


