Agreed, this is a great thread. I'm still learning the ropes, but so far I've done:
(1) A Lambic-style beer with 70% pilsner and 30% wheat, no hops, and Imperial Sour Batch Kidz. I split it into 4 1 gallon batches, one I'm drinking young, one is being aged for blending later, one went onto a big can of mango pulp and another went on a kilo of cherries. They are all tart. The young one is this side of good, the fruit ones are a bit too much, in fact I don't think I've ever had a sour as sour as these, and I've tried 'em all! I think I'll save them for blending with something sweeter, perhaps a brown ale to make something along the lines of Petrus aged red. I explain the extreme sourness by (1) It spent 4 months in a plastic fv and probably had a bit too much oxygen, (2) I mashed high so the sacch left loads of fermentables behind for the brett and lacto, (3) no hops, (4) pitching mixed right at the start to give the lacto a head start.
(2) I have a 33 month old triple and a 32 month old dubble that fermented a bit hot and are fusally. After reading a thread on homebrew talk that suggested that brett can metabolise fusal alcohols in the presence of oxygen, I decided to take a gallon of each, oxygenate the hell out of them, and age them on the yeast/bacteria cake from the lambic above. 6 months down the line, it has worked to a limited extent. The aged version tasted much better than the old one, but still give me a headache from hell the next morning.
(3) I've got two 11L glass carboys of Flander's Red ageing under the stairs. I direct pitched the Roeselare blend, and learnt my lessons from (1). I let the sacch do most it's work then racked to glass for aging. I'll leave one carboy for 18 months, at least, and might taste the other at around 12 months to see how it's going. Although not traditions, lots of people but unmalted wheat to give the non-sacch stuff a boost. I went a different route and added a bit of kamut, the taste of which I think will work very well in this style.
I have also done mixed fermentation chilli sauces with beer-brewing blends and wild bacterial from the garden and have just started playing about with krauts and kimchi. Last year I bought the agar, inoculation loops etc... to start harvesting, isolating, banking and propagating yeasts and bacteria, either commercial or wild. So far I'm just banking single sacch strains but I hope to have a bit of time to play around with more exotic stuff in the summer, mostly for beer but also for food.