I did not realize sour beers were so complicated. Have yet to make one. Like I said this beer taste great just the aroma was terrible. Smelled like someone had a few to many the night before and puked in my glass. I never would have tried it if I had smelled the smell first except for I took a huge swig before I got a whiff of the vomit smell. Let's put it this was the flavor was good enough to keep drinking it with my nose plugged. Would love to see how it taste without the off aroma. Think it would turn out to be my favorite beer.
I'd recommend trying some of the most well-known lambic fruit beers. Like I said, I've never had a commercial beer with butyric acid (the source of the vomit smell), but I'd imagine some inexperienced local breweries might release stuff like that, whereas any brewery worth their salt would dump that stuff and not even consider releasing it.
If you liked the sour/fruit combination, here are a few of the most easy-to-find world-renowned fruit lambics:
Lindemans Kriek (sour cherry lambic sour beer):
Lindemans Framboise (raspberry lambic sour beer):
Lindemans Cassis (Black currant lambic sour beer):
All of those fruit lambics are sweetened and pasteurized because it makes them more "accessible," so they are great jumping off points.
If you want to try some unsweetened lambics, there are quite a few. Even New Belgium makes a kriek (sour cherry ale) that is a collaboration with the Belgian lambic brewery, Oud Beersel. Theirs is unsweetened and pretty damn good.
And if you want to try a sour beer without fruit, here are a few recommendations:
Lindemans Cuvee Renee (an oude gueuze, which is a blend of very old and young lambics. Very good, but probably not a good place to start with sour beers):
Rodenbach Grand Cru (a very nice Flemish Red Ale):
Duchess de Bourgogne (a nice Flemish Brown Ale):
New Belgium La Folie (basically an American take on a Flemish Brown Ale):
The Lindemans fruit ales should be easily found at any decent sized store specializing in beer. The unsweetened sour beers are pretty famous and well-distributed, but you might need a larger, better-stocked beer store to find them.