Burglar,
My experiment with my engine started as a Head and cam change. Evolved into an engine change, and It ended as a sound motor, but a costly one.
My engine is not a crate engine. It is a Hi perf. short block with edelbrock heads, Compcam HE268H, and it has a combination of stock parts (manifold, carb) together with after market parts (roller tip rockers, dual sproket chain, water pump, etc). The cam is based on my wishes for a 330 - 350 Hp engine that will still operate vaccum components. One can get more radical that this cam still.
I did it the hard way, for in my haste, I ended relying on a Speed Shop for the procurement of the components. The net result was a very strong 9.7 CR engine, but I probably could have bought a ZZ4 crate for the amount of money I have spent. Then the labor would have been on me.
Nevertheless, with the labor costs ($650.00 Complete), and incidentals (ARP hardware, hardened push rods, gaskets, and others) I probably overpaid nearly $1,000 by doing the engine A La Carte. The final total was $3,500, and although I have my original cam, heads, and block, the best choice would have been a crate motor (with GM warranty). I've spent GM's profits from a crate motor for a very strong and skillfull knowledge base (the speed shop), upgraded miscelaneous hardware, and a little micro-managing of my engine on my part.
I am very happy with my motor, and I am having fun tweeking it with more parts (WEiand manifold, Jet Performance computer chip, Hedman headers). Researched information here and through key individuals such as Rare81, Tom73, Stingray6974, 69MyWay, Evolution, and in fact the CAC and L81 community at large

).
Yes, crate engine
is the answer, but I cannot readily help you on which to choose. Just think of what you want your engine to do and add a good 40% budget for incidentals/unknowns. Does it add to a crate engine, then buy crate engine and avoid the hassles.
As they say: "you can pay me now or you can pay me later, but pay me you will"... :cry