(11.7% ABV) Some brewers will make a
strong old ale for bottling. Some of these can mature for several years after bottling, and may or may not be
bottle-conditioned. The "October" keeping ales are thought to have formed the basis for
India pale ales shipped by the
British East India Company. Another historic version was so-called "majority ale", a strong ale brewed on or around the birth of a child, and intended to be drunk on the child's twenty-first birthday. Some old ales blended older vintages with fresh beer in vats, on the
solera system. Burton Ale brewed by the Ballantine brewery (
Newark, New Jersey) was such a beer, and kept in production as a gift item for distributors and VIPs up until the closing of the brewery in 1972. The only surviving representatives are
Greene King 5X and
The Bruery's anniversary ales.
Sour old ales fermented with
Brettanomyces yeast were popular in 19th-century Britain. The style is now associated more with
Belgian brewing, for instance
oud bruin and
Rodenbach Grand Cru, although there is one surviving British example,
Gales Prize Old Ale. A number of breweries, particularly in Sussex, produce a weaker style of old ale with some resemblance to a
mild ale. Examples include
King and Barnes (later W. J King) (4.5% ABV) and
Harveys (4.3% ABV) These are typically consumed on draught dispense. ==Notes==