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{{Infobox Beverage
{{Infobox Beverage
|name=Ale 8 One
|name=Ale 8 One
|image=
|image=[[Image:Popular Kentucky Soft Drink Ale-8-1 Logo.png|250px]]
<gallery>
File:Example.jpg|Caption1
File:Example.jpg|Caption2
</gallery>
|type=[[Ginger Ale]]
|type=[[Ginger Ale]]
|manufacturer='''Ale-8-One Bottling Company, Inc.'''
|manufacturer='''Ale-8-One Bottling Company, Inc.'''

Revision as of 17:14, 3 January 2013

Ale 8 One
TypeGinger Ale
ManufacturerAle-8-One Bottling Company, Inc.
Country of origin United States
Introduced1926
Websitewww.ale-8-one.com Edit this on Wikidata

Ale-8-One, known colloquially as Ale-8, is a regional ginger-flavored soft drink, distributed primarily to brick and mortar retailers in Kentucky, southern Ohio and Indiana and eastern Tennessee. Limited distribution is available in Georgia and Florida. It is bottled by the Ale-8-One Bottling Company, a family-owned enterprise in the small town of Winchester, Kentucky, near Lexington, where the beverage is especially popular.

Ale-8 could be described as a ginger ale with a kick. It is a ginger and citrus blend, containing less carbonation, and fewer calories than conventional soda.

History

The formula for Ale-8-One was developed by soda bottler G. L. Wainscott in the 1920s.[1] According to text on the back of some Ale-8 bottles, "Wainscott was an eccentric old man; however, there was nothing odd about his creation." Wainscott, who had been in the soda business in Winchester, Kentucky since 1902, had developed Roxa-Kola, his previous flagship product, in 1906.[1] In creating the formula for Ale-8-One, Wainscott drew upon his knowledge of ginger-based recipes acquired during extensive travels in northern Europe.[1]

Wainscott began bottling his new creation in 1926.[1] To choose a name for the drink, he sponsored one of the first name-the-product contests in the United States; "A Late One" was chosen as the winning entry.[1] Wainscott conceived of the "Ale-8-One" logo (designed to resemble a mail clerk's scrawl) as a pun suggesting that his product was "the latest thing" in soft drinks.

In 1935, Wainscott purchased a livery stable in Winchester and converted it to a bottling factory to expand his operation.[1] Upon Wainscott's death in 1944, half of his company stock went to his wife; the other half was divided among his employees.[1] When his wife died in 1954, her stock was left to her brother, Frank A. Rogers, Sr.[1] Rogers bought the remaining company stock in 1962 and incorporated the Ale-8-One Bottling Company.[1] He named his son, Frank Rogers, Jr. manager of the new company.[1] The company grew rapidly, and the younger Rogers was elevated to president.[1]

The Ale-8-One Bottling Company constructed a new plant in Winchester in 1965.[1] It ceased production of Roxa-Kola in 1968, and by 1974, had halted production of all its other drinks to focus on Ale-8-One when Frank A. Rogers III joined the management team.[1] The facility has been expanded several times, including the addition of a warehouse in 1976, a syrup room in 1981, and a two-story office complex in 1989.[1] The company remains under the control of the Rogers family.[1] The current president is Wainscott's great, great-nephew, Fielding A. Rogers.

Composition

The recipe for Ale-8 is a closely guarded family secret. Reportedly, only two executives—Company president Frank A. Rogers, III and Fielding Rogers, Executive Vice-President and heir-apparent to the company—know the exact composition. According to the product label, Ale-8's ingredients include "carbonated water, sugar and/or corn sweetener, glycerine, natural and artificial flavorings, citric acid, sodium benzoate (preservative), caramel coloring, phosphoric acid, [and] caffeine." Each 12-fluid ounce (355-ml) serving contains 37 mg of caffeine and 30 g of sugars. (For comparison, the same serving of Coca Cola Classic in the U.S. has 34 mg of caffeine and 39 g of sugars.) The company readily admits that natural ginger is included among Ale-8's flavorings. A trace of citrus can also be discerned.

In 2003, the company announced limited distribution of Diet Ale-8, its first new product since the introduction of the original Ale-8 in 1926. Diet Ale 8 contains 44 mg of caffeine (compared to 45 mg for Diet Coke) and no sugars. The diet variety is sweetened with a mixture of acesulfame potassium and sucralose, the latter being more commonly known under the brand name Splenda.

Availability and distribution

For much of its history, Ale-8 was only available in Kentucky, though it was briefly available in parts of the Southeast, including Florida, in the early 1980s. In April 2001, however, the Ale-8-One Bottling Company expanded its distribution to areas of southern Ohio, and southern Indiana Indiana, through an agreement with Coca-Cola Enterprises. Today, the company also ships cases of its product directly to consumers worldwide through its website.

Consumption

A 6-pack of the Ale-8 returnable long-necks

Ale-8 is available in glass bottles, aluminum cans and plastic bottles. It is widely preferred that the beverage be drunk from a glass bottle, rather than cans or plastic bottles. Ale-8 traditionalists are even known to refuse to drink Ale-8 from the newer glass bottles. Instead, they prefer the older "returnable" glass bottles. The "returnable" bottles are often referred to as long-necks or green dragons.

Some Kentuckians are fond of mixing Ale-8-One with one of the commonwealth's many bourbons, such as Maker's Mark, Wild Turkey, or Buffalo Trace. This has been named the "Kentucky Cocktail".[2]

Ale-8 is also often mixed with vodka, with the resulting concoction known as a "Tender Lovin'".[3] Seagram's Seven and Ale-8 are mixed to produce Kentucky Beer.[4]

References

  • Walton, Riley Rogers (1992). "Ale-8-One". In John E. Kleber (ed.). The Kentucky Encyclopedia. Associate editors: Thomas D. Clark, Lowell H. Harrison, and James C. Klotter. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-1772-0. Retrieved 2011-11-02.