I had not tried coopers sparkling ale, I was more interested in just creating a beer that fits the style guidelines and for something to do with the Australian yeast I have. The discussions here got me to go out and see if I could find some coopers.
I was able to find both the sparking ale and their pale ale but wish I had looked closer at the bottles as they have a best used after date, sparkling ale was 4/7/21 and the pale was even older at 1/5/21. Both did show a little oxidation and the sparkling being a little worse, not sherry more wet cardboard, but still drinkable. I did not get any citrus or fruit from either beer but it seems there was a hop presence in the aroma, slightly herbal with earthy/leather/tobacco aroma (some of that could be oxidation or skunking I guess as these beer were sitting warm on the shelf of a mega mart liquor store). I tried to not get any yeast in the pour but I don't think I was able to do it with the sparkling ale as the carbonation level was just under a gusher. Actually quite amazing how much carbonation was present in the sparkling ale. For having so much carbonation it still had a decent body, I did not notice any carbonic bite either. I did not get much if any hop flavor from either beer fairly smooth malt with bitterness at the end. I am sure a fresh bottle would be a totally different beer.
I have a few couple bottle sitting in the fridge to see if a little cold conditioning will clean them up a little. The last ones had been in with my kegs at ~45F just long enough to get to temp. I plan to try to cultivate some of the yeast sediment to see how it compares to WLP009 and WLP059.
Might also allow a beer to go flat to check it's gravity as I am curious how a 5.8%ABV beer with a 1045 starting gravity and so much carbonation can have so much body.