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The ramifications of record-shattering heat on the West’s ecosystems

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The ramifications of record-shattering heat on the West’s ecosystems

This story was originally published by High Country News and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

In March, a month traditionally known for heavy mountain snows and dreary lower-elevation weather, a heat wave settled across the West, shattering temperature records from Tucson, Arizona, to Casper, Wyoming.

The heat wave’s intensity and early arrival shocked many climate scientists. “It is exceptionally difficult for the Earth system to produce temperatures this warm so early in the season,” wrote Daniel Swain, a climatologist with the University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources who runs the Weather West blog.

Yet not only did Western locations set new March highs; many exceeded temperature records for May. And those high temperatures kept hanging on, said Zachary Labe, a climate scientist at the nonprofit science center Climate Central, for nearly two weeks.

While heat waves are a natural phenomenon, this was the earliest and most widespread one ever recorded in the Southwest. And it was caused by climate change, which is making intense heat waves much more likely. Researchers say this means understanding their fallout is even more important.

Scientists are just now beginning to understand the ramifications of a devastating 2021 heat wave, when a massive heat dome brought 120-degree temperatures to the Pacific Northwest, causing widespread ecological damage. Tens of thousands of trees died. Baby birds that could not yet fly plummeted to the ground as they tried to escape the heat. Salmon and trout suffocated in small streams. Millions — perhaps even billions — of mussels and barnacles cooked.

Number of daily record highs broken in March 2026

Map of Number of daily record highs broken in March 2026

This year’s heat wave may not have had the same immediate ecological impacts, but it comes on the heels of an already record-breaking hot, dry winter. Researchers say 2021 holds lessons about what lies ahead for both vulnerable and resilient species. Ecosystems, they warn, are likely to permanently change as some species simply can’t handle the heat.

Fully understanding the impact that events like heat waves have on long-lived tree species takes time. Research is now trickling out from places like Washington, Oregon, and British Columbia, and it’s not good.

The 2021 heat wave either killed or otherwise harmed more than three-quarters of species surveyed, including by limiting their reproductive success, according to Julia Baum, a professor at the University of Victoria who co-wrote a recent paper on the long-term impacts. The hardest hit, perhaps unsurprisingly, were those unable to move to seek shade or cooler temperatures. Marine species like acorn barnacles and green rope seaweed fared the worst, as did kelp, surfgrass, and rockweed.

“The rocky shorelines they live on heated up to [122 Fahrenheit]. Think of being glued to hot concrete on the most scorching summer day: They essentially baked and died,” said Baum. “On land, wildflowers wilted and died, preventing entire populations from reproducing that year, and there was widespread leaf scorch and death in forests.”

Some species that could move modified their behavior: Ferruginous hawks reduced their flight time by about 81 percent, while wolves moved around more, perhaps seeking hunkered-down prey like mule deer and moose.

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Meanwhile, species already adapted to hotter or more variable temperature ranges adjusted better than others.

The heat wave’s timing also mattered, said Adam Sibley, a remote sensing scientist and co-author of a 2025 paper that examined the impact on trees and forests. Plants tend to acclimate to heat throughout a season, so the triple-digit temperatures that struck in June hit harder than they would have in August.

So many tree needles died, in fact, that when Sibley drove to the Oregon coast with friends a few days after the heat wave ended, the tree canopy looked as though it had been dusted with orange snow.

New buds and needles are fragile for a number of reasons, said Christopher Still, a forest ecology professor at Oregon State University. Many contain fatty membranes that, when super-heated, will melt and cause the leaf to fall apart. Young leaves and needles also lack “heat hardening” mechanisms like specialized proteins that stabilize mature leaves and needles when it’s hot.

Many larger, more well-established trees, such as Douglas fir, lost a growing season: Their needles fell off, but grew back the following year. Other trees died, especially younger ones and species like Sitka spruce and western red cedar that require cooler, wetter temperatures.

The 2021 heat wave also rapidly dried grasses, flowers, and other fine fuels, leading to record-breaking wildfires in the Pacific Northwest, according to a 2024 paper in the journal Nature.

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While the timing of this year’s heat wave surprised many climatologists, the fact that it arrived in March may have ultimately saved some Southwestern plants, said Osvaldo Sala, a professor and director of Arizona State University’s Global Drylands Center.

During the hottest period, he explained, many plants were still dormant. Desert plants tie their growing cycles to rain and moisture instead of heat or sun duration. That means that, unlike in places like Wyoming, where cherry trees started blooming in March instead of May, desert plants were still waiting for rains to come.

Unfortunately, that early blooming has left the cherry trees and other flowering plants particularly susceptible to spring frosts, Still said.

The effects of this year’s heat dome have only exacerbated the winter’s record-setting heat and drought, Still added. Snowpack across much of the West was abysmal; in many places, it was the worst in recorded history. 

“The heat dome put an exclamation point on the worst winter in a century,” said Still. “It was the worst possible way to end the winter that was already worse than normal.”


Myanmar’s political makeover unmasked by revolutionary reality

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Myanmar’s political makeover unmasked by revolutionary reality

After five years of conflict and a tightly controlled election, Myanmar’s junta leader, Min Aung Hlaing, shed his uniform, named himself president and spoke of peace and reconciliation.

The release of elected President Win Myint, the reduction of Aung San Suu Kyi’s sentence and her transfer to house arrest all serve to reinforce this image.

These cosmetic moves, however, do not amount to a democratic transition. Rather, they are part of a political makeover by a military ruler who still cannot claim control over the country he claims to govern.

To understand Myanmar in 2026, it is more useful to look at the battlefield than speeches and pronouncements made in Naypyitaw. The coup-installed regime controls the capital, major airports and urban cores of Yangon and Mandalay.

Beyond these centers, however, its authority fades quickly. In areas where rebel forces hold sway, the military bombs, raids and blocks transit arteries. It punishes, not governs, civilian populations.

Myanmar is no longer a classic civil war with a central state fighting rebels on the margins. Since the coup, armed resistance has spread into central Myanmar, breaking the old center-periphery pattern.

The conflict is fragmented, with rival claims to legitimacy and multiple armed groups exercising power and control.

The anti-coup National Unity Government, or NUG, claims democratic legitimacy from the 2020 election and has built parallel armed and administrative structures, including People’s Defense Forces, or PDF – some of which it controls, many others which it doesn’t.

Min Aung Hlaing may control the state’s formal shell, but he does not command authority across Myanmar. Internationally, meanwhile, Myanmar’s UN seat is still held by Ambassador Kyaw Moe Tun, aligned with the pre-coup government, while ASEAN remains cautious and divided over the junta’s latest attempt at a makeover.

Map tells the story

The picture on the ground is just as revealing. ISP-Myanmar estimated in January that the regime had lost control of roughly 38% of the country’s territory and had not recovered at least 150 overrun bases.

A 2025 ISEAS study claimed that anti-junta armed groups controlled as much as half the country, while the military held only about a quarter.

Figures and estimates of who controls where may differ, but the broad picture does not: Myanmar’s map does not support the regime’s claim of restored national control and its recent tactical gains do not represent stabilization.

In northwestern Myanmar, the regime recently retook Falam, Chin State’s second city, after a six-month offensive involving ground assaults and heavy airstrikes. Its recapture is a reminder that the junta can still concentrate firepower.

But Falam does not indicate the revolution is waning. Resistance forces remain active across Chin State, and retaking a town is different from holding territory, governing people, reopening roads and restoring legitimacy.

The same is true in Magway, where the military recently seized Kangyi village in Saw Township, a strategic route to Chin State and onward toward Paletwa near the Rakhine State border. The move appears aimed not only at local control but at tightening pressure on routes feeding into Rakhine.

That matters because Rakhine State remains one of the clearest examples of the junta’s loss of authority. The Arakan Army now controls most of the state except for three townships, and the military is reduced to defending a few remaining strategic pockets, including Sittwe, Kyaukphyu, and Manaung.

Recent reports describe Arakan Army pressure around Sittwe, with the regime responding through naval blockades and airstrikes. The junta’s rule is less governance than a siege in Rakhine.

Fighting still raging

Across Myanmar, crisis monitoring continues to describe clashes, displacement, airstrikes and insecurity across multiple regions, including the central heartland. That alone should make observers skeptical of the junta’s claim to have restored order.

In Karen State, resistance forces reportedly captured regime positions over the Myanmar New Year holidays in April, while fighting along the Thai-Myanmar border remained intense.

Meanwhile, in the north, Kachin State points in the same direction. The Kachin Independence Army and allied anti-junta forces have expanded their influence, seizing towns, border crossings and rare-earth mining areas.

The battle for Bhamo, near routes linking central Myanmar, northern Kachin and the China border, has become one of the country’s most important fronts.

Northern Shan State tells a different story. Operation 1027, launched by the Three Brotherhood Alliance, exposed the military’s weakness, but it also revealed the limits of gains in a war shaped by outside actors, especially China.

Formally, this is still Myanmar’s internal war. In practice, Beijing is shaping parts of the battlefield by pressuring armed groups it tacitly supports or arms, and seeking to secure trade corridors near its border.

Myanmar’s conflict is also geopolitical. The country sits between China and India, linking South and Southeast Asia. Rakhine State is especially critical: China sees Kyaukphyu as a route to the Indian Ocean, while India has connectivity interests through the Kaladan project and Sittwe port.

When the military blocks roads between Magway, Chin and Rakhine, or when the Arakan Army dominates much of Rakhine, the issue affects trade routes, border stability, humanitarian access and the geopolitical and geoeconomic calculations of Beijing and New Delhi.

Foreign governments, however, must be careful not to confuse Min Aung Hlaing’s new title with a new reality. The junta’s “transition” is not ending the war – it is simply trying to repackage it.

Peace offer changes nothing

The junta’s latest peace language should be treated with equal caution. The 100-day talks proposal is less a breakthrough than another attempt to turn military weakness into diplomatic legitimacy.

It asks resistance groups to enter a process designed by the same power that overthrew an elected government, jailed opponents and still relies on airstrikes, mass arrests, blockades and coercion to impose its will.

The swift rejection by major resistance organizations was hardly surprising. That said, none of this means the junta is about to collapse tomorrow.

Naypyitaw remains under regime command. Yangon is not on the verge of falling. Mandalay remains a core military-held city. The junta still has aircraft, prisons, patronage networks, foreign backers and the capacity to inflict immense violence, including on civilian populations.

But regime survival is not the same thing as regime victory. The war is now arguably entering a longer, harsher phase. The regime can still retake towns, block roads and punish the general population.

The resistance faces fragmentation, fatigue, shortages and the task of turning battlefield control into durable political authority. Myanmar’s revolution, however, is not waning, because the problem was never just Min Aung Hlaing or his latest attempt to dress military rule in civilian garbs.

The crisis runs much deeper, characterized by decades of military domination, the denial of democratic rights and the failure to build a genuine federal union with real equality and power-sharing. So long as those issues remain unaddressed, the resistance will endure.

Nyein Chan Aye is a Burmese journalist based in Washington, D.C., who previously worked for the BBC and Voice of America and writes on Myanmar, the US, China and regional affairs.

Apple may take “several months” to catch up to Mac mini and Studio demand

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Apple may take “several months” to catch up to Mac mini and Studio demand

Apple’s Mac mini and Mac Studio desktops have been increasingly difficult to buy over the course of the year—multiple configurations are listed on Apple’s site as “currently unavailable,” which almost never happens, and others will take weeks or months to ship if you order them today. A top-end version of the Mac Studio with 512GB of RAM was delisted from Apple’s store entirely.

Current Apple CEO Tim Cook addressed the situation on Apple’s Q2 earnings call yesterday as part of a larger conversation about how Apple is navigating component shortages, and he partly blamed the shortage on the popularity of those desktops among users looking to run AI agents and other tools locally.

“Both [the Mac mini and the Mac Studio] are amazing platforms for AI and agentic tools, and the customer recognition of that is happening faster than what we had predicted, and so we saw higher-than-expected demand,” said Cook. “We think looking forward that the Mac mini and the Mac Studio may take several months to reach supply-demand balance.”

Cook wasn’t specific about what components were driving the Mac mini and Studio shortages, though he did say that generally, “availability of the advanced [manufacturing] nodes our SoCs are produced on” was constrained, and “we have less flexibility in the supply chain than we normally would.” In other words, it has become harder for Apple to go to TSMC and ask for more chips because TSMC doesn’t have the spare manufacturing capacity. Cook said these constraints “primarily” affected the iPhone, though, and only affected the Mac “to a lesser extent.”

As we wrote last month, the extent of the shipping delays can probably be blamed on multiple factors. AI-related demand for the desktops and chip shortages are probably factors, but Apple is also said to be planning replacements for both systems with Apple M5-series chips later this year, and it’s common for models to see their ship times slip when replacements are imminent. Cook’s “several months” estimate could easily include the introduction of new models, plus whatever time Apple needs to catch up to pent-up demand afterward.

Cook also noted that “customer response to MacBook Neo has been off the charts, with higher-than-expected demand” and that Apple “set a March record for customers new to the Mac, partly due to the Neo.” (Note that “a March record” is not the same thing as “an all-time record,” but regardless, it seems that demand for the Neo has been healthy.)

But MacBook Neo availability has been much better than for the Mac mini or Studio. A Neo ordered directly from Apple will usually arrive in two or three weeks, but this time window has stayed roughly the same since early March. The Neo also remains widely available for same-day shipping or pickup at third-party retailers like Amazon, Walmart, and Best Buy, which is not true of most Mac mini or Studio models.

Supply constraints aside, Apple’s Q2 2026 was a successful one for the company. Apple made $111.2 billion in revenue, a 17 percent increase over Q2 of 2025, thanks to strong growth from iPhone 17 sales and its Services division. The Mac also grew 6 percent year over year despite the shortages affecting the Mac mini, Mac Studio, and MacBook Neo. But Apple isn’t immune to the industry-wide RAM shortage: Cook said that Apple expected “significantly higher memory costs” for Q3 than it paid in Q2 and that “memory costs will drive an increasing impact on our business” going forward.

Domino’s Delivery Driver Attacks Man Who Didn’t Tip

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Domino’s Delivery Driver Attacks Man Who Didn’t Tip


A routine pizza delivery took a terrifying turn in Missouri when a Domino’s driver allegedly snapped over a missing tip and used his car to settle the score.

Police say the shocking incident unfolded on April 29 at a private home in Fulton, where officers rushed to reports of a crash involving injuries. But this wasn’t your typical accident — investigators say it all started with a heated argument over a tip.

According to witnesses, the delivery driver became furious after the customer refused to tip, quickly escalating the situation into a verbal confrontation. The victim later told police the driver was visibly angry, hurling insults as tensions boiled over.

Court documents cited by KRCG reveal the driver, identified as 36-year-old Zachary Nicholos Walton, allegedly lashed out, calling the customer and a witness “f–king rude” before storming back to his vehicle. As he climbed inside, he reportedly taunted them, shouting, “What are you going to do, b—h? Come get me.”

Moments later, things took a dangerous turn.

Authorities say Walton then hit the gas, accelerating straight toward the victim, who was standing in their own driveway. The vehicle struck the customer, leaving them injured, before the driver sped off from the scene.

The victim suffered injuries to their hand, according to police.

Officers later tracked Walton down at a local Domino’s, where he allegedly admitted to what happened — but claimed he only meant to scare the victim, not actually hit them.

That explanation didn’t stop authorities from taking swift action.

Walton was arrested and booked into the Callaway County Jail, now facing multiple serious felony charges, including first-degree assault and armed criminal action.

What began as a simple pizza delivery ended in chaos — and now, a driver’s moment of rage could cost him far more than just a tip.

Aid Groups Seek Hormuz Humanitarian Corridor as Supply Routes Strain

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Aid Groups Seek Hormuz Humanitarian Corridor as Supply Routes Strain


Humanitarian organizations are calling for a protected aid corridor through the Strait of Hormuz after the Iran war and related shipping disruption drove up fuel costs, slowed deliveries, and threatened food and medical assistance to vulnerable countries across Africa, the Middle East, and Asia.

Aid groups say the crisis has disrupted supply routes from major logistics hubs in Dubai and India, affecting deliveries to Sudan, Somalia, Ethiopia, Nigeria, and Afghanistan. The Guardian reported that the appeals came from organizations including the International Rescue Committee, Save the Children, and the World Food Programme.

The Strait of Hormuz is one of the world’s most important maritime chokepoints, carrying about one-fifth of global oil and gas flows. Its disruption has pushed energy prices sharply higher, increasing the cost of shipping food, medicine, fuel, and other emergency supplies. Humanitarian agencies say the added expense is stretching already strained budgets, forcing some programs to reduce services, delay deliveries, or redirect funds away from direct aid.

The World Food Programme has warned that supply disruptions and rising prices could worsen global hunger at a time when hundreds of millions of people already face severe food insecurity. Aid groups say children with acute malnutrition, displaced families, and communities dependent on imported grain, fertilizer, and fuel are among those most exposed.

The crisis comes as humanitarian operations are already under pressure from wars in Sudan and Yemen, instability in the Horn of Africa, and funding cuts from major donors. Higher fuel prices also affect clinics, water systems, cold storage for medicine, and transport for relief workers.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen warned this week that the wider effects of the Iran war “may echo for months or even years to come.”

Aid officials say a humanitarian corridor through Hormuz would not resolve the wider conflict, but could help keep lifesaving supplies moving while diplomatic efforts continue.

Virgin Galactic reveals new ship, but it’s running out of time and cash

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Virgin Galactic reveals new ship, but it’s running out of time and cash

On Thursday, the publicly traded spaceflight company Virgin Galactic shared on social media a new photo of its next-generation spaceship being towed outside of its factory in Mesa, Arizona.

You remember Virgin Galactic, right? The space tourism company was founded 22 years ago by Sir Richard Branson to bring spaceflight to the masses. Hundreds of people began buying tickets to space nearly two decades ago. And after a long, and at times deadly, development campaign, the company reached outer space (defined, somewhat controversially, as an altitude of 80 km and above) in December 2018.

The company began flying passengers in May 2021 with its VSS Unity spacecraft, and impressively completed six spaceflights in 2023. But a few months later, in June 2024, Virgin Galactic stopped flying VSS Unity to focus on the development of its next-generation vehicle capable of more frequent, lower-cost spaceflights.

Since then, the company has been largely quiet, making this week’s revelation of new hardware notable. So Virgin Galactic is still pressing ahead, but the question is where it’s going, and along with it, the entire suborbital space tourism industry.

Difficult to make a profit

Spaceflight remains an expensive and dangerous business, even for companies focused on relatively simple suborbital flights.

There was a time, about five years ago, when the market appeared poised to break through. During the summer of 2021, both Virgin Galactic and its US-based competitor, Blue Origin, began commercial flights. Famously, Branson and Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos both went to space within weeks of one another.

Both companies have had robust demand for their services.

A full-priced ticket on Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket never dropped below $1 million, and the company had customers lined up. But then, during an uncrewed New Shepard flight in September 2022, the rocket failed. The vehicle had to stand down for more than a year. Blue Origin has never revealed New Shepard’s finances, but multiple sources told Ars the program—despite persistent demand—was never close to profitability. Blue Origin ended New Shepard in January to focus on orbital launches and its lunar program.

That left Virgin Galactic as the sole player in the suborbital space tourism game. The company has plenty of customers and has been able to raise its prices for “spaceflight expeditions” to $750,000. Nevertheless, without a steady stream of revenue from flights, its finances are strained.

Images from the flight of VSS Unity.

Sir Richard Branson enjoys microgravity in 2021.

Sir Richard Branson enjoys microgravity in 2021. Credit: Virgin Galactic

Two years ago, in February 2024, Virgin Galactic’s “cash position” was reported as strong, with $982 million in cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities. A year later, this cash position had declined to $567 million, as the company has very low revenues while it’s not flying. To that end, Virgin Galactic said a first spaceflight with the new spaceship carrying research payloads was coming in summer 2026, with private astronaut flights in “fall 2026.”

At the end of March, the company reported its most recent quarterly results, with its cash position declining to $338 million. The company was now projecting that its new spaceship would “enter service” between “late Q4 2026 and early Q1 2027.”

A lot of testing ahead

The new ship revealed this week will presumably make that first flight. According to Virgin Galactic, it was being moved this week from the assembly hangar to the launch hangar and will now “undergo final systems integration and ground testing.”

It’s difficult to tell from an image, but the vehicle appears to have a significant amount of integration left to undergo, and its test campaign will not be short.

For comparison purposes, Virgin Galactic rolled a fully integrated VSS Unity spacecraft out in February 2016. It underwent about six months of ground tests and two years of glide and flight tests before its first spaceflight in December 2018. If we assume Virgin Galactic can halve the test time with its new spaceship, given the integration work necessary, this would still place its first spaceflight at the end of 2027 or early 2028.

It’s not clear whether Virgin Galactic has the cash reserves to fund a prolonged test phase, let alone invest in multiple spaceships to achieve profitability. Ultimately, this will require the company to fly hundreds of passenger flights a year.

The stock market appears to have similar concerns. At the height of the meme stock era, as Virgin Galactic was sending Branson into space, the company’s publicly traded stock rocketed to a valuation of $1,118 per share. It has steadily fallen since, trading at between $2 and $3 a share this year.

The odds of Virgin Galactic succeeding appear to be pretty long. First, it must get this newest spaceship flying soon, and it must do so safely. Then it must build a second one and hope that its aging Eve carrier aircraft can support three spaceflights a week and 125 flights a year. And it must perform all of these operations without significant anomalies. If it does all of this before the cash runs out, Virgin Galactic will just about be able to break even.

And if it doesn’t? Then the suborbital space tourism market, which looked so promising just a few years ago, will likely be dead for at least a generation.

Applebee’s Chicken Wonton Tacos (Copycat Recipe)

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Applebee’s Chicken Wonton Tacos (Copycat Recipe)

You are here: Home / All RECIPES / Applebee’s Chicken Wonton Tacos (Copycat Recipe)

Crispy, Sweet, Savory, and Better Than Takeout

If you’ve ever ordered Applebee’s Chicken Wonton Tacos and immediately wished you had ordered two more… you’re not alone. Those crispy little tacos packed with sticky chicken, crunchy slaw, and sweet chili sauce are seriously addictive.

The good news? You can make them right at home—and honestly, they may be even better than the restaurant version.

With crunchy baked wonton shells, juicy sesame-hoisin chicken, crisp Asian-style slaw, and a drizzle of sweet chili sauce, this recipe brings restaurant-quality flavor straight to your kitchen in just 30 minutes.

Perfect for:

  • Taco night
  • Game day appetizers
  • Girls’ night
  • Family dinners
  • Party platters

Or… simply because you deserve something delicious.


Why You’ll Love These Applebee’s Chicken Wonton Tacos

Quick & Easy

Ready in only 30 minutes.

Crispy & Flavorful

Every bite has the perfect crunch.

Budget-Friendly

Restaurant flavor at a fraction of the cost.

Crowd Favorite

Perfect for parties and gatherings.

Customizable

Mild, spicy, extra sweet—it’s your taco.


Quick Recipe Overview

  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Cook Time: 15 minutes
  • Total Time: 30 minutes
  • Yield: 16 wonton tacos

Ingredients

For the Chicken Filling

  • 2 boneless skinless chicken breasts, finely diced
  • 2 tablespoons hoisin sauce
  • 1 tablespoon sesame oil
  • 1 tablespoon soy sauce
  • 2 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1 teaspoon fresh ginger, minced

For the Crunchy Slaw

  • 1 bag coleslaw mix
  • 4 green onions, thinly sliced
  • 1 tablespoon sesame oil
  • 1 tablespoon rice vinegar
  • 1 tablespoon soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon honey

For Assembly

  • 16 wonton wrappers
  • Sweet chili sauce
  • Fresh cilantro, chopped
  • Sesame seeds

How to Make Applebee’s Chicken Wonton Tacos


Step 1: Make the Crispy Wonton Shells

Preheat your oven to 375°F (190°C).

Lightly spray the back side of a muffin tin with cooking spray.

Carefully drape each wonton wrapper over an upside-down muffin cup to create taco shell shapes.

Bake for 5–7 minutes, or until:

  • golden brown
  • crisp
  • lightly toasted

Set aside.


Step 2: Cook the Chicken

Heat sesame oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat.

Add diced chicken.

Cook for 3–4 minutes, stirring occasionally, until no longer pink.

Add:

  • hoisin sauce
  • soy sauce
  • garlic
  • ginger

Cook for another 2–3 minutes until the chicken becomes sticky, glossy, and beautifully caramelized.

Remove from heat.


Step 3: Make the Asian Slaw

In a medium bowl, combine:

  • coleslaw mix
  • green onions
  • sesame oil
  • rice vinegar
  • soy sauce
  • honey

Toss until evenly coated.

The slaw should be crisp, fresh, and lightly sweet.


Step 4: Assemble the Tacos

Fill each crispy wonton shell with:

First:

A spoonful of sticky chicken.

Then:

A generous handful of crunchy slaw.

Finish with:

  • sweet chili sauce drizzle
  • fresh cilantro
  • sesame seeds

Serve immediately while shells are crisp.


Serving Ideas

These tacos are amazing with:

  • Asian cucumber salad
  • Fried rice
  • Edamame
  • Spring rolls
  • Mango salsa
  • Spicy dipping sauce

Aneta’s Best Tips

Fill Right Before Serving

This keeps the wonton shells perfectly crunchy.

Feeding a Crowd?

Double the recipe—they disappear fast.

Want More Heat?

Add:

  • sriracha
  • red pepper flakes
  • chili crisp

Prefer Milder Flavor?

Swap hoisin for teriyaki sauce.

Shortcut Option

Ground chicken works beautifully and cooks even faster.


Storage

Chicken Filling

Store in an airtight container for up to 3 days.

Slaw

Best enjoyed within 2 days.

Wonton Shells

Store in a dry airtight container for 2–3 days.

To re-crisp:

Bake at 350°F for 2–3 minutes.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use ground chicken?

Absolutely. It’s faster and equally delicious.

Can I air fry the wonton shells?

Yes—air fry at 350°F for 3–4 minutes.

Can I make these gluten-free?

Yes—use gluten-free wonton wrappers and tamari.

Can I prep ahead?

Definitely. Prepare all components separately and assemble right before serving.


Final Thoughts

These Applebee’s Chicken Wonton Tacos bring everything you love about the restaurant favorite—crispy shells, sticky sweet chicken, crunchy slaw, and that irresistible sweet chili finish—right into your own kitchen.

They’re fun, flavorful, easy to make, and guaranteed to disappear faster than you can make them.

One bite, and Taco Tuesday may never be the same again.

China should borrow Britain’s tobacco-ban logic, not its law

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China should borrow Britain’s tobacco-ban logic, not its law

Britain’s Tobacco and Vapes Bill, passed by Parliament in April and awaiting Royal Assent, would permanently bar the sale of tobacco to anyone born on or after January 1, 2009.

The measure is designed to create what British officials call a “smoke-free generation.” It does not force current smokers to quit. Instead, it raises the legal age of sale year by year, while also tightening controls on tobacco retailing, vaping, advertising, packaging and public use.

That design matters. Britain is not trying to ban smoking overnight. It is trying to change the market’s default settings so that tobacco gradually stops recruiting new customers. In public-health terms, this is less a sudden prohibition than an intergenerational firewall.

That distinction is important for China, where the tobacco debate can too easily collapse into a false choice: preserve the status quo or impose an unrealistic ban. Britain’s experiment suggests a third possibility — not immediate abolition, but long-term market denormalization.

The British case arrives with hard realities attached. Smoking still causes tens of thousands of deaths each year in England and imposes large health-care and productivity costs. Those numbers help explain why London has moved from ordinary tobacco control toward endgame thinking.

China does not face the same problem at the same scale. It faces a much larger one. China remains the world’s largest producer and consumer of tobacco, with more than 300 million smokers.

A 2024 China CDC study found that current smoking prevalence among Chinese adults aged 15 and older was 23.2%, with higher rates in rural than urban areas. Beijing’s Healthy China 2030 plan aims to reduce adult smoking prevalence to 20% by 2030, a goal that will be difficult to reach without stronger measures.

Still, China should resist the temptation to read Britain’s bill as a ready-made blueprint. Britain is regulating a private-market habit in a relatively mature tobacco-control environment.

China is managing a public-health burden intertwined with a state tobacco monopoly, local fiscal interests, male social norms, gift culture, retail habits and uneven enforcement capacity. That is why the most useful lesson from Britain may not be the headline policy itself, but its sequencing.

The British approach is phased rather than abrupt, youth-centered rather than punitive and paired with complementary measures such as retailer licensing, age restrictions, vaping controls and enforcement powers.

For China, the strategic question is not “Should Beijing copy London?” but rather “Which parts of the British approach can help China reduce youth initiation, support adult cessation and manage transition costs in a credible order?”

The answer should begin with a shift in framing. China does not need to define tobacco control as a campaign against smokers or a symbolic attack on the tobacco sector.

It can define success as reducing future dependency while expanding present-day options: protecting adolescents from initiation, making quitting easier for adults, reducing secondhand smoke exposure in homes and workplaces and lowering the long-term burden on families and the health system.

A generational tobacco restriction, if ever considered in China, would only be credible if the runway were built first. That means stronger national retailer licensing, reliable age-verification systems, better product tracing, visible enforcement against illicit sales, broader smoke-free public spaces, higher effective prices and a serious expansion of cessation services.

A ban without this platform would risk becoming performative. A platform without a long-term endgame would risk becoming incremental forever. China could therefore begin not with a national lifetime sales ban, but with disciplined experimentation.

Selected cities, special zones or provinces with stronger public health infrastructure could pilot a generational tobacco control model. These pilots could test whether retailer licensing, digital-age verification, school-based prevention, smoke-free enforcement, and cessation support can work together before any national decision is made.

This would fit China’s own governance style better than a sudden national leap. It would allow policymakers to measure real outcomes: fewer young initiates, lower secondhand smoke exposure, more quit attempts, better compliance by retailers and reduced local medical costs.

It would also help avoid turning tobacco control into a symbolic contest between Western liberalism and Chinese governance. The issue should be judged by health, fiscal and administrative results.

The harder question is political economy. China’s tobacco system is not merely a public-health challenge. It is also a revenue system and an industrial structure. Any serious reform must therefore answer a practical question: what happens to local governments, tobacco-growing regions, retailers and workers if cigarette sales gradually decline?

This is where China may need a health-transition strategy, not just a health campaign. One approach would be transparent accounting: how much tobacco revenue is collected, where it goes and how much smoking-related disease costs the health system, households and employers.

Over time, a portion of tobacco revenue could be placed into a dedicated transition fund to support cessation services, local public-health enforcement, farmer adjustment, worker retraining and fiscal cushioning for tobacco-dependent areas.

The point is not to punish local governments for relying on tobacco revenue. It is to make declining cigarette sales financially manageable rather than administratively threatening. Public health reform becomes more governable when the losers from transition are acknowledged rather than ignored.

Britain’s gamble is that a society can end smoking by denying the habit to a new generation. China’s challenge is broader: it must decide whether tobacco control is mainly a health campaign, a fiscal problem or an industrial reform agenda. The honest answer is that it is all three.

That is precisely why the British bill is useful to China. Not because it offers a script, but because it exposes the real question China will eventually have to answer: whether the country wants to keep managing tobacco’s harms indefinitely, or begin managing tobacco’s sunset.

For China, the most innovative response may therefore be the least theatrical one. Do not import Britain’s bill as a symbol. Import its logic: long horizons, youth protection, regulatory layering, credible enforcement, cessation support and gradual market denormalization.

If Britain is testing how to create a smoke-free generation, China may need to test something even harder: how to build post-tobacco state capacity inside a tobacco state.

Y. Tony Yang is an endowed professor at the George Washington University in Washington, D.C.

Over two-thirds of Germans think government lacks strategy on Iran war: Poll

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Over two-thirds of Germans think government lacks strategy on Iran war: Poll

More than two-thirds of Germans think that their government lacks a clear strategy on how it should act in the Iran war, according to a survey published by the Internationale Politik news magazine on Saturday.

Some 68% of respondents answered “no” to a question on this topic, while 28% held the opposite view.

According to the poll, only among supporters of the co-ruling Christian Democratic Union / Christian Social Union did a narrow majority of 54% believe that the government has a clear vision of how Germany should position itself in the Iran conflict.

Meanwhile, the majority of supporters of the governing Social Democratic Party (43%) see it differently – as do, to an even greater extent, supporters of the opposition parties.

READ: Germany calls on UN to take responsibility for settling Iran conflict

Among voters of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), the proportion of those who cannot discern a clear course is particularly high at 86%. Additionally, 78% of the opposition Left Party supporters and 69% of Green Party supporters share this view.

In eastern Germany, this assessment is even more pronounced – only 17% feel that the federal government is clear about its course on this issue, while 82% disagree.

Looking at age groups, it is striking that 76% of 18- to 29-year-olds in particular feel that the federal government lacks a clear course. Only 20% think differently.

After the US and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28, Chancellor Friedrich Merz initially supported the action. In recent weeks, however, he has repeatedly criticized the US in particular and accused President Donald Trump’s administration of lacking a plan.

READ: Trump calls US naval blockade of Strait of Hormuz ‘a very profitable business’

Research roundup: 6 cool science stories we almost missed

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Research roundup: 6 cool science stories we almost missed

It’s a regrettable reality that there is never enough time to cover all the interesting scientific stories we come across. So every month, we highlight a handful of the best stories that nearly slipped through the cracks. April’s list includes tracking Roman ship repairs, the discovery that mushrooms can detect human urine, crushing soda cans for science, and the physics of why dolphins can swim so fast.

Physics of why dolphins swim so fast

Dolphins are very good swimmers but the exact mechanisms by which they achieve their impressive speed and agility in water have remained murky. Japanese scientists from the University of Osaka ran multiple supercomputer simulations to learn more about how dolphins optimize their propulsion and found it has to do with the vortices, or eddies, produced by dolphin kicks, according to a paper published in the journal Physical Review Fluids.

Per the authors, when dolphins flap their tails up and down, the kicking motion pushes water backward and produces swirling currents of varying sizes.  The computer simulations enabled the team to break down those different sizes, revealing that the initial tail oscillations produce large vortex rings that generate thrust, and those larger ones then produce many more smaller vortices. However, the smaller ones don’t contribute to the forward motion.

In short, “Our results show that the hierarchy of vortices in turbulence is crucial for understanding dolphin swimming,” said co-author Susumu Goto. “The largest vortices are responsible for most of the propulsion, while the smaller ones are mainly byproducts of turbulent flow.” The team hopes to apply these insights into the mechanics of underwater propulsion to the design of faster and more efficient underwater robots.

DOI: Physics of Fluids, 2026. 10.1103/tnxb-ckr5  (About DOIs).

Tracking Roman shipwreck repairs

View of the excavation of the bow area of the Ilovik-Paržine 1 shipwreck. In the foreground, the cargo of logs and amphoras can be seen. Archaeologists are working near the structure of the bow complex.

Credit: Adriboats © L. Damelet, CNRS/CCJ

Back in 2016, archaeologists discovered a shipwreck from the Roman Republic, the Ilovik–Paržine 1. The wreck has been the subject of much study of the actual ship, enabling scientists to determine it was constructed in what is now Brindisi on Italy’s south-eastern coast. Most recently, analysis of pollen trapped in the ship’s waterproofing layers have yielded insight into repairs made successively in other locations throughout the Adriatic Sea, according to a paper published in the journal Frontiers in Materials.

Per the authors, prior research had largely ignored studying non-wooden materials like seawater-resistant coatings, so they used mass spectrometry and similar methods to examine the molecular makeup of ten coating samples. The results showed that pine tree resin or tar (pitch) was the main component. But one sample was a combination of beeswax and tar, a mixture unique to Greek shipbuilders known as zopissa. The combination makes the coating easier to apply when heated and also makes the pitch adhesive more flexible.

Because pitch’s adhesive nature easily traps and preserve pollen, the researchers were also able to identify which plants had been present when the coating was applied, so they could in turn identify the regions where the pitch had been produced. They found pollen from a wide range of environments, such as forests of holly oak, pine, and matorral, all typical of the Mediterranean and Adriatic coastal regions. Other samples contained alder and ash, more common to rivers, as well as fir and beech more typical of the mountain regions of Istria and Dalmatia. This provides concrete proof of mid-voyage repairs to the ship.

DOI: Frontiers in Materials, 2026. 10.3389/fmats.2026.1758862  (About DOIs).

Crushing soda cans for science

Soda can in a hydraulic press

Credit: Finn Box

Who doesn’t love to watch those YouTube videos of people using hydraulics to crush a variety of objects? That includes physicists at the University of Manchester, who were intrigued by the difference between crushing an empty soda can versus one that is full of liquid. An empty can collapsed immediately; a full can collapses gradually in a series of circular rings. The Manchester physicists wanted to know why a full can behaves this way. They investigated via a combination of mathematical modeling and laboratory crushing experiments, describing their findings in a paper published in the journal Communications Physics.

It turns out that how a full can buckles isn’t random and that the liquid inside actually alters how the can responds to force. The buckling may start in the middle, and minor variations in a given can’s shape and size might affect when the first ring emerges. But then, the authors say, the physics takes over in a highly predictable process. The rings arise because the metal softens as the can compresses, then stiffens, then compresses and stiffens again, repeating the pattern until the compression is complete—akin to something called homoclinic snaking.

This seems to be a fundamental property of liquid-filled cylinders, which are common in such industries as industrial storage transportation, construction, energy systems, and rocket parts. So this work could help engineers detect early signs of failure in such structures.

DOI: Communications Phhysics, 2026. 10.1038/s42005-026-02589-5  (About DOIs).

How Australia’s 12 Apostles formed

The Twelve Apostles in Victoria, Australia

Credit: Mark Cuthell

Australia is home to many natural wonders and among the most striking is the “Twelve Apostles,” a clustering of limestone stacks off the shore of Campbell National Park in Victoria. But the same geological forces that formed the stacks may also be their undoing. In 2005, four of the stacks collapsed, followed by a fifth four years later, so only seven remain. Scientists are keen to learn more about their formation in order to reconstruct all the changes in climate, ocean conditions, and sea levels and thus better understand contemporary coastal erosion.  A team at the University of Melbourne described their latest findings in a paper published in Australian Journal of Earth Sciences.

The authors describe the Twelve Apostles formation as “an environmental time capsule,” since its limestone layers can yield information about variations in temperatures and sea level over millions of years, much like tree rings. Thanks to microscopic fossils, the Melbourne researchers found that the formation is younger than previously thought: 8.6 to 14 million years old, compared to the previous estimate of 7 to 14 million years.

That’s when tectonic plates first pushed them out of the sea, but the shaping of the pillars via coastal erosion only occurred over the last few thousand years. And that tectonic movement didn’t push them straight up, but tilted them just a few degrees. There are also small fault lines in the layers, evidence of past earthquakes. The next step is to take a closer look at the individual rock layers.

DOI: Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, 2026. 10.1080/08120099.2026.2638817  (About DOIs).

“Gossipy” mushrooms can detect your urine

Close-up of mushrooms with electrodes attached.

Credit: Yu Fukasawa et al., 2026

It’s well known that mushrooms have a vast, interconnected underground network by which they can communicate; it’s the main body of the mushroom, in fact, rather than what we see growing on the surface. But little is known about how, exactly, information spreads across these mycelial networks. Japanese researchers at Tohoku University found that electrical flow can either increase or decrease communication levels, depending on whether one applies water or urine, according to a paper published in the journal Scientific Reports.

The scientists attached electrodes to 37 locally grown mushrooms, specifically ectomycorrhizal fungi, which are sensitive to high concentrations of ammonia in the soil. Ammonia is a chemical byproduct of urine, so the team chose urine as a trigger for their experiments. They watered the mushrooms with either tap water or urine and measured the ‘shrooms’ electrical response.

The results: applying water around one mushroom increased electrical activity (and hence the flow of information), while applying water across a larger area reduced electrical activity. Applying urine to just one mushroom also reduced information flow. The spatial distance and how closely the mushrooms are genetically related also seem to be factors. More research is needed to understand why the mushrooms vary their responses, but the authors hypothesize that when water is broadly applied, there is no need to share information since the network already knows.

DOI: Scientific Reports, 2026. 10.1038/s41598-026-42673-y  (About DOIs).

Japanese poetry and  space weather

A hand-copied version of Fujiwara no Teika’s diary, Meigetsuki, from the Edo period. The page shown includes references to “red lights in the northern sky” on the right-hand side.

Credit: National Archives of Japan/Public domain

Achieving a deeper understanding space weather is vital to all manner of space-based science, such as extreme solar activity known as solar proton events (SPEs), which hurl high-energy particles toward the Earth traveling as much as 90 percent of light speed. Should an SPE coincide with a manned space mission—as a string of SPEs nearly did in 1972, just missing the Apollo 16 and 17 missions—it could expose astronauts to lethal radiation. Learning more about past SPEs is key but to date research has focused on rare, very powerful historical SPEs.

The standard method for identifying when an SPE occurred is measuring carbon-14, produced when high-energy photos penetrate the Earth’s magnetic field (usually near the poles) and collide with gases in the atmosphere. Those carbon-14 compounds then spread through the atmosphere around the globe and are eventually deposited into organic materials, like buried trees. But the method is time consuming and researchers would like to be able to identify the most likely places to focus their efforts. Japanese scientists have developed an interdisciplinary method for identifying less extreme SPEs, which are more frequent but harder to detect, according to a paper published in the Proceedings of the Japan Academy Series B.

They turned to medieval historical sources for help, looking for any mention of phenomena that might be evidence for an SPE. The first clue came from a diary of an influential Japanese courtier and poet, Fujiwara no Teika, who described seeing “red lights in the northern sky over  Kyoto” in February 1204 CE—i.e., an aurora. So the team measured carbon-14 in asunaro wood in the region and discovered the telltale spikes of an SPE. An examination of tree rings confirmed that a red aurora had occurred in China between 1200 and 1201 CE. (SPEs don’t cause aurora but they are associated with the space weather conditions that do.) The authors also found that there were shorter fluctuations in the solar cycles at that time: seven- to eight-year cycles, vs. the eleven-year-cycles we see today.

DOI: Proceedings of the Japan Academy Series B, 2026. 10.2183/pjab.102.011  (About DOIs).

 

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