logo
Applebee's unveils new summer menu

Applebee's unveils new summer menu

Daily Mail​14-07-2025
Published: Updated:
Applebee's is making dining out more affordable and tasty with its new summer menu and the return of its popular 2 for $25 deal. The promotion offers two entrées and an appetizer or two side salads for just $25, making it the perfect way to enjoy the latest seasonal dishes. Here's a look at the new menu items launched on July 14, 2025.
Chicken Parmesan Fettuccine
BIG Bangin' Burger
If you're craving a burger, the BIG Bangin' Burger is sure to hit the spot. This hearty burger features a juicy all-beef patty, two slices of American cheese, and a sweet and spicy jalapeno-bacon secret sauce. It's served with lettuce, tomato, onion, and pickles on a soft brioche bun.
Perfect Watermelon Margarita
Watermelon Lime Rush
Looking for something non-alcoholic? The Watermelon Lime Rush is a refreshing blend of Red Bull Red Edition, strawberry, and lemon lime soda. It's zesty, energizing, and perfect for summer!
Strawberry Lemon Sunshine
Part of Applebee's long-standing partnership with Alex's Lemonade Stand Foundation, the Strawberry Lemon Sunshine drink supports childhood cancer research. For each in-restaurant purchase, Applebee's donates 50 cents to ALSF. You can also support the cause by purchasing a 'digital lemon' online during checkout on Applebee's website or app, with donations starting at $1.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

STEPHEN DAISLEY: If John Swinney fancies himself as a global statesman, it's time to put up or shut up
STEPHEN DAISLEY: If John Swinney fancies himself as a global statesman, it's time to put up or shut up

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

STEPHEN DAISLEY: If John Swinney fancies himself as a global statesman, it's time to put up or shut up

Donald Trump 's visit to Scotland is an opportunity – if we choose to grasp it. The US President is coming to Aberdeenshire for the grand opening of his Menie golf course, which joins Trump Turnberry in Ayrshire as part of his business empire. Where goes Trump, so go dollars. The 79-year-old is the most powerful man in the world. One squiggle from his pen can authorise the spending of vast sums, erect or dismantle barriers to trade, and clear the path for private sector investment. This weekend could be a godsend for Scotland's struggling business sector, pumping in much-needed cash and cracking open the door to new markets. It's essential, then, that this visit is handled wisely. Some will turn up waving placards and Palestine flags, but no one with Scotland's interests at heart will have anything to do with such stunts. Trump will be a guest and should be accorded the respect the American President merits. His doctrine is 'America First' and it means punishing nations he thinks are ripping off the US and rewarding those who deal fairly. Reward and punishment are the two pillars of the Trump administration and of his outlook on life. Whether in the boardroom, the TV studio or the Oval Office, he has practised a carrot and stick philosophy. Do what he wants, and he will make it to your benefit. Cross him, and there will be a price to pay. Trump's worldview is Manichean: you're either supportive, and ostentatiously so, or you're the enemy. There is no middle ground. In our personal lives, most of us would avoid such a volatile personality. We would probably consider it the hallmark of a swaggering egomaniac who has gone through his life without hearing the word 'No' often enough. But diplomacy is another world and different rules apply. Just as we roll out the red carpet for sundry despots and demagogues – President Outlawed-the-Opposition and Crown Prince No-Votes-For-Women – so too must we put on the niceties for heads of state of friendly democracies, no matter how distasteful we might find them personally or politically. The Scottish Government wants to involve itself in international relations? This is the price. Suck up or go home. That, frankly, is what the First Minister must do with Trump. He needn't prostrate himself. Diplomacy with dignity should be his strategy. Swinney should treat the President with all the respect he would have Barack Obama or another US politician more to his political liking. Be gracious, welcome him warmly, laugh at his jokes and keep a game face the whole time. Don't allow the photographers to capture an incautious eye roll or the TV cameras to pick up an ill-considered mutter. Self-control and courtesy at all times. Diplomacy also requires a certain razzmatazz. Schedules are already locked in for this visit, but Swinney should work with Downing Street on securing a future Scotland visit during which the Scottish Government could put on a proper show. Have a piper waiting to greet Trump on the tarmac, skirling a rendition of the Star-Spangled Banner. Take him on a tour of the Irn-Bru factory in Cumbernauld, and try to change his mind about the other national drink. (The orange nectar was banned at Turnberry after guests spilled their drinks and stained the costly carpets.) Trump places great stock in his mother, Mary Anne MacLeod, and her roots on the Isle of Lewis. He will be unveiling a new golf course at Menie which will have a memorial garden in her honour. Swinney could announce a Mary Anne MacLeod bursary, additional financial support to help Lewis retain vital skills such as teaching or nursing. Pander to Trump but do so in a way that opponents can hardly complain about. Flattering Trump's ego would require a great deal of pride to be swallowed but it could pay dividends in investment and preferential treatment secured for Scotland. Not only for obvious sectors like tourism and whisky, either. Renewables, digital technology and life sciences are among the most common foreign industries for US investors, and Scotland has a good story to tell on all three. Attracting American cash would mean jobs and growth. Another market where Trump could be useful is the creative industries. Scotland continues to attract Hollywood productions looking to film in cheaper locations than Los Angeles or New York. The next Spider-Man movie, Spider-Man: Brand New Day starring Tom Holland, will do much of its location shooting in Glasgow, which will stand in for New York as it did in 2023's Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny. When I argued in the Mail four years ago that the Scottish Government should prioritise support for the screen industry, film production employed 4,000 people in Scotland and generated less than £100million annually. Today, it's 11,000 jobs and more than £600million. However, the Trump administration's planned 100 per cent tariffs on US productions which shoot overseas could devastate Scotland's screen sector. Here is another area where good relations with Trump could help us escape the worst of his policies and do so to the benefit of our pockets. Swinney might not welcome this advice. He is not as stubbornly ideological on Trump as some of his MSPs and much of his party's grassroots, but given his Christian faith I doubt he thinks much of a man of Trump's character. HE should take a lesson from Ian Murray, who has come in for some flak for talking up Trump's visit when he backed a motion in 2019 urging the UK Government to withdraw an invitation to the president. Some might see that as hypocrisy but it looks to me like political maturity. It's easy to sound off when you're a backbencher and the world seems black and white, but ministerial office brings with it responsibility to interests higher than your self-righteousness. Murray is putting the country and its political, economic and security interests ahead of his own misgivings. Swinney should do the same.

Why Tesla shares fell as Musk issues warning
Why Tesla shares fell as Musk issues warning

The Independent

time7 hours ago

  • The Independent

Why Tesla shares fell as Musk issues warning

Tesla shares fell after CEO Elon Musk warned of The electric vehicle maker reported a 12 per cent drop in revenue and a 16 per cent fall in profit, facing increased competition and the impact of Musk's political affiliations. Tesla's financial challenges include the loss of a $7,500 EV tax credit, reduced income from regulatory credits, and hundreds of millions in costs due to tariffs imposed by Donald Trump. Musk indicated a strategic shift towards self-driving taxis, automated driving software, and robotics, rather than focusing primarily on car sales. The company began rolling out its paid robo-taxi service in Austin, Texas, in June, with plans to expand to other cities soon

Trump fires back at reports he's trying to destroy Musk's companies
Trump fires back at reports he's trying to destroy Musk's companies

Daily Mail​

time7 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trump fires back at reports he's trying to destroy Musk's companies

President Donald Trump shot back at reports that he will try to destroy the companies of former best friend Elon Musk, clarifying his intent when it comes to the world's richest man. Trump had previously threatened to take away the billions in government contracts that Musk's various companies hold. The duo had a very public fallout over Trump's one big beautiful bill, which resulted in each man making threats against the other But the president now says he wants Musk to 'thrive.' 'Everyone is stating that I will destroy Elon's companies by taking away some, if not all, of the large scale subsidies he receives from the U.S. Government. This is not so!,' the president wrote on Truth Social. 'I want Elon, and all businesses within our Country, to THRIVE, in fact, THRIVE like never before! The better they do, the better the USA does, and that's good for all of us,' Trump wrote. The clarification came after White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt was asked in her briefing on Wednesday if Trump supports federal agencies contracting with Musk's artificial intelligence company, xAI. 'I don't think so, no,' she replied and then added she would speak to the president about the matter. xAI won a contract for up to $200 million with the Department of Defense, alongside Anthropic, Google and OpenAI, last week. Additionally, this week, xAI unveiled a suite of products for U.S. government customers, which it refers to as Grok for Government. Trump and Musk have had a hot and cold relationship since the Tesla founder left government service in May. After his departure, Musk publicly turned on Trump's signature bill, complaining it would increase the country's debt and undo much of the savings his Department of Government Efficiency had sought. Trump was furious at Musk's public criticism and, at one point, responded: 'The easiest way to save money in our Budget, Billions and Billions of Dollars, is to terminate Elon's Governmental Subsidies and Contracts.' 'We might have to put DOGE on Elon. You know what DOGE is? DOGE is the monster that might have to go back and eat Elon,' Trump added. Musk, for his part, threatened to start a third political party to go after Republican candidates and posted on his X account that the reason the Jeffrey Epstein files hadn't been released because Trump is in them. He later took that post down.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store