COPENHAGEN — He’s the two-Michelin-starred chef at the helm of what one U.K. newspaper called “the world’s weirdest restaurant,” dishing up freeze-dried butterflies, deer blood ice cream and caged chicken claws every night as part of a 50-course gastro-marathon.
Washington
In the search for sustainable food, a top chef homes in on waste
Spora grew out of Alchemist’s Copenhagen test kitchen, where chefs still shape and puff and buff dishes during the first part of each night’s meal. But that bright white test kitchen is now simply a kitchen, with Munk’s ideas finding a second home at a lab mere blocks away in Refshaleøen, a former industrial site.
The goal he is forever working toward, he tells me earnestly, is: “Can you make something that has such a big impact that you change the world?” Alchemist has been his first pass at making political statements about the way we eat (the ice cream comes with a QR code for blood donation), but seats just 55 diners in its one nightly service, which typically runs to six hours. Spora, then, is his chance to make “the products of tomorrow” — primarily by “upcycling” materials discarded in other food processes.
Spora is nothing like the grandeur of Alchemist, the 24,000-square-foot space where the 50 courses (or as Munk calls them, “impressions”) take place in five locations, including a planetarium-style dome on which graphics swirl overhead and a ball pit. Like Munk himself, dressed all in black when we meet, the lab is surprisingly understated.
A chef is checking over his latest batch of cocoa-less chocolate in an otherwise unremarkable kitchen; upstairs is the diminutive lab that looks like a meeting room. There, Mette Johnsen, Spora’s CEO, opens a cupboard door to reveal a colony of leaf cutter ants in a glass case, cultivating fungus — and in the process, teaching Spora’s 20 staff members about the “effective transformation of plant materials into nutrients.” The ants also “release a pheromone with an incredible lemony/ginger/umami flavor, which make them very interesting to explore gastronomically,” she says.
The experiment encapsulates what Spora can offer the world when it comes to sustainable food, Johnsen says — a matter more urgent now than ever, with 40 percent of the food grown in the United States uneaten or unsold. (ReFED, a food waste research organization, says that food waste has the same climate footprint as the whole U.S. aviation industry — the military included — equivalent to 1.8 percent of the U.S. GDP.) To make what we eat more planet-friendly, “you need to bring together science and gastronomy, [as] individually, they’re not going to find these answers,” Johnsen says. Spora “is the intersection or transaction of the disciplines coming together, and asking different questions, and finding different answers.”
The lab has two development streams: repurposing existing waste foods and fermentation. Foods in development include rapeseed (a.k.a. canola) cakes, the solid byproduct formed when oil is extracted from the crop, of which 36.8 million tons are produced each year. I eat it as a taco filling (earlier in the week, they tried it as a meat replacement in spaghetti Bolognese); it tastes earthy, tempeh-like in texture. Their protein bar version, which blends rapeseed cakes with dried fruits and nuts, could be sold tomorrow.
Further behind is the chocolate, which, considering the high land farming required and child labor issues in the cultivation process, they want to make minus cocoa. It is no simple task to re-create “the same properties that we love about chocolate, so snap, smell, mouthfeel; the smoothness and how it melts in your mouth,” Johnsen says. We chomp through variations including honey, raspberry and coffee ganache (made from waste coffee grounds), though Johnsen admits that on deliciousness, “we’re not quite there yet.” (I would agree.)
There are “probably five projects, six projects at least” on the go, Munk says, including partnerships with a San Francisco start-up developing cell-grown salmon (Spora’s role is to replicate the fishy taste), and a major drinks company. Munk doesn’t see Spora’s name ending up on any of the products that will be sold, though two of its creations are now on Alchemist’s menu: a fungi gel developed as part of a study with the University of California at Berkeley; and the cocoa-less chocolate, made from spent grain otherwise discarded during beer production, now used in the restaurant’s petits fours.
The lab may seem an unusual move for someone like Munk, who inhabits a world where his peers are more likely to lend their name to pasta sauces or cookbooks or celebrity collaborations. But he sees it as the logical next step for melding the personal with the political — his animus since the first Alchemist opened. At the restaurant, where tables sell out in minutes and there is a waiting list of 10,000, there have been five walkouts from perturbed diners over the years, and endless arguments as parties fall out over the caged claw (his attempt to highlight the ills of battery farming), or an “impression” addressing garbage in the ocean, which features plaice shrouded in edible “plastic,” made from algae and fish skin collagen.
Running Alchemist (which doesn’t open unless Munk is there), a February pop-up with Ferran Adria of El Bulli (the father of molecular gastronomy, whose restaurant was voted best in the world before its 2011 closure), a string of Super Bowl events in Las Vegas and opening Spora have resulted in a “crazy” period for the millennial provocateur.
All the same, he is pressing on with his sustainability crusade, of which he is an unlikely leader. Munk grew up on a farm in Randers, Jutland, 3½ hours outside Copenhagen, where the food highlight of his youth was a weekly visit to McDonald’s. He had never heard of organic fare until his late teens, when he began culinary training. But with the knowledge and status he has now, he believes it is on him — as well as others in the industry — to change our outlook.
“I think a lot of chefs have voices out there, and some use it on telling stories about childhood memories” through their dishes, he says. “But I also think you can take it further” — to use it as a medium through which “to discuss, and sometimes to create a debate” about the meaning of what we eat. While musicians or painters convey a deeper message through their art, “it seems like when you use food as a medium for that, we’re still maybe a little bit conservative.”
Still, he is not the only Michelin-starred chef looking to the future. Noma, ranked the world’s best restaurant multiple times (and just a mile away from Alchemist) is closing down this year to restart life as “Noma 3.0” come 2025, when chef-patron René Redzepi will herald its transformation “into a giant lab — a pioneering test kitchen dedicated to the work of food innovation and the development of new flavors,” as he wrote on the restaurant’s website. (El Bulli also has a lab running research programs and various culinary projects, with the goal being “to share knowledge in various formats,” according to the El Bulli Foundation.) Meanwhile at Eleven Madison Park, crowned the world’s best in 2017, new flavors have been on the menu since Daniel Humm in 2021 pivoted its famed duck, lobster and caviar dishes to all vegan fare, because, as he told Wallpaper magazine, “We’re just running out of resources.”
Munk acknowledges the hypocrisy in his own mission. It would be far better for the planet to shut Alchemist down, he knows: to turn off the projectors that adorn the dome, stop people flying in from around the world to visit, to end the nightly regimen of putting tiny circles of food on diners’ plates and doing away with the rest.
With the oil still burning at Alchemist, for Munk, Spora is his own personal offsetting scheme — even if he worries that the goals he started out with as a young chef hopeful of earning a Michelin star are “so much bigger now, and maybe also sometimes too big.” Still, he is pressing on, optimistic that greater change is coming — and inside of six months. “It’s very important that Spora’s [work] is not just in small, romantic little bakeries” in Copenhagen; “it needs to have a broader perspective,” Munk says, ideas for our future that are “possible to scale up for millions of lives.”
Washington
Deputies use drone to catch man wanted for damaging car in Washington County
WASHINGTON COUNTY, Ore. (KPTV) – The Washington County Sheriff’s Office released video of deputies using a drone to track down a man wanted for damaging a car.
On Saturday, May 30, a 911 caller reported a man damaging a car outside their home on Southwest 179th Avenue in Aloha. The sheriff’s office said it was reported the suspect, 21-year-old Santos Paulino Castro-Ramirez, was punching the car.
Deputies used a drone to follow the suspect as he ran toward Southwest Barcelona Lane. The sheriff’s office said Castro-Ramirez then entered a white SUV that did not belong to him on SW Barcelona.
Deputies arrested Castro-Ramirez. He was booked into the Washington County Jail for first-degree burglary and attempt to commit a crime – second-degree theft.
Copyright 2026 KPTV-KPDX. All rights reserved.
Washington
Lebanon hopes crunch talks in Washington will halt an Israeli invasion
Beirut, Lebanon – On Tuesday, representatives from Lebanon and Israel met at the US Department of State in Washington, DC – the first session of a two-day round of negotiations that Lebanese negotiators hope will end an invasion of their country.
The negotiations, which started at 9am local time (13:00 GMT), come as Israel’s invasion of Lebanon pushes deeper than at any point since the year 2000 and as Hezbollah and Israel continue to trade attacks. Israel has killed 3,468 people in Lebanon since March 2, according to Lebanon’s Ministry of Public Health.
With the war raging on, what do Lebanon and Israel have to discuss and will the talks lead to an end of the Israeli assault?
Here’s everything you need to know.
What will Israel and Lebanon discuss?
Similar to past meetings, the two sides are ostensibly looking to come to some kind of deal following fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, with strong doubts it will be achieved.
Lebanon’s government is still pushing for a total ceasefire. However, as talks started, Israel was striking various parts of southern Lebanon. Lebanon is also trying to get Israel to withdraw from Lebanese territory in the south, so that more than 1.2 million displaced people can return home, and so the state can resume finding a way to disarm Hezbollah and rebuild areas devastated by Israeli attacks.
Israel is meanwhile looking to get assurances that Lebanon will disarm Hezbollah, a prospect analysts say Israel knows is complicated by the continuation of its military operations and occupation of swaths of southern Lebanon. Instead, Israel appears to be trying to fuel sectarian tensions inside Lebanon, leading to chaos and internal strife.
What has happened so far?
An initial meeting took place in April between Israel and Lebanon’s ambassadors to the United States. A second round took place in May with a larger delegation on both sides.
On Friday, a meeting took place with Lebanese and Israeli military representatives, while Hezbollah, the Iranian-backed Lebanese group, is not involved in the meetings.
Israel claimed the two sides found common ground in that they both wanted to see Hezbollah disarmed. Some Israeli officials suggested there may soon be trade agreements and an exchange of tourists between the two countries. Lebanon, however, said it preferred to find a deal closer to the 1949 armistice agreement between the two countries.
In the last meeting, Beirut reportedly outlined the damage done by Israeli attacks since the 2024 ceasefire agreement and presented detailed maps showing homes destroyed or razed by Israel.
Is there a chance for a ceasefire?
That remains to be seen, but for now, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his country’s military would continue attacking Lebanon.
On Monday, Netanyahu announced that attacks on Beirut’s southern suburbs would resume, despite a ceasefire. Apart from two targeted attacks, Israel has not struck the suburbs, known as Dahiyeh, since April.
Iran, which has attempted to include Lebanon in a wider ceasefire between themselves, on one side, and Israel and the US on the other, then intervened by threatening to attack northern Israel.
US President Donald Trump reportedly intervened to stop Israel’s attacks. He announced another ceasefire, after his previous announcement of one between Israel and Lebanon on April 16, after claiming he had gotten the approval of Netanyahu and spoken to Hezbollah.
“There will be no troops going to Beirut, and any troops that are on their way have already been turned back,” Trump announced on his social media platform, Truth Social.
But attacks from Israel and Hezbollah are continuing.
How do Lebanese people feel about the talks?
Not everyone is on the same page.
Some Lebanese support the talks and say they are the only option the state, which has little leverage, has. Among those who believe direct talks are the best way forward are Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam.
“There is no option other than negotiation,” Aoun said in a statement on Tuesday.
Others, however, oppose direct talks. Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri and his allies, Hezbollah, have said indirect talks are preferred and that negotiations cannot be conducted while attacks are ongoing.
How are Iran and the US connected?
Israel and the US attacked Iran on February 28, killing the country’s longtime leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Iran is Hezbollah’s primary benefactor, and two days after Khamenei’s assassination, Hezbollah fired six rockets towards Israel on 2 March.
Hezbollah’s response brought a huge response from Israel, who have crossed the Litani River – the supposed buzzer zone in southern Lebanon it had created – towards the Zahrani River.
Despite a 2024 ceasefire, Israel had never stopped attacking Lebanon, while Hezbollah had only responded once in December 2024.
Iran has attempted to include Lebanon in the ceasefire deal it has with the United States and Israel, who say this theatre is not part of the agreement.
Although Trump has now announced a ceasefire between Hezbollah and Israel twice, the invasion of southern Lebanon continues.
Are there other actors involved?
Gulf states have also intervened. Saudi Arabia has been working behind the scenes to get Lebanon’s leadership – Aoun, Salam and Berri – on the same page. Meanwhile, analysts say Saudi Arabia and Qatar engaged the Trump administration to stop an escalation in Lebanon.
Washington
Washington Lottery Powerball, Cash Pop results for June 1, 2026
The Washington Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big.
Here’s a look at June 1, 2026, results for each game:
Winning Powerball numbers from June 1 drawing
02-42-47-57-58, Powerball: 14, Power Play: 3
Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Cash Pop numbers from June 1 drawing
11
Check Cash Pop payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Pick 3 numbers from June 1 drawing
8-6-0
Check Pick 3 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Match 4 numbers from June 1 drawing
07-08-09-18
Check Match 4 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Hit 5 numbers from June 1 drawing
03-10-28-32-33
Check Hit 5 payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Keno numbers from June 1 drawing
04-05-08-14-16-17-23-24-27-28-31-32-38-43-45-47-51-58-65-66
Check Keno payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Lotto numbers from June 1 drawing
05-09-10-15-21-26
Check Lotto payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Powerball Double Play numbers from June 1 drawing
02-07-35-44-57, Powerball: 25
Check Powerball Double Play payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your lottery prize
All Washington Lottery retailers can redeem prizes up to $600. For prizes over $600, winners have the option to submit their claim by mail or in person at one of Washington Lottery’s regional offices.
To claim by mail, complete a winner claim form and the information on the back of the ticket, making sure you have signed it, and mail it to:
Washington Lottery Headquarters
PO Box 43050
Olympia, WA 98504-3050
For in-person claims, visit a Washington Lottery regional office and bring a winning ticket, photo ID, Social Security card and a voided check (optional).
Olympia Headquarters
Everett Regional Office
Federal Way Office
Spokane Department of Imagination
Vancouver Office
Tri-Cities Regional Office
For additional instructions or to download the claim form, visit the Washington Lottery prize claim page.
When are the Washington Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 7:59 p.m. PT Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 8 p.m. PT Tuesday and Friday.
- Cash Pop: 8 p.m. PT daily.
- Pick 3: 8 p.m. PT daily.
- Match 4: 8 p.m. PT daily.
- Hit 5: 8 p.m. PT daily.
- Daily Keno: 8 p.m. PT daily.
- Lotto: 8 p.m. PT Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Powerball Double Play: 8:30 p.m. PT Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Washington editor. You can send feedback using this form.
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