Maison Rose, cafe and bakery from Rose Street Patisserie team, coming to former I Nonni spot in Lilydale

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Maison Rose, a new cafe and production bakery from the team behind Rose Street Patisserie in St. Paul and Patisserie 46 in South Minneapolis, is set to open in spring 2026 in Lilydale.

Chef John Kraus and business partner Elizabeth Rose are taking over the building that since 2002 had been home to upscale Italian destination Osteria I Nonni and Buon Giorni Deli, until both closed in October.

Part of the 13,000-square-foot space will be a cafe, serving various pastries and breads, snacks and coffee. Hours of operation have not yet been announced.

The team also plans to expand the kitchen into a massive bakery production space that’ll become the headquarters for the Bread Lab, Kraus’s wholesale production facility that had previously been located within the old Schmidt Brewery complex on West Seventh Street in St. Paul. The space will also host an apprenticeship program to train professional bakers and offer public classes on bread, pastry and other sweet topics.

Both Rose Street Patisserie and Patisserie 46 will continue to operate as normal with Maison Rose as “an exciting new addition,” the company said in a statement.

“We’ve always believed that food has the power to bring people together, and this next chapter gives us the space to do that on a deeper level,” Kraus said in a statement. “We look forward to inviting the community in to slow down and savor the small moments while helping to educate and inspire the next generation of bakers in the joy of good food made with care.”

Kraus opened Patisserie 46 in Minneapolis in 2010. Rose Street Patisserie opened in 2016 in Linden Hills, but set up shop in St. Paul in 2018 and soon afterward closed the Linden Hills spot.

Maison Rose: Opening spring 2026 at 981 Sibley Memorial Hwy., Lilydale; patisserie46.com

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The best U.S. airports for drinking alcohol, ranked

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Whether it’s for wasting time or numbing travel headaches, bars and restaurants pouring booze are valuable oases in the airport ecosystem.

But not all airports are equal when it comes to imbibing. Putting that in stark relief is a ranking from travel-finance site Upgraded Points, “The Best U.S. Airports for a Boozy Layover,” which gives top billing to the East Coast and trashes the Bay Area’s Oakland airport.

The ranking is based on three factors: concentration of bars and restaurants, accessibility (number of venues per 10,000 passengers) and quality (as based on Google-review stars). With those metrics underpinning this highly scientific assessment, Upgraded Points has determined the winner to be Logan International Airport in Boston.

Of course, it’s no surprise that Boston has a thing with booze. What might be surprising is that the Oakland San Francisco Bay Airport ranked as one of the worst airports, coming in at 49 on a list of 50. The site says it “struggles with accessibility and quality, offering fewer high-rated bars than other California airports, plus minimal restaurant overlap for those looking to pair food with drinks.”

Best U.S. airports for drinkers by Upgraded Points

1 Logan International Airport (BOS)

2 Nashville International Airport (BNA)

3 Kansas City International Airport (MCI)

4 Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA)

5 Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport (MSY)

6 Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport (MSP)

7 San Diego International Airport (SAN)

8 Philadelphia International Airport (PHL)

9 LaGuardia Airport (LGA, or New York City)

10 Harry Reid International Airport (LAS, or Las Vegas)

Source: http://upgradedpoints.com/news/best-airports-boozy-layover-2025

Kennedy’s vaccine advisory committee meets to discuss hepatitis B shots for newborns

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By MIKE STOBBE, Associated Press Medical Writer

A federal vaccine advisory committee convened Thursday in Atlanta to discuss whether newborns should still get the hepatitis B vaccine on the day they’re born.

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For decades, the government has advised that all babies be vaccinated against the liver infection right after birth. The shots are widely considered to be a public health success for preventing thousands of illnesses.

But U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s committee is considering whether to recommend the birth dose only for babies whose mothers test positive, which would mark a return to a public health strategy that was abandoned more than three decades ago. For other babies, it will be up to the parents and their doctors to decide if a birth dose is appropriate.

Committee member Vicky Pebsworth said a work group was tasked in September with evaluating whether a birth dose is necessary when mothers tested negative for hepatitis B.

“We need to address stakeholder and parent dissatisfaction” with the current recommendation, she said.

The committee makes recommendations to the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on how already approved vaccines should be used. CDC directors almost always adopted the committee’s recommendations, which were widely heeded by doctors and guide vaccination programs. But the agency currently has no director, leaving acting director Jim O’Neill to decide.

Kennedy, a leading anti-vaccine activist before he became the nation’s top health official, fired the entire 17-member panel earlier this year and replaced it with a group that includes several anti-vaccine voices.

The panel has made several decisions that angered major medical groups.

At a June meeting, it recommended that a preservative called thimerosal be removed from doses of flu vaccine even though some members acknowledged there was no proof it was causing harm.

In September, it recommended new restrictions on a combination shot that protects against chickenpox, measles, mumps and rubella. The panel also took the unprecedented step of not recommending COVID-19 vaccinations, even for high-risk populations such as seniors, and instead making it a matter of personal choice.

Several doctors groups said the changes were not based on good evidence, and advised doctors and patients to follow guidance that was previously in place.

Hepatitis B is a serious liver infection that, for most people, lasts less than six months. But for some, especially infants and children, it can become a long-lasting problem that can lead to liver failure, liver cancer and scarring called cirrhosis.

In adults, the virus is spread through sex or through sharing needles during injection drug use.

But it can also be passed from an infected mother to a baby. As many as 90% of infants who contract hepatitis B go on to have chronic infections, meaning their immune systems don’t completely clear the virus.

In 1991, the committee recommended an initial dose of hepatitis B vaccine at birth. Over about 30 years, cases among children fell from about 18,000 per year to about 2,200.

But members of Kennedy’s committee have voiced discomfort with vaccinating all newborns.

Cynthia Nevison, an autism and environmental researcher, presented at the meeting. Nevison has written opinion pieces published by Children’s Health Defense, an anti-vaccine advocacy organization Kennedy previously led. She also co-authored a 2021 article in the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders that the publication retracted after concerns were raised about the paper’s methodology and about nondisclosed ties between the authors and anti-vaccine groups.

Another presenter was Mark Blaxill, a co-author of the retracted paper, who spoke about vaccine safety.

In the past, committee meetings have relied on presentations by the CDC scientists involved in tracking vaccine-preventable diseases and assessing vaccine safety. The agenda for this meeting listed no CDC scientists, but rather featured a prolonged public airing of anti-vaccine theories that most scientists have deemed as discredited.

Kennedy is a lawyer by training. Aaron Siri, a lawyer who worked with Kennedy to sue vaccine makers, is listed as a presenter on Friday on the topic of the immunization schedule for U.S. children.

The current guidance advises a dose within 24 hours of birth for all medically stable infants who weigh at least 4.4 pounds (2 kilograms), plus follow-up shots to be given at about 1 month and 6 months. The committee is expected to vote on language that says when a family decides not to get a birth dose, then the vaccination series should begin when the child is 2 months old.

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

Stillwater Twinkle Party and tree lighting set for Saturday

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A 60-foot blue spruce tree arrived in downtown Stillwater this week — just in time for the annual Hometown for the Holidays’ Twinkle Party and tree lighting on Saturday.

The 6,800-pound tree, a gift to the city from Aamodt’s Apple Farm in Grant, now stands in Chestnut Street Plaza.

A 60-foot blue spruce tree was transported from Aamodt’s Apple Farm to the Chestnut Street Plaza in downtown Stillwater on Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2025. (Courtesy of Greg Schulz / PicturesOverStillwater.com)

Owner Chris Aamodt said the tree, which was originally 68 feet tall, was planted by his paternal grandfather, Thor Aamodt, sometime in the 1960s. Thor and his wife, Lucille, started Aamodt’s Apple Farm in 1948 after Thor Aamodt retired from his job as a professor of horticulture and entomology at the University of Minnesota-St. Paul campus.

“The orchard was his retirement project,” Chris Aamodt said. “I literally remember being there when he planted it. My dad (Tom Aamodt) told him that it was too close to the barns and that we would need to cut it down in 40 or 50 years. I think Grandpa planned this.”

Aamodt said he contacted Mayor Ted Kozlowski a few years ago after the mayor put out a request for a tree for the holiday display at Lowell Park. “I said, ‘Dude, I think I have your tree,’” he said.

It turned out Aamodt’s tree was too big for the space at Lowell Park, but city officials made sure that the city’s new Chestnut Street Plaza could handle “a tree that would rival the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree,” he said.

Jeff and Missy Hause, of JAM Freedom, helped coordinate the crew that cut down the tree and transported it. Among the companies that helped: Big Sky Crane Co., McCallie’s Tree Service and Miller Excavating, Jeff Hause said.

The city’s Twinkle Party will start at 4:30 p.m. Saturday in North Lowell Park. Santa is slated to arrive – by fire truck – around 5 p.m. The lighting of the tree will be at 5:30 p.m.

For more information, go to https://greaterstillwaterchamber.com.

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