Yes, you can wash cast iron: 5 big kitchen myths, debunked

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Food myths come from many sources, and American cooks (including me) have swallowed lots of them. Some of them used to be truths, like the notion that you should eat oysters only in “R” months (before refrigeration, shellfish were safer to eat in the winter). Some come from restaurant kitchens, like the rule against washing mushrooms. (When you’re ready to use them, it’s perfectly fine to rinse off the dirt. Just don’t store them after washing; they will spoil once wet.) And some just derive from superstition, like the idea that brown eggs are healthier than white ones. (They are identical inside the shell; the color is determined by the hen’s feathers.)

The five notions below are the ones I’ve believed in the longest — and been most mystified by. I consulted the latest studies, called up experts, bought two extra rice cookers and tracked down farmers to find out once and for all: truth or myth?

TRUTH OR MYTH: Never use soap to wash a cast-iron pan.

Apart from the best way to cook rice, nothing gets cooking-science types more riled up than cast-iron pans. If you haven’t cooked in one, you might wonder what all the fuss is about, both on the cooking and the cleaning front.

For cooking, cast iron has a great weight and a porous surface — slightly rough, compared with smooth stainless steel or a nonstick coating — that makes it ideal for searing. The surface absorbs oil, which hardens over heat and over time into a shiny, nearly nonstick patina. This process is called seasoning, not in the sense of adding salt to taste but in the sense of developing a well-used, trusted tool.

I have been told that a truly well-seasoned cast-iron pan can cook an omelet without sticking, but I am too chicken to try. I have also been told that the best way to clean my skillet is to boil it, to bury it in the sand, and to never wash it at all. None of these seem like practical options.

The prohibition against soap comes from a time when all soap was made with lye, which could eat through a patina in minutes. And it’s true that most of the time, soap is unnecessary. Most of your cleaning power should come from hot water and gentle scrubbing or brushing, the way cast-iron pots like Chinese woks and Indian kadai are traditionally cleaned.

But sometimes a batch of bacon or a crusty steak leaves more residue in the pan than hot water can handle. A few drops of dishwashing liquid and a plastic scrubber will remove any cooked-on bits and degrease your pan just enough to move on to the final cleaning step. You want the pan to still have a sheen when you place it over low heat to dry out and to bond the latest layer of oil to the surface.

And if you use too much soap or scrub a little too hard (or if a houseguest runs your prized vintage Wagner through the dishwasher), it may remove a little of the patina. But just as a patina can be built, it can be rebuilt: This is when soap comes in handy. With a metal pad, you can scour any rust down to the cast-iron surface, then start the seasoning process over again.

VERDICT: False. As long as you’re not using scouring powder or drain cleaner, a little bit of soap won’t harm your cast-iron pan.

TRUTH OR MYTH: Pasta cooking water should taste as salty as the ocean.

Where did this myth come from? Probably not from Italy, where “salted water’ is understood to mean a palmful of salt in a standard 5-liter pasta pot. (The myth Italian cooks argue about is when, not whether, to add the salt.)

And more important, what does the ocean taste like, anyway? According to NASA, the average salinity of the Earth’s oceans is 3.5% by weight. That works out to 35 grams of salt per liter of water, or half a cup per gallon in home-cook terms.

To test the myth, I cooked eight batches of spaghetti at salt levels ranging from none to Pacific Ocean (3%) to Mediterranean Sea (4%). I can confirm that seawater is too salty. As I worked my way up from a teaspoon to a tablespoon of kosher salt per gallon, the pasta was noticeably undersalted, and its flavor got lost in the finished dish. I most liked water that tasted as salty as a light chicken stock, or 2 tablespoons per gallon of water.

Of course, the salted water rule doesn’t apply to all kinds of noodles. Italian pasta doesn’t contain salt because it interferes with gluten development, which makes it possible to roll pasta into sheets (as for fresh pasta) or extrude it through machines (for dried). Salt is added to the cooking water for flavor, and to make the noodles less sticky.

Asian wheat noodles like udon and lo mein have alkaline salts added to the dough, and they are traditionally cooked in unsalted water. Rice noodles are unsalted; like rice, they are supposed to taste neutral and fresh, so they are also typically cooked in unsalted water.

VERDICT: False. Salt to taste.

TRUTH OR MYTH: Always wash rice until the water runs clear before cooking.

For centuries, the process of milling rice — white or brown, sticky or sweet — produced bran, chaff and dust, and storing it brought vermin, fungi and spoilage. So for reasons of hygiene, safety and general anti-ick, rice absolutely did have to be washed. This is done in multiple changes of water, until the water, cloudy at the outset, runs clear.

Today, milled rice is sealed in oxygen-free tanks and lasts for decades, and, according to the most recent research, washing doesn’t affect the way the rice cooks. Modern growers say washing is unnecessary. So is there any need to? And if so, is a quick rinse enough or are we talking about multiple changes of water?

The answer depends on what kind of rice you’re cooking.

Instead of measuring short, medium and long grains, it makes more sense to think of the world’s two main varieties of rice: indica and japonica. Most rice is indica; it can be long or medium-grain and includes Indian basmati, Thai jasmine, Carolina, and parcooked rice like Golden Sella, used for jollof rice in West Africa. Japonica rice includes Spanish bomba, Italian Arborio and Japanese rice like Koshihikari and Nishiki; most, but not all of it is short-grain.

All of it now arrives in our kitchens milled, cleaned and lightly dusted in its own starch. But at the molecular level, the way the starches behave is slightly different. As the microscopic granules swell with hot water and burst while cooking, japonica releases more sticky starch. That’s (part of) why indica cooks up lighter and drier and japonica is denser, with a pearly sheen. Both types can be sticky enough to cling together when cooked, but you shouldn’t feel starch on your teeth.

Having always wondered if I could tell the difference between washed and unwashed rice, I bought an extra rice cooker and cooked three kinds of washed and unwashed rice side by side: Koshihikari, jasmine and basmati.

For the indica rices (jasmine and basmati), the difference between unwashed and rinsed rice was imperceptible. For the japonica, to my taste the washed rice had just a microdose less starch, taking it from already excellent to perfect.

VERDICT: False. Short- and medium-grain (japonica) rice can be washed to reduce stickiness, but it’s not required; long-grain rice (indica) just needs a rinse.

TRUTH OR MYTH: Have all of your ingredients prepared and your cooking oil heated before starting to cook.

So many dishes around the world begin by cooking some combination of aromatics (garlic, ginger, chiles, lemon grass) and vegetables (onions, celery, carrots) in hot fat, whether as a sofrito, a mirepoix, a recaito or a ginisa. And most published recipes — including many at New York Times Cooking — instruct you to prepare all of the ingredients separately, heat the oil (or butter or lard) until “shimmering” (or the like) and then begin to cook.

But years ago, I started to rush the process by adding ingredients directly from the cutting board to the pan with the oil. Now I set the pan over low heat and warm the ingredients as I work, stirring in each new ingredient as it’s ready. The heat goes up only once everything is minced, chopped, diced and coated evenly with oil.

This may not be exactly a eureka moment for most cooks, but it goes against the instructions in nearly every published recipe. The myth that all of the ingredients need to be prepared before any cooking starts comes to us from restaurant kitchens, where the concept of “mise en place,” French for put in place, is fundamental.

From outdoor stalls to high-end kitchens, professional cooks start with prepped ingredients and cook them to order, with attention focused on that one skillet (or wok or tadka) at a time. For stir-frying, where the cook is constantly moving the food around in the pan, this works great. And when deep-frying or pan-frying, starting with an empty pan and super-hot oil is integral to the cooking process.

But for slower food, like soups and stews, it’s perfectly fine to start the pan over low heat, and turn the heat to high only once everything is in. Diced vegetables like onions and celery take longer to cook than minced aromatics like ginger and garlic, so put the vegetables in first. They will soften, and then turn golden, and then — quite a lot later — caramelize. (Speaking of: Another persistent myth in American cooking is that it takes 8 to 10 minutes to caramelize onions, which is pretty much impossible unless you are a restaurant chef and stirring onions over high heat is your only job.)

VERDICT: False. When cooking something in a flash, preheated oil and prepped ingredients are necessities. But for other recipes, low and slow is a great start.

TRUTH OR MYTH: Always brown meat at the beginning of the cooking process, to ‘seal in’ the juices.

Historians like to argue about when humans discovered cooking (anywhere from 2 million to 70,000 years ago), but they do agree on this: Roasting meat (or poultry, fish, reptiles or amphibians) over an open flame was our first step toward home cooking.

But it wasn’t until a century ago that French scientist Louis-Camille Maillard identified the source of the delicious aromas and flavors produced by cooking proteins and sugars over high, dry heat. Maillard reactions are what make dry-roasted things like bread crusts, dumpling skirts, coffee beans and chicken skin taste and smell so good.

A lot of cooking is about generating those reactions, from tossing beef in a wok over high heat to coaxing a Thanksgiving turkey to achieve crisp skin. But that browned surface doesn’t actually keep the juices — a combination of blood, fats and collagen — in the meat.

If you’ve ever spent an hour patiently browning chicken thighs in batches, only to move to the next step and find you’re about to submerge them in liquid that will reduce the skin to flab, you may have wondered what all that work was for. Many traditional stews are built without it: a Central American jocón, a West African mafe and a Provençal daube all skip browning and rely on other ingredients to deepen their flavors.

Many stew recipes from European traditions call for a first step of browning the meat — sometimes “all over” — a process that creates extra mess and tedium. It isn’t about keeping the meat juicy or tender; it’s about building those delicious cooked bits at the bottom of the pan, the fond, to flavor the cooking liquid.

There are many other ways to make meat succulent — poaching it as in Hainanese chicken or braising it as in Indian curries — but browning isn’t one of them. Skip it if you wish, and try letting your stews rest overnight instead to deepen the flavors.

VERDICT: False. Browning is great for dry-heat dishes like steaks and roasts, but unnecessary for stews and braises.

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With new PFAS limits, some east metro cities have big water cleanup jobs ahead

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Nearly all of the water wells serving Hastings and South St. Paul have PFAS chemical levels exceeding the new limits for drinking water announced last week by the Environmental Protection Agency.

The cities are among several in the east metro that are stepping up efforts to handle the “forever chemicals” after the EPA on April 10 finalized standards of no more than 4 parts per trillion for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances. While some communities are able to comply by shutting off certain wells or blending water with cleaner wells, others will have to install costly new filtration systems to remove the chemicals.

Minnesota health officials said more than 300,000 people across the state have unsafe levels of PFAS in their water systems under the new EPA standards.

The updated guidelines mean that five of the six municipal wells serving Hastings are now above the allowable drinking water standards. The city of South St. Paul found that seven of its eight wells do not meet standards.

“We expected this,” said Hastings City Administrator Dan Wietecha. “For the last two years, we have been trying to avoid being in the position we are in now.”

Wietecha said the drinking water in Hastings is safe to drink in the short term, but if anyone has concerns, they should contact their doctor. “It’s not an emergency in terms of needing to boil the water,” he said. “It’s a matter of ingesting this water over years, it will increase the risk of certain cancers and other serious health impacts.”

A feasibility study conducted last summer recommended three new water treatment plants to address PFAS contamination, Wietecha said, adding that three separate plants was found to be the most cost-effective solution.

The total estimated cost for the three plants is $68.9 million, Wietecha said. Funding for the water treatment plants has yet to be secured as the city is submitting requests to both state and federal agencies. Completion of all three plants is anticipated for 2027.

Design of the first water treatment plant is underway thanks to a grant from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, Wietecha said, and will include an interconnect with the Minnesota Veterans Home in Hastings.

The veterans home, which currently draws from its own well and private water system, is working with the city to potentially connect to its infrastructure after it also was discovered to exceed the new limits, Wietecha said.

Also ongoing for the city is an environmental site assessment, currently in its second phase, working to narrow down the source of the chemicals.

As part of the ESA, one particular PFAS-related chemical was found in one of the city’s six wells that could only come from 3M Co., Wietecha said. The chemical has been described as a “fingerprint” for 3M, he said, and could allow the city to access part of 3M’s settlement funding.

Hastings residents are invited to a public meeting at 6 p.m. May 9 at Hastings High School, where there will be presentations by the city, the Minnesota Department of Health and the MPCA.

Hastings and the Minnesota Veterans Home are two of 22 water systems in the state – 10 in the metro area and 12 others statewide – put on notice after the EPA standards were announced.

The other metro systems are Brooklyn Park, Lake Elmo, Newport, South St. Paul, Stillwater, Woodbury and mobile home communities Cimarron Park (Lake Elmo) and Mobile Manor (Shakopee).

The nonmetro water systems out of compliance are Alexandria, Battle Lake, Cloquet, Pease, Pine City, Princeton, Sauk Rapids, Swanville, Wabasha, Waite Park, and mobile home communities in Austin and Bemidji.

Cities have five years to bring their water systems within the new lower limits, according to the EPA. Here’s how the new standards are affecting east-metro communities:

South St. Paul

The city of South St. Paul was informed that seven of its eight wells do not meet the new standards with some exceeding the PFOA and PFOS limits and other wells containing a mix of other PFAS chemicals.

“We were a bit surprised that seven of eight were over, because they were below guidance until recently,” said Nick Guilliams, city engineer for South St. Paul.

Currently, the city is monitoring its wells and working with MDH to get new testing results done, Guilliams said. Next steps include conducting a feasibility study to identify potential solutions to get below the new standards.

“This is not an emergency, so there is no need to seek an alternative source of water or boil water,” the city said on its website.

The city is looking for grant opportunities, Guilliams said Wednesday. “Any improvement we implement is going to be pretty costly, so trying to plan ahead for those costs is pretty important,” he said.

Community members who would like to learn more can attend the May 6 city council meeting, where there will be a presentation discussing the new guidelines and what it means for the city.

“The city is actively working on a solution to this issue that is complicated and ever-changing as we learn more,” Guilliams said.

Lake Elmo

Nothing has changed for Lake Elmo since the new limits were announced, said Interim City Administrator Clark Schroeder.

Over the past few years, traces of PFAS have been found in Well No. 2 at levels that were below the old maximum contaminant level, or MCL, of 15 parts per trillion. “Out of an abundance of caution, (city officials) elected to only utilize Well No. 2 on an emergency basis to maintain water tower levels,” he said. “These occurrences included a handful of days where (Well No. 2) would run a couple of hours a day to keep up to demand. When it does run, it is always blended in the distribution system with water from other wells.”

City officials are applying for a $2 million Minnesota Pollution Control Agency 3M settlement grant to install an ion exchange system at Well No. 2 to treat the PFAS – “a process that is expected to be complete before the 2025 irrigation season,” he said.

City officials met Wednesday with MPCA officials to discuss the design and construction of a $40 million water treatment plant for the city – and one or two more wells around 10th Street “to create more supply for the peak water demands of summer,” he said.

The city’s average water use per day is 600,000 gallons in the winter; summer peak days can exceed 3 million gallons per day. In 2023, city officials modified the city’s irrigation restrictions to two days a week and limited it to the hours between 5 p.m. and 5 a.m. This has allowed the two wells to maintain acceptable storage levels in the towers for fire protection and domestic daily use. Those same restrictions will be in place this year, he said.

With the new limits in place and the creeping of the contamination plume, city officials are anticipating possible positive tests on Well No. 4 and Well No. 5 in the future, he said. The city has received a grant to study a common treatment plant for those wells should they exceed the new levels, he said.

“Unfortunately, the city is limited in where it can put a new well due to the White Bear Lake level lawsuits,” he said, referring, in part, to a court order issued in 2017 by Ramsey County District Judge Margaret Marrinan that effectively prohibits the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources from issuing new or expanded groundwater pumping permits within five miles of the lake. “The cleaner water is in the north part of the city and due to the possible effects on the level of White Bear Lake, we would have to drill new wells in contaminated water in the south part of the city and add a treatment plant to remove the PFAS.”

Cimarron Park, the city’s mobile-home development, has its own water system, which is tested and monitored by the Minnesota Department of Health. Conversations revolving around connecting Cimarron Park to the city water system have started, but no plan has been established, Schroeder said.

Schroeder said residents should go to the city’s website and click on “Lake Elmo Water Topics” for more information.

Newport

Last week’s news was not a surprise for Newport city officials.

PFAS substances have been present along the city’s eastern border, and city officials have long known the “forever chemicals” would eventually flow into its groundwater, Mayor Laurie Elliott said.

“Even before the wells showed anything, we knew it was only a matter of time,” Elliott said. “We planned accordingly.”

One of the city’s two municipal wells has tested slightly above the new EPA health standards, but the city’s second well tests below, she said. “We’re blending water from our two wells to meet the EPA standards,” she said.

Eventually, Newport will connect to water from Woodbury and/or Cottage Grove – both of which are building new water treatment plants to treat the PFAS contamination, Elliott said.

The plants are being paid for with money from a multibillion-dollar settlement reached with 3M, a leading manufacturer of PFAS. Depending on what additional contamination is found, the amount paid out will range from $10.5 billion to $12.5 billion, officials said.

Stillwater

Affected wells in Stillwater are not being used, and there is no immediate health risk posed by Stillwater’s drinking water, said City Administrator Joe Kohlmann.

“The safety of our community is the guiding force for the urgency with which we are exploring both short- and long-term ways to mitigate PFAS,” Kohlmann said. “We are now evaluating those options with the new EPA standards in mind.”

On Tuesday night, the Stillwater City Council approved a $98,200 contract to conduct an options analysis for PFAS for the city’s water supply.

The study will include a summary of the city’s water usage, modeling of existing water distribution systems and will consider mitigation options for short-term treatment solutions. The cost of the study will be covered by an MPCA grant, Kohlmann said.

Kohlmann urged residents to go to stillwatermn.gov/waterupdates to sign up for email updates from the city on the water issue, or reach out with any questions or concerns.

Woodbury

The EPA announcement last week had no immediate impact on Woodbury’s municipal water system, either, said Jim Westerman, the city’s assistant public works director.

“Woodbury’s years of proactive work on temporary water treatment for PFAS, operational adjustments that we’ve made and our progress on a permanent treatment solution for the city’s system puts Woodbury in a very good position to meet the MCL standards and continue to provide the highest quality water possible to our residents,” he said.

Nine of the city’s 20 wells previously exceeded PFAS water quality standards and guidelines, but those nine are operational due to treatment technology known as granular-activated carbon that works to remove PFAS and can meet the city’s water demands for the bulk of the year, he said.

The 11 other wells are used in summer, when water demand is highest; city officials anticipate that seven of those wells will not meet the new MCL standards, he said.

“On those limited days, when we may need to turn them on and use water from those (seven) wells, that water will commingle with the water from the other 13 wells from our system,” he said.

Woodbury officials say a permanent solution won’t be available until 2028, when the city expects to complete its new $400 million water treatment plant capable of filtering all of its water of PFAS.

The money for the plant, which will be located on 24 acres of land in the south-central part of the city, is coming from the $850 million settlement reached in 2018 between the state of Minnesota and 3M, Westerman said.

The high cost of the plant is due, in part, to the estimated 18 miles of pipeline needed to connect wells to the plant, he said. The city, population 82,000, is “already developed, so we have to put a lot of pipe in the ground to get water in and then back out to the community,” Westerman said. “That is about half of the cost.”

The Woodbury City Council elected to treat water from all of the city of Woodbury municipal water supply wells – whether they are eligible under the settlement agreement or not, he said.

“That’s based partly on the continuing changing science of PFAS,” he said. “While those wells may not today receive health advisories – they may have low-level trace detections of PFAS that are acceptable today, but in the future, that may change.”

Home PFAS filtration

While water softeners, iron filtration systems and boiling water are not effective against removing PFAS, there are steps you can take if you have concerns about your health.

According to the Minnesota Department of Health, filters containing activated carbon or reverse osmosis membranes have been shown to be effective at removing PFAS from water supplies.

A granular activated carbon filter is one option for a point-of-use filtration method that allows water to pass through while accumulating contaminants on the filter.

The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, MDH and West Central Environmental Consulting evaluated one of these filters and found that it removed six out of seven PFCs, or perfluorochemicals, typically found in south Washington County groundwater when installed and maintained properly. The results of this study were found to remove PFCs to below “detectable levels and MDH health recommendations,” but it has not been updated to reflect the new EPA standards for PFAS.

Some refrigerators also are equipped with water filters that can remove or reduce PFAS. The Environmental Working Group, a research nonprofit, has composed a list of their top-rated water filters that reduced the presence of PFAS.

Find more information at www.pca.state.mn.us/pfas-in-minnesota.

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St. Paul resident along path of Gold Line has asked Met Council to buy her out

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Take a step off Dawn Keller’s curb and you’ll soon be standing in the parking lot drop-off of the Etna Station, the Clarence Street entranceway to the Gold Line corridor.

Keller’s front-door view once consisted of a woodsy tree lot frequented by a family of deer — “three of them,” she said. “Mom, baby and daddy.”

The trees are all gone, as is the adjoining sloping grass hill, all demolished to make room for Metro Transit’s $505.3 million bus rapid transit project, a 10-mile route that will connect downtown St. Paul to Woodbury following bus-only lanes parallel to the highway for much of the trip. Keller now has an unobstructed view of construction debris, and beyond that, U.S. 61.

By March 2025, Gold Line buses could roll into the Etna Station up to every 10 minutes at rush hour, passing just to the side of her house from early morning until late at night using a new bridge and elevated guideway under construction over Johnson Parkway. A massive highway noise wall went up about two months ago along the entrance ramp to Interstate 94, directly next to her property.

“I’ve got to do something,” said Keller, 60, a former teacher’s aide who has lived at the end of the Clarence Street cul-de-sac, or a house that was once across the street from it, since 1997. “I never had a problem with (the Gold Line) until they threw me in the middle of it. It’s not where I want to be — the middle of a bus station.”

Sought a buyout

Dawn Keller on the front porch her home in St. Paul’s Dayton’s Bluff neighborhood on Wednesday, April 17, 2024. Keller’s view of wooded hills has been transformed into a construction site as Metro Transit’s Gold Line bus rapid transit project is built just feet from her front door. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

Since 2019, Keller has asked the Metropolitan Council — the regional planning agency that oversees Metro Transit — to buy out her home, which she lives in through a contract-for-deed. The Met Council has been unresponsive, according to David Drach, an attorney from Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services who joined her effort last summer.

“Their response is they’ve done everything legally required,” Drach said. “This will totally transform her quality of life.”

Laura Baenen, a spokesperson for the Met Council, said the agency has not acquired any other homes to build the Gold Line and does not have a public purpose or need for Keller’s property. Acquiring private property for a public project might otherwise trigger a price negotiation and relocation benefit under state law, but Met Council officials have said that’s not relevant in her case.

Baenen forwarded an unsigned statement from the Met Council: “We understand the frustration transportation projects create. The Met Council has worked closely with this resident and has made some minor changes based on her feedback. Unfortunately, by law, the Met Council cannot pay off any debt on this property or compensate the owner.”

St. Paul, not the Met Council, offered $209,000 for relocation

Construction trucks rumble past Dawn Keller’s home in St. Paul’s Dayton’s Bluff neighborhood overlooking the what will be Metro Transit’s Gold Line on Wednesday, April 17, 2024. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)

Officials with the city of St. Paul came to a different conclusion.

When she was still in office, former St. Paul City Council member Jane Prince visited Keller and was moved to tears.

“She came out here and literally cried when she found out what they were doing,” Keller said. “She said, this isn’t right.”

Clarence Street is a city street, so Prince felt the city had some obligation to help. Nearly a decade ago, the city’s Gold Line station area plans contemplated the possibility of a sizable multi-family apartment building directly across from Keller’s property, with a commercial storefront on ground level.

“In the Etna Station Area, the property at the northwest corner of Etna Street and Wilson Avenue may have long-term potential for large-scale mixed-use development due to its size and proximity to the station, provided that the pedestrian environment is improved,” reads the city’s station area report from 2015. “Land use change should occur immediately around the Etna Station through the creation of new developable land.”

With the possibility of future development in mind, Prince found $209,000 in city coffers that could be used to attempt to buy out Keller’s property. It’s still not enough, Drach said, to both cover the remaining $60,000 Keller owes on her contract-for-deed and purchase a comparable home.

The city’s offer was based on both the appraised value of her home in August 2023 — $125,000 — and an additional $84,900 to help defray relocation expenses, as required by the state’s relocation law, said Crystal King, a spokesperson for St. Paul Planning and Economic Development, on Tuesday.

And as months pass, those numbers may be in flux.

“The spirit of the offer provided by the city remains available to Ms. Keller,” King said. “However, staff may need to recalculate the previous offer amount based on a dynamic housing market.”

Unsuccessful effort

Drach called the city’s offer generous and appreciated. Still, he noted that Keller, who stopped working years ago after suffering seizures, lives on disability and, based on her age, income and financial history, would not qualify for a traditional mortgage. The two believe that if the Met Council partially matched the city’s $209,000 offer by chipping in an additional $60,000, that would be enough to pay off the debt on her Clarence Street home and relocate her to a similar property elsewhere.

After an unsuccessful effort to meet with Chai Lee, her Met Council district representative, Keller reached out to him again this month by email. He declined an in-person meeting and referred further questions to the Met Council’s attorney and bus rapid transit project manager.

“At this time, the information that staff have communicated is the Council’s position on this matter, and an additional meeting would not result in a change in the Council’s stated position,” wrote Lee, in an April 11 response.

Drach noted that removing Keller’s home would create more room for parking or other amenities attached to the transit station and any future development there. “It would be good for everyone to have that dedicated space,” he said.

For her part, Keller just wants to be away.

“I want out of here,” she said. “I don’t want to be anywhere near this.”

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Jury selection in Trump hush money trial faces pivotal stretch as former president returns to court

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By MICHAEL R. SISAK, JENNIFER PELTZ, ERIC TUCKER and JAKE OFFENHARTZ (Associated Press)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Jury selection in the hush money trial of Donald Trump enters a pivotal and potentially final stretch Thursday as lawyers look to round out the panel of New Yorkers that will decide the first-ever criminal case against a former president.

Seven jurors have been picked so far, including an oncology nurse, a software engineer, an information technology professional, a sales professional, an English teacher and two lawyers. Eleven more people must still be sworn in, with the judge saying he anticipated opening statements in the landmark case to be given as early as next week.

The seating of the Manhattan jury — whenever it comes — will be a seminal moment in the case, setting the stage for a trial that will place the former president’s legal jeopardy at the heart of the campaign against Democrat Joe Biden and feature potentially unflattering testimony about Trump’s private life in the years before he became president.

The process of picking a jury is a critical phase of any criminal trial but especially so when the defendant is a former president and the presumptive Republican nominee. Prospective jurors have been grilled on their social media posts, personal lives and political views as the lawyers and judge search for biases that would prevent them from being impartial. Inside the court, there’s broad acknowledgment of the futility in trying to find jurors without knowledge of Trump, with a prosecutor this week saying that lawyers were not looking for people who had been “living under a rock for the past eight years.”

To that end, at least some of the jurors selected acknowledged having their own opinions about Trump.

“I find him fascinating and mysterious,” one juror selected for the case, an IT professional, said under questioning. “He walks into a room and he sets people off, one way or the other. I find that really interesting. ‘Really? This one guy could do all of this? Wow.’ That’s what I think.”

The process has moved swifter than expected, prompting Trump when leaving the courthouse on Tuesday to complain to reporters that the judge, Juan Merchan, was “rushing” the trial.

The case centers on a $130,000 payment that Trump’s lawyer and personal fixer, Michael Cohen, made shortly before the 2016 election to porn actor Stormy Daniels to prevent her claims of a sexual encounter with Trump from becoming public in the race’s final days.

Prosecutors say Trump obscured the true nature of the payments in internal records when his company reimbursed Cohen, who pleaded guilty to federal charges in 2018 and is expected to be a star witness for the prosecution.

Trump has denied having a sexual encounter with Daniels, and his lawyers argue the payments to Cohen were legitimate legal expenses.

Trump faces 34 felony counts of falsifying business records. He could face up to four years in prison if convicted, though it’s not clear that the judge would opt to put him behind bars. Trump would almost certainly appeal any conviction.

The hush money case is one of four criminal prosecutions Trump is confronting as he vies to reclaim the White House, but it’s possible that it will be the sole case to reach trial before November’s presidential election. Appeals and other legal wrangling have caused delays in cases charging Trump with plotting to overturn the 2020 election results and with illegally hoarding classified documents.

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Tucker reported from Washington.