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Rich and Creamy Blue Cheese Dressing

Rich and Creamy Blue Cheese Dressing

Rich and Creamy Blue Cheese Dressing

bowl of salad dressing - blue cheese dressing stock pictures, royalty-free photos & images
Photo by Getty Images

Blue Cheese Dressing Recipe by LUCKYME9 from All Recipes.

Prep time: 10 minutes

Cooking time: 10 minutes

Serving size: 6 servings

Ingredients

  • 2 ½ ounces blue cheese
  • 3 tablespoons buttermilk
  • 3 tablespoons sour cream
  • 2 tablespoons mayonnaise
  • 2 teaspoons white wine vinegar
  • ¼ teaspoon sugar 
  • ⅛ teaspoon garlic powder
  • salt and freshly ground black pepper
blue cheese on wooden board - blue cheese dressing stock pictures, royalty-free photos & images
Photo by Getty Images

Directions

  1. In a small bowl, mash blue cheese and buttermilk together with a fork until the mixture resembles large-curd cottage cheese.
  2. Stir in sour cream, mayonnaise, vinegar, sugar, and garlic powder until well blended. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
  3. Enjoy!
blue cheese full frame - crumble blue cheese stock pictures, royalty-free photos & images
Photo by Getty Images
New psychiatry residency program aims to strengthen mental health care in North Carolina

New psychiatry residency program aims to strengthen mental health care in North Carolina

RALEIGH, N.C. (WPTF) – A new initiative is working to broaden mental health services in Eastern North Carolina, focusing on rural areas and military families. But with a nationwide shortage of healthcare workers, how might this effort play out here in North Carolina? Dr. Joseph Pino is senior vice president of medical education and research at Novant Health who says that accessing healthcare can be tough.

“In one 2022 study, that evaluated access to mental health care, nationwide, North Carolina ranked in the bottom third along with other southern states. Rural areas in particular struggle with the reduced numbers of mental health providers and services,” said Pino.

The mission of Novant Health is to engage and connect donors to programs and initiatives that save lives and improve the health of the communities they serve. Statistically, it’s even harder for military personnel and their families to receive access to healthcare.

“North Carolina has the fourth largest military presence in the country. Military families frequently face moves across the country, long deployments and added stress that comes with military life. Those experiences can lead to anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and other mental health conditions,” said Pino.

Novant Health’s not-for-profit integrated system consists of more than 2,000 physicians in over 800 locations, as well as numerous outpatient surgery centers, medical plazas, rehabilitation programs, diagnostic imaging centers and community health outreach programs. A partnership between the UNC School of Medicine and Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune has created a four-year residency program in psychiatry.

“Each year, our program will accept three military residents and four civilian psychiatry residents. These are medical school graduates who are in a four-year training program to become board eligible in psychiatry,” said Pino.

Novant Health Foundation philanthropic efforts inspire giving that supports programs and initiatives having direct patient impact. What makes this center stand out from other medical training centers is the collaboration.

“We’re bringing together military medicine, academic expertise and community healthcare. They will receive an experience both treating civilian and military patients, while civilian residents gain a deeper understanding of the specific challenges military families face. That cross-collaboration and learning is invaluable through the course of their training,” said Pino.

The new residency program at Camp Lejeune reflects a collaborative approach to addressing the mental health care gap in North Carolina, particularly for rural populations and military families. By combining military medicine, academic training, and community healthcare experience, the initiative aims to build a stronger network of future psychiatrists. As healthcare organizations like Novant Health continue to invest in workforce development and community partnerships, the goal is to expand access to mental health services where they are needed most.

Sunrise Mocktail

Sunrise Mocktail

Sunrise Mocktail

Photo by Getty Images

Sunrise Mocktail Recipe from The Mindful Mocktail

Prep time: 3 minutes

Cooking time: N/A

Serving size: 1 servings

Ingredients

  • Alcohol-free sparkling wine or alternatives
  • Orange juice
  • ½ teapsoon Grenadine

Directions

  1. Add equal amounts orange juice and non-alcoholic sparkling wine (or alternative) to a champagne flute.
  2. Gently pour in the grenadine. Refer to video above where I demonstrate how to do this.
  3. Garnish with your choice of fruit and serve.
Judges blocks Trump push to cut funding to public schools over diversity programs

Judges blocks Trump push to cut funding to public schools over diversity programs

By HOLLY RAMER and COLLIN BINKLEY Associated Press

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A federal judge on Thursday blocked Trump administration directives that threatened to cut federal funding for public schools with diversity, equity and inclusion programs.

The ruling came in a lawsuit brought by the National Education Association and the American Civil Liberties Union, which accused the Republican administration of giving “unconstitutionally vague” guidance and violating teachers’ First Amendment rights.

A second judge in Maryland on Thursday postponed the effective date of some U.S. Education Department anti-DEI guidance, and a third judge in Washington, D.C., blocked another provision from taking effect.

In February, the department told schools and colleges they needed to end any practice that differentiates people based on their race. Earlier this month, it ordered states to gather signatures from local school systems certifying compliance with civil rights laws, including the rejection of what the federal government calls “illegal DEI practices.”

The directives do not carry the force of law but threaten to use civil rights enforcement to rid schools of DEI practices. Schools were warned that continuing such practices “in violation of federal law” could lead to U.S. Justice Department litigation and a termination of federal grants and contracts.

U.S. District Court Judge Landya McCafferty in New Hampshire said the April letter does not make clear what the department believes a DEI program entails or when it believes such programs cross the line into violating civil rights law. “The Letter does not even define what a ‘DEI program’ is,” McCafferty wrote.

The judge also said there is reason to believe the department’s actions amount to a violation of teachers’ free speech rights.

“A professor runs afoul of the 2025 Letter if she expresses the view in her teaching that structural racism exists in America, but does not do so if she denies structural racism’s existence. That is textbook viewpoint discrimination,” McCafferty wrote.

An Education Department spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

States were given until the end of Thursday to submit certification of their schools’ compliance, but some have indicated they would not comply with the order. Education officials in some Democratic-led states have said the administration is overstepping its authority and that there is nothing illegal about DEI.

The Feb. 14 memo from the department, formally known as a “Dear Colleague” letter, said schools have promoted DEI efforts at the expense of white and Asian American students. It dramatically expands the interpretation of a 2023 Supreme Court decision barring the use of race in college admissions to all aspects of education, including, hiring, promotion, scholarships, housing, graduation ceremonies and campus life.

In the ruling in Maryland, U.S. District Judge Stephanie Gallagher postponed that memo. She found it was improperly issued and forces teachers to choose between “being injured through suppressing their speech or through facing enforcement for exercising their constitutional rights.” That suit was filed by the American Federation of Teachers, one of the nation’s largest teachers’ unions.

“The court agreed that this vague and clearly unconstitutional requirement is a grave attack on students, our profession, honest history and knowledge itself,” Randi Weingarten, president of the AFT, said in a statement.

A judge in Washington, D.C., granted a preliminary injunction against the certification letter after the NAACP argued it failed to identify specific DEI practices that would run afoul of the law.

All three lawsuits argue that the guidance limits academic freedom and is so vague it leaves schools and educators in limbo about what they may do, such as whether voluntary student groups for minority students are still allowed.

The April directive asked states to collect the certification form from local school districts and also sign it on behalf of the state, giving assurance that schools are in compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

President Donald Trump’s education secretary, Linda McMahon, has warned of potential funding cuts if states do not return the form by Friday.

In a Tuesday interview on the Fox Business Network, McMahon said states that refuse to sign could “risk some defunding in their districts.” The purpose of the form is “to make sure there’s no discrimination that’s happening in any of the schools,” she said.

Schools and states are already required to give assurances to that effect in separate paperwork, but the new form adds language on DEI, warning that using diversity programs to discriminate can bring funding cuts, fines and other penalties.

The form threatens schools’ access to Title I, the largest source of federal revenue for K-12 education and a lifeline for schools in low-income areas. ___

Binkley reported from Washington.

___

The Associated Press’ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

Trump science cuts target bird feeder research, AI literacy work and more

Trump science cuts target bird feeder research, AI literacy work and more

By MATT O’BRIEN AP Technology Writer

Ashley Dayer’s dream of winning a National Science Foundation grant to pursue discoveries in bird conservation started when she was an early-career professor with an infant in her arms and a shoestring laboratory budget.

Competition is intense for NSF grants, a key source of funding for science research at U.S. universities. It took three failed applications and years of preliminary research before the agency awarded her one.

Then came a Monday email informing Dayer that President Donald Trump’s administration was cutting off funding, apparently because the project investigating the role of bird feeders touched on themes of diversity, equity and inclusion.

“I was shocked and saddened,” said Dayer, a professor at Virginia Tech’s department of fish and wildlife conservation. “We were just at the peak of being able to get our findings together and do all of our analysis. There’s a lot of feelings of grief.”

Hundreds of other university researchers had their National Science Foundation funding abruptly canceled Friday to comply with Trump’s directives to end support of research on diversity, equity and inclusion, as well as the study of misinformation. It’s the latest front in Trump’s anti-DEI campaign that has also gone after university administrations, medical research and the private sector.

The NSF’s director, Sethuraman Panchanathan, defended the agency’s priorities but then quit on Thursday, saying he had “done all I can to advance the critical mission of the agency.”

More than 380 grant projects have been cut so far, including work to combat internet censorship in China and Iran and a project consulting with Indigenous communities to understand environmental changes in Alaska’s Arctic region. One computer scientist was studying how artificial intelligence tools could mitigate bias in medical information, and others were trying to help people detect AI-generated deepfakes. A number of terminated grants sought to broaden the diversity of people studying science, technology and engineering.

NSF, founded in 1950, has a $9 billion budget that can be a lifeline for resource-strapped professors and the younger researchers they recruit to their teams. It has shifted priorities over time but it is highly unusual to terminate so many midstream grants.

Some scientists saw the cuts coming, after Republican U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz last year flagged thousands of NSF-funded projects he says reflected a “woke DEI” or Marxist agenda, including some but not all of the projects cut Friday.

Still, Dayer said she was “incredibly surprised” that her bird project was axed. A collaboration with other institutions, including the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, it tapped into Project Feederwatch, a website and app for sharing bird observations.

Dayer’s team had collected data from more 20,000 Americans on their birdwatching habits, fielding insights on how outdoor feeders were affecting wildlife, but also people’s mental well-being.

The only mention of the word “diversity” in the grant abstract is about bird populations, not people. But the project explicitly sought to engage more disabled people and people of color. That fit with NSF’s longtime requirement that funded projects must have a broad impact.

“We thought, if anything, maybe we’d be told not to do that broader impacts work and to remove that from our project,” Dayer said. “We had no expectation that the entire grant would be unfunded.”

DOGE says “wasteful DEI grants” cut as NSF head quits

On the day the grants were terminated, Panchanathan, the NSF’s director since 2020, said on the agency’s website that it still supported “research on broadening participation” but those efforts “should not preference some groups at the expense of others, or directly/indirectly exclude individuals or groups.” Less than a week later, Panchanathan had announced his resignation.

The NSF declined to share the total number of canceled grants, but Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency, run by billionaire Elon Musk, posted on X that NSF had canceled “402 wasteful DEI grants” amounting to $233 million. It didn’t say how much of that had already been spent. Grants typically last for several years.

Caren Cooper, a North Carolina State University professor of forestry and natural resources, said she expected her work would be targeted after it made Cruz’s list. Her grant project also sought to include people of color and people with disabilities in participatory science projects, in collaboration with the Audubon Society and with the aim of engaging those who have historically been excluded from natural spaces and birdwatching groups.

One doctoral student had left her job and moved her family to North Carolina to work with Cooper on a stipend the grant helped to fund.

“We’ve been trying to make contingency plans,” Cooper said. “Nonetheless, it’s an illegal thing. It’s violating the terms and conditions of the award. And it really harms our students.”

Cutting misinformation work

Along with eliminating DEI research, NSF said it will no longer “support research with the goal of combating ‘misinformation,’ ‘disinformation,’ and ‘malinformation’ that could be used to infringe on the constitutionally protected speech rights of American citizens across the United States in a manner that advances a preferred narrative about significant matters of public debate.”

Several researchers said they weren’t sure why their funding was terminated, other than that their abstracts included terms like “censorship” or “misinformation.”

“The lack of transparency around this process is deeply concerning,” said Eric Wustrow, an engineering professor at the University of Colorado Boulder whose grant aims to study and combat internet censorship in countries like China and Iran. “Did they just Ctrl+f for certain words, ignoring context?”

NSF said on its website that “there is not a list of words” to avoid, but that misinformation research is no longer aligned with NSF’s priorities.

Wustrow said his research supports free speech and access to information around the world, and he plans to appeal the decision to terminate the funding. Meanwhile, he’s looking at potentially working for free this summer without a grant to fund his salary.

Even for those who did intend to address misinformation, the cuts seemed to miss the point.

Casey Fiesler, of the University of Colorado Boulder, had a project focused on dispelling AI misconceptions and improving AI literacy — also a priority of Trump’s education department. Cornell University’s Drew Margolin said his work set out to help people find ways to combat social media harassment, hate speech and misinformation without the help of content moderators or government regulators.

“The irony is it’s like a free speech way of addressing speech,” Margolin said.

Are more cuts coming?

The NSF declined to say if more cuts are coming. The terminated funding mirrors earlier cuts to medical research funding from the National Institutes of Health.

A group of scientists and health groups sued the NIH earlier this month, arguing that those cuts were illegal and threatened medical cures.

The cuts at NSF so far are a tiny portion of all of the agency’s grants, amounting to 387 projects, said Scott Delaney, a research scientist at Harvard University’s school of public health who is helping to track the cuts to help researchers advocate for themselves. Some received termination letters even though their projects had already ended.

“It is very chaotic, which is very consistent with what is happening at NIH,” Delaney said. “And it’s really unclear if this is everything that’s going to get terminated or if it’s just the opening salvo.”

Dayer is still figuring out what to do about the loss of funding for the bird feeder project, which cuts off part of summer funding for four professors at three universities and their respective student teams. She’s particularly worried about what it means for the next generation of American scientists, including those still deciding their career path.

“It’s just this outright attack on science right now,” Dayer said. “It’s going to have lasting impacts for American people and for science and knowledge in our country. I’m also just afraid that people aren’t going to go into the field of science.”

——

Associated Press writer Ali Swenson in New York contributed to this report.

US election officials question agency about Trump’s order overhauling election operations

US election officials question agency about Trump’s order overhauling election operations

By CHRISTINA A. CASSIDY Associated Press

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — State and local election officials from around the country on Thursday questioned the leaders of a federal agency tasked by President Donald Trump with implementing parts of his sweeping election overhaul executive order, with some expressing concerns about the consequences for voters and the people in charge of voting.

The U.S. Election Assistance Commission, an independent and bipartisan federal agency, is at the center of Trump’s March 25 order that directs the commission to update the national voter registration form to include a proof-of-citizenship requirement and revise guidelines for voting systems. Trump also wants it to withhold federal money from any state that continues to accept ballots after Election Day even if they are postmarked by then.

Whether the Republican president can order an independent agency to act and whether the commission has the authority to do what Trump wants will likely be settled in court.

A federal judge on Thursday issued a preliminary injunction blocking the proof-of-citizenship requirement from moving forward while the legal challenges over Trump’s executive order play out.

On Thursday, the commission’s Standards Board – a bipartisan advisory group of election officials from every state – held its annual meeting in North Carolina. It was among the first conversations held by those who oversee the nation’s voting on the implications of Trump’s executive order.

The meeting was largely an opportunity for election officials to ask the four EAC commissioners about Trump’s executive order and share their concerns about its effects on election administration and voting.

“I can see on your faces there’s a lot of concern in this room for this process and other aspects of it,” Commissioner Thomas Hicks said. “And I would highly encourage you to send comments to us on that.”

An election official from Utah raised concern about how Native American communities might be affected under a proof-of-citizenship requirement, while an election official from Florida asked how voting machine companies could be expected to comply when a voting system has yet to be certified to meet the latest guidelines, which were updated in 2021.

“And they’re going to what — ramp up production and provide voting equipment and all that for all 50 states and five territories?” asked Paul Lux, elections supervisor in Okaloosa County.

Donald Palmer, chair of the Election Assistance Commission, sought to reassure election officials that the commission would weigh their concerns and encouraged them to continue sharing their thoughts.

“Wherever we end up in this process, my goal is to provide the least disruption to the states, to mitigate any impact on you and your voting systems,” Palmer told the group.

Voting rights groups, the Democratic Party and Democratic officials in 21 states have sued, arguing that the Republican president is exceeding his authority under the Constitution and interfering with states’ power to set election rules. They want to block the commission from taking action to implement the executive order.

The Constitution says it’s up to states to determine the “times, places and manner” of how elections are run, while Congress has the power to “make or alter” regulations for presidential and congressional elections. It does not grant the president any authority over how elections are administered.

The commission isn’t waiting for the court cases to play out. It sent a letter to state election officials seeking their thoughts on how they might implement a change to the national voter registration form to include a proof-of-citizenship requirement.

“It remains to be seen how this all plays out,” Commissioner Christy McCormick told The Associated Press during a break in the meeting. “I think we have to be ready, though. And I think that’s the position we’re in at the moment — trying to take what steps we can to be prepared.”

Both the process for updating the national voter registration form and making changes to the nation’s voluntary voting system guidelines are outlined in federal law. For the form, that involves getting feedback from state election officials and from the agency’s advisory boards. The process for the voting system guidelines also includes a period for public comment and a hearing.

Congress created the Election Assistance Commission after the 2000 presidential election, which included a contested outcome in Florida, to help states update their voting equipment.

Under the 2002 law, the commission was charged with distributing federal money for new voting equipment, creating voluntary guidelines for voting systems, establishing a federal testing and certification program for them, and overseeing the national voter registration form. It also has worked closely with the states to gather an array of data and share ideas on how to run elections more efficiently.

Trump, who continues to make false claims about the 2020 presidential election, instructed the commission to “take appropriate action” within 30 days to require documentary proof of citizenship on the national voter registration form. The order outlines acceptable documents as a U.S. passport, a REAL ID-compliant driver’s license or official military ID that “indicates the applicant is a citizen,” or a government-issued photo ID accompanied by proof of citizenship.

The requirement has caused widespread concern that it will disenfranchise millions of voters who don’t have a passport or ready access to their birth certificate or other documents that will prove their citizenship. Similar laws at the state level have caused disruptions, including during town elections last month in New Hampshire and in Kansas, where a since overturned law ended up blocking the voter registrations of 31,000 people who were citizens and otherwise eligible to vote.

Trump’s order also directed the Election Assistance Commission to “take all appropriate action to cease” federal money for any state that fails to use the form that includes the proof-of-citizenship requirement, though a handful of states are exempt under federal law from using the national form.

Some states would have to halt their practice of counting late-arriving mail ballots that are postmarked by Election Day. If they don’t, Trump’s executive order directs the commission to withhold election-related funding. Oregon and Washington have filed a separate lawsuit against the executive order, saying it would upend their elections because they rely entirely on mail voting.

Students and residents protest UNC’s coal plant over health and climate concerns

Students and residents protest UNC’s coal plant over health and climate concerns

RALEIGH, N.C. (WPTF) – Dozens of students and Chapel Hill residents gathered to protest the continued operation of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s campus co-generation plant, calling for an end to the use of coal and citing health risks, environmental injustice, and the university’s unmet climate goals.

The demonstration, organized by the Sunrise Movement at UNC-Chapel Hill, began at Granville Towers and ended outside the Cameron Avenue Co-Generation Facility. The plant, which provides steam and electricity to the university and UNC Hospitals, uses a combination of coal and natural gas. Kiersten Hackman, spokesperson for the Sunrise Movement, says this decades-old facility is at the center of long-standing environmental concerns.

“We’ve talked to residents in the neighborhoods that the coal plant is located right in between and these residents have been complaining for decades that they’re seeing health impacts of the coal plant that have been dismissed by the university,” said Hackman.

The Sunrise Movement has joined forces with other student organizations, including the Student Environmental Action Coalition and No-Coal UNC, to collect and analyze data on local air quality using monitoring equipment positioned in nearby neighborhoods.

“We know that the coal plant emits air pollutants that are four-to-six times the legal limit of the EPA due to a permit that they have from the NC Department of Environmental Quality and we are looking at the actual air pollutants in the area using air pollutant monitors,” said Hackman.

Organizers say these emissions are contributing to both local and regional pollution.

“Right now it is posing probably one of the biggest threats to environmental injustice in the Chapel Hill community with both the coal plant itself as well as coal ash that it has produced,” said Hackman. “We know that the University of North Carolina is contributing to this history of environmental injustice.”

According to environmental advocates, leftover coal ash—a byproduct of coal combustion—was used as fill material during construction of several buildings in Chapel Hill, including the current site of the police department. Concerns have been raised about the potential leaching of heavy metals from this material into the surrounding environment. Hackman says a lot of communities on campus have had diplomatic meetings with campus officials about these issues.

“What we’ve seen in those meetings is that they’re not really aware of the blueprints of their own University whereas students have done the research on public records of whether geothermal would be a valid solution, whether electrodes would be a valid solution. And the department meets our requests with ‘would cost too much’ or ‘that doesn’t work for our infrastructure’ or ‘that’s not the best solution,'” said Hackman.

Community concerns have long been overlooked despite consistent reports of respiratory issues and other health problems. Organizers hope their ongoing research will help validate these claims and push the university to take action.

North Carolina judges block GOP law to strip governor’s election board powers

North Carolina judges block GOP law to strip governor’s election board powers

By GARY D. ROBERTSON and MAKIYA SEMINERA Associated Press

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — North Carolina trial judges threw out on Wednesday another Republican attempt to strip the governor of his authority to appoint State Board of Elections members, declaring that a law shifting the task to the state auditor is unconstitutional.

One registered Republican judge and one Democratic judge on the three-member panel sided with Democratic Gov. Josh Stein, who with his predecessor Roy Cooper sued over the law finalized by the GOP-dominated General Assembly in December. The third judge, a Republican, dissented.

The governor picks the five board members, three of whom are traditionally members of the governor’s party. Appointments are made from candidates provided by the two major political parties.

The latest law would have given the responsibility to new GOP state Auditor Dave Boliek starting May 1, with the expectation that Republicans would assume a majority on the board.

Superior Court Judges Edwin Wilson and Lori Hamilton said the law would “interfere with the Governor’s constitutional duties.” Other elected executive officials assist the governor in executing state law, but the governor “bears the ultimate duty of faithful execution,” they wrote.

Their decision also cited rulings on previous unsuccessful attempts by the General Assembly to strip powers from the governor. Since late 2016, the Republican-dominated legislature has sought to erode or eliminate a governor’s authority to appoint the board that administers elections in the ninth-largest state.

Four previous laws targeting Cooper were blocked by courts — including a 2023 law declared unconstitutional by the same three-judge panel that ruled Wednesday. Voters in 2018 rejected a constitutional amendment that would have forced the governor to pick members recommended by legislative leaders.

Republicans have complained that a governor has too much control over elections, resulting in one-party decision-making and a lack of voter confidence. But Democrats say the laws are a GOP power grab designed to give Republicans an unfair advantage in elections in the battleground state. The board’s importance has been apparent in the still-unresolved election for a state Supreme Court seat.

Dissenting Superior Court Judge Andrew Womble argued that the General Assembly does have the constitutional authority to assign new powers to the state auditor. When it comes to allocating certain powers in the executive branch, the legislature is the “final authority,” he wrote.

Stein’s lawyer argued in court last week that the auditor’s historic role in state government has nothing to do with elections — it’s best known for issuing reports uncovering waste and fraud in state government. Upholding the law, he said, would have given the legislature the go-ahead to move other gubernatorial powers not specifically mentioned in the constitution to other statewide elected officials who would be inclined to carry out laws as GOP lawmakers wanted.

“The North Carolina Constitution puts the Governor in charge of executing the law. That’s what the voters elected me to do, so that’s what I’ll do,” Stein said in a post to X after the ruling.

Attorneys for Senate leader Phil Berger and House Speaker Destin Hall contend the constitution disperses executive-branch power in North Carolina government to many statewide elected leaders including the auditor, who can be tasked with carrying out elections and other laws. The board of elections isn’t mentioned in the constitution, which says the auditor’s duties “shall be prescribed by law.”

Boliek, who joined with GOP legislative leaders in the case, said late Wednesday that he would appeal the ruling. Republicans hold the majority of seats on both the state Court of Appeals and Supreme Court.

“We are taking immediate steps to rectify this constitutionally corrosive and misguided ruling,” Berger said in a statement. “The Board of Elections functioned in a highly partisan manner during the Cooper administration, with handpicked partisan Democrats running elections and rewriting rules. There’s no indication it will change under the Stein administration.”

Wednesday’s ruling also strikes down changes to how the 100 county elections boards are chosen, which also with Boliek’s involvement, would likely have Republican majorities, too. The county board changes would have started in June.

Stein is also suing lawmakers over additional provisions in the wide-ranging December law that weaken other powers of the governor and other Democratic officials. Cooper vetoed the bill, but Republicans completed an override.

‘Everything’ Pigs in a Blanket

‘Everything’ Pigs in a Blanket

‘Everything’ Pigs in a Blanket

Photo by Getty Images

‘Everything’ Pigs in a Blanket Recipe from Food 52

Prep time: 15 minutes

Cooking time: 30 minutes

Serving size: 30 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 (12-ounce) package beef cocktail franks or 3 (10-ounce) packages regular beef hot dogs
  • 1 (17.5-ounce) package puff pastry (2 sheets)
  • 1/4 cup whole-grain mustard
  • 1 large egg beaten with 1 tablespoon water
  • 4 tablespoons ‘everything but the bagel’ seasoning blend

Directions

  1. Heat the oven to 350°F. If you’re using regular hot dogs in lieu of cocktail franks, cut each hot dog into 3 equal pieces to yield 24 small hot dogs.
  2. Lay out a piece of parchment or wax paper and unfold the puff pastry on it. Lightly flatten with a rolling pin until about ¼ inch thick.
  3. Bush the mustard all over the pastry in a thin, even layer. Using a sharp knife, cut the pastry into 9 vertical strips. Cut the 9 strips in half horizontally to yield 18 small strips.
  4. Place the frank on the end of one strip and roll it up. Arrange on a parchment-lined baking sheet seam side down.
  5. Brush the puff pastry with egg wash and sprinkle the everything spice blend on top; use sparingly, as the blend is salty.
  6. Bake, rotating the pan halfway through, for about 30 minutes, until the pastry is golden brown.
Copycat McMuffin

Copycat McMuffin

Copycat McMuffin

Photo by Getty Images

Copycat McMuffin Recipe from Recipes Tin Eats

Prep time: 10 minutes

Cooking time: 15 minutes

Serving size: 4 servings

Ingredients

Sausage Patties

  • 1 lb / 500g ground pork (juicier) OR beef (mince)
  • 1/2 tsp dried ground sage
  • 1/2 tsp dried thyme
  • 1 tsp onion powder (or garlic powder)
  • 3/4 tsp black pepper
  • 3/4 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp sugar

Muffins

  • 2 tbsp oil
  • 4 eggs
  • 4 English muffins , cut in half
  • 4 slices cheese

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 130C/275F.
  2. Place muffins on a baking tray, cut side up, and top with cheese. (Alternative – melt cheese on sausage patties, see video)

Sausage Patties

  1. Mix Sausage Patty ingredients in a bowl – use your hands to mix it real good!
  2. Shape into 4 patties (thick ones, or 5 Maccers size patties). Make them slightly larger than the muffins because they will shrink when cooking.
  3. Heat oil in a large non stick skillet over high heat. Add patties (in batches if needed). Cook the first side for 2 – 3 minutes or until browned. Flip then cook the other side until browned. (Optional: After flipping, top with cheese, cover with lid to melt).

Egg

  1. Meanwhile, heat another pan over medium high heat with 1 tbsp oil. Spray egg rings with oil and place in the skillet. (Note 4 for other cook methods). 
  2. Crack egg into the rings. Add around 2 tbsp water into the skillet then cover with a lid. Cook for 1 – 2 minutes or until egg is cooked to your liking (I like runny yolks). 

Assemble

  1. Remove warm muffins from the oven. Top with sausage, then egg, the lid of muffin.
  2. Serve and enjoy!
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