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Rachael Ray says her NYC apartment flooded during Hurricane Ida: 'Just literally melted'

TV chef personality Rachael Ray is dealing with a flooded apartment just a year after her home in upstate New York went up in flames during a house fire.

The New York City apartment she shares with her husband John Cusimano got ruined during the heavy rainfall from Hurricane Ida, which killed 46 people in the Northeast, Ray told People in an exclusive interview published Wednesday.

"Ida took it out. And I mean, out. Down hard," Ray told the magazine. "Like, literally every speaker in the ceiling, the fireplace, every seam in the wall... It was like the apartment just literally melted, like in 'Wicked' or something."

Rachael Ray and her husband John Cusimano's New York City apartment was flooded during Hurricane Ida.
Rachael Ray and her husband John Cusimano's New York City apartment was flooded during Hurricane Ida.

The 53-year-old chef said the flooding happened right after they had finished renovating the apartment. They had to wait a week for a remediation team to come air out their home, but that led to even more damage.

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"They put up their fans and their humidifiers. And then, they make a hole in the wall and break the main water pipe and flood the entire building down to the first floor, from our apartment on the sixth floor." Ray said. "Tell me you would not feel like a kicked can."

USA TODAY has reached out to Ray's rep for more information.

Last August, Ray's home in Lake Luzerne, New York was engulfed in flames after a chimney fire. Ray opened up about the tragic loss of what was her home for 15 years on her show.

'I heard the fire in the walls': Rachael Ray describes devastating house fire

"I heard the fire in the walls," she said during her Season 15 premiere. "It was blood-curdling and chilling from head to toe. I turn to leave and there was a first responder right in front of me, (saying), 'Get out, get out now. You have to go.' "

Despite flames flying through the roof in the blaze, Warren County Fire Coordinator Brian LaFlure told USA TODAYat the time that Ray's high-end, self-designed kitchen avoided fire damage.

More: Rachael Ray 'grateful for what we have' after fire rips through her home; kitchen spared

Ray had been filming episodes of the "Rachael Ray Show" in the home kitchen during the COVID-19 pandemic, preparing food alongside her husband (and an at-home camera man).

She told People that she is still "grateful."

"There are so much worse positions we could be in," Ray said. "I mean, I'm alive. And I do have a roof over my head. And I do have a job."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rachael Ray says her NYC apartment flooded, a year after house fire