Crockpot Arroz con Pollo

I belong to the The Rocky Mountain Inkslingers, a rubber stamping club that meets once a month. This month, we swapped recipe cards, suitably decorated with rubber stamps. For my recipe, I chose Crockpot Arroz Con Pollo, which has become a staple since we first tried the recipe about a year ago. The chicken always turns out well, and the results are fresher tasting than a lot of crockpot recipes, perhaps because the peas are added an hour before serving.

Faux postage card

fauxpostagecard.jpeg

Emboldened by my success with the CD burner, I started working on getting my Epson 610 scanner to work with Linux. It now works, although I am not completely sure of which of the many things I tried succeeded. USB scanners don’t seem to have good support under Linux.

I made this faux postage card for a swap last spring featuring cards using eyelets. The base of the card is white. I added a black border with Gimp so the card would show up.

k3b

k3b rocks (almost). This morning, I managed to burn my first CD under Linux. I used an application called k3b, which allows burning CDs and DVDs in a variety of formats. Unfortunately, I was slowed down by k3b being set up to use the KDE desktop environment, so I had to use KDE to run the k3bsetup utility. However, it all seems to be working now under my normal Gnome environment.

Grip

I’ve been using grip to transfer some of my CDs to my fixed disk so I can them replay them with “xmms”:http://www.xmms.org/. Although I like to listen to music when I am working at my computer, I find it tedious to continually have to switch cds in the cup holder. Right now, I have over 400 songs by thirty artists and groups. Grip, as indicated by its name, grabs a stranglehold on the computer resources, but hidden in the configuration tabs is a place where you can tell it to play “nice”:http://www.die.net/doc/linux/man/man1/nice.1.html so you can use your computer for other activities at the same time.