Friday, November 14, 2014

All about the stripes.

Once upon a time I gave up buying clothes.

The End.

Now, we all know that's clearly not true. It can't ever be the end. I gave up buying things for a while and then - slowly but surely - I have started purchasing again. It's not like I have loads of space (I don't have any, to be honest!). I don't really NEED much (do any of us?) but the thrill of finding something lovely and then wearing it for the first time cannot be denied.

I am trying to limit myself to things I either very much need (in the broader sense of the definitition) to round out my wardrobe, things that are very cheap, and "investment pieces" (things that are expensive but that I can justify because they are absolute workhorses of the wardrobe).

I have been wanting to add some nautical stripes to my wardrobe for some time now but I needed to find the right stripe for me. Everything either had stripes that were too thin or too much white... I wanted the stripes to be predominantly navy with a smaller white stripe. I liked the idea of a skirt - the pattern adverse part of me could deal with a smaller block of pattern. I toyed with the idea of the gorgeous Bohemian Traders skirt but when I found this one at Sussan, I was hooked.


Following fashion Icon Redcliffe Style, I paired it with this gorgeous linen shirt which was drastically on sale (thanks for the tip!) and a white Witchery cami so I can layer and use the shirt as a bit more of a jacket style if I want.

To dress it up, I would wear The Jewel Collective Tara necklace, featuring gorgeous Tahitian and baroque freshwater pearls, or the Aphrodite which has a very pretty white sapphire central element, set in sterling silver.






Throw on a pair of flats or espadrilles (I like these ones from The Iconic) and a Metallic handbag and you are set!

Now I am hooked on stripes. I am considering getting this tee shirt from Katies (because CUTE!). And maybe even digging out my old striped canvas bag from pre Georgie days!

What other stripey things could I add to my wardrobe?

Kitty x

Monday, November 10, 2014

Christmas List: What's on yours?

Every year it gets to this point in time and I am ready. Ready for Christmas. I have decided what I am going to bake, I have lists, I have ordered Christmas cards, I am ORGANISED.

This year? Well, this year... Not so much...

At the moment I am procrastishopping. Building a list of things I'd like for Christmas (which will basically be bought by me in the post Christmas sales at this point). But a girl can dream - or post suggestions on her blog for her husband... Hint Hint...

So, this is what's on my list:




A TANDA MODERN candle in Lychee and Black tea. It's just the best smell! Seriously. My gorgeous friend Alyson makes the loveliest candles, and I am so super fussy about scents. Hers are amazing. Before she launched I only used to buy Diptyque candles but hers are better. Truly.

An Alexander McQueen De Manta Clutch in Jewel Print. I already have two of these and they make the best evening bags. And this one has JEWELS on it! Winner!


Phillippa's Home Baking - filled with amazing, easy to bake recipes, this will no doubt be a well thumbed classic in my kitchen. Georgie is a keen baker (she is a top level stirrer and cake batter eater) and it's something we like to do together. I know it sounds naff, wanting to expand her baking repetoire, but there are only so many chocolate cakes a mummy can eat before she loses her mind...


Now anyone who has been reading this blog for any length of time knows of my long and abiding love of china. By that I mean porcelain, not the country (although I am a fan of dumplings... but I digress)... It's such a nana hobby but I really do love it. Now that I have completed my Limoges collection, I wanted to start collecting a new set. Determined not to rush into anything, I stumbled across the Waterford Michelle l'Huillier Embrace pattern one day and it was love at first sight. LOVE. Now I must have it, so I think I will be collecting places for each birthday and Christmas for the next few years.

What is on your Christmas list this year?

K xx


Sunday, November 9, 2014

The Jewel Collective



Last weekend, after 15 months of hard work, we launched The Jewel Collective.


The Jewel Collective is the epitome of affordable luxury. Born from the idea that everyone should be able to wear beautiful jewels made from natural materials and gems at a reasonable price, the pieces are designed to be worn and enjoyed both everyday and for special occasions. The Jewel Collective designs are classic, timeless and stylish, with a bit of an edge to make them truly original.

The launch of the website and business is the culmination of more than a year of planning and work by my husband and I. A life long passion for jewels and pearls led me to give up an almost two decade career in public relations to follow my dream and harness my consumer and online experience to create a destination for beautifully designed and hand crafted jewellery. It was important to me that the pieces we designed were high quality and beautiful yet still affordable for customers. I wanted to provide stylish women with another option for their accessories collection, other than costume jewellery.
 
Pieces from the first collection prices start at $125 and go all the way up to $3500 for a “one of a kind” strand of hand selected Tahitian pearls. Many of the pieces in the collection feature precious and semi-precious stones, such as sapphires, garnet, agate, citrines and pearls, as well as South Sea, Tahitian and freshwater pearls, sterling silver and high quality gold vermeil. The first collection contains earrings, necklaces and bracelets.

The Hera pendant, $350

When designing the pieces for the first collection, I drew on my own experiences of collecting jewellery over the years and my love of natural stones and pearls. Every piece is something I would wear, love and cherish.

Fortuna earrings, $150

 You can see the collection at http://www.thejewelcollective.com or follow us through social media on Instagram (@jewelcollective) or Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/jewelcollective).

And, as a special friend of The Jewel Collective, to celebrate the launch, we are giving you 10% off all products in the Mythology collection. Just enter the code FRIENDS1114 at checkout. The code is valid until the end of November.

I hope you love The Jewel Collective as much as we loved designing and creating all of the pieces in our launch collection. We are so excited about our launch!

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Miss Kitty Bakes: Cinnamon rolls.



My new best friend is The Pioneer Woman. She doesn't know it but we are like sisters. Truly. We have a shared love for baked goods, fancy kitchenwares, Wolf ovens and butter. Lots of butter.

But she lives on a farm and I hate the outdoors (a little secret - I don't even really like going to the park in case I get tan bark or sand in my shoes. True fact). And I hyperventilate at being more than about 10 minutes away from a shopping centre and she lives in Oklahoma on a cattle ranch, about a squillion miles from anywhere... So maybe we are just a little different...

The one thing we definitely both LOVE are these cinnamon rolls. She seems to make them for practically everyone she meets. I made them for a friend who was in hospital last week, having given birth to a gorgeous new baby. Everyone who has ever breastfed knows how you have to inhale food in gargantuan quantities to keep making mama milk so this was a perfect hospital gift.

I make them in half batches (which still made enough for two trays) but if you have enough people to share these amongst, the full batch doesn't take much extra time and effort to make. I didn't have maple flavouring for the glaze so I just use maple syrup instead (the Costco one or the organic Macro one from Woolies are both pretty good) and reduce the amount of milk, adding it splash by splash until you get the right consistency. And Mr K (who is usually an eschewer of all things icing related) says it really adds something to these rolls so it is worth making.

The only disadvantage is that they don't keep much longer than a day as they do start to dry out a little, even with the glaze. And they don't freeze (because of the icing). And they are best eaten warm, just after the glaze has oozed and settled into all those gorgeous pillowy folds. So basically, stand over the sink and try not to get too much icing on your top as you inhale a few while they are still warm.

Food of the gods. You heard it here first.

K xx


The Pioneer Woman’s Cinnamon Rolls


Ingredients:
1 quart (1 Litre) Whole Milk
1 cup Vegetable Oil
1 cup Sugar
2 packages Active Dry Yeast, 7g Packets (total 14 grams)
8 cups (Plus 1 Cup Extra, Reserved) All-purpose Flour
1 teaspoon (heaping) Baking Powder
1 teaspoon (scant) Baking Soda
1 Tablespoon (heaping) Salt
Plenty Of Melted Butter – about 1 1/2cups total.
2 cups Sugar
Generous Sprinkling Of Cinnamon

Glaze:
1 bag Powdered Sugar (450g)
2 teaspoons Maple Flavoring (substitute maple syrup if you can’t find it and drop the milk down to a few splashes)
1/2 cup Milk
1/4 cup Melted Butter
1/4 cup Brewed Coffee (espresso is fine, or if you are making this to share with kids, just add more milk instead)
1/8 teaspoon Salt

For the dough, heat the milk, vegetable oil, and sugar in a medium saucepan over medium heat to just below a boil. I found it was perfect at about 75-80 degrees celcius. Set aside and cool until just warm, about 40 minutes or so. Sprinkle the yeast on top and let it sit on the milk for 1 minute.

Add 8 cups of the flour. Stir until just combined, then cover with a clean tea towel, and set aside in a relatively warm place for 1 hour. After 1 hour, remove the towel and add the baking powder, baking soda, salt, and the remaining 1 cup flour. Stir thoroughly to combine. Use the dough right away, or place in a mixing bowl and refrigerate for up to 3 days, punching down the dough if it rises to the top of the bowl. (Note: the dough is very sticky at this point and unless you are in a huge hurry, it is much easier to work with if it’s been chilled for at least an hour or so beforehand.)

Preheat the oven to 180°C.

To assemble the rolls, remove half the dough from the pan/bowl. On a floured baking surface, roll the dough into a large rectangle, about 30 x 10 inches. The dough should be rolled very thin. Try and make the rectangle as even as possible to make sure your rolls are nice and even in size.

To make the filling, pour 3/4 cup to 1 cup of the melted butter over the surface of the dough. Use your fingers to spread the butter evenly. Generously sprinkle half of the ground cinnamon and 1 cup of the sugar over the butter. Don’t be afraid to drizzle on more butter or more sugar! Gooey is the goal. It's messy but worth it.

Now, beginning at the end farthest from you, roll the rectangle tightly towards you. Use both hands and work slowly, being careful to keep the roll tight. Don’t worry if the filling oozes as you work; that just means the rolls are going to be divine. When you reach the end, pinch the seam together and flip the roll so that the seam is face down. When you’re finished, you’ll wind up with one long buttery, cinnamony, sugary, gooey log.

Slip a cutting board underneath the roll and with a sharp knife, make 1/2-inch slices. One “log” will produce 16-20 rolls. Pour a couple of teaspoons of melted butter into disposable foil cake pans and smear with a pastry brush to coat. Place the sliced rolls in the pans, being careful not to overcrowd. (Each pan will hold about 8 rolls.)

Repeat the rolling/sugar/butter process with the other half of the dough and more pans. Cover all the pans with a kitchen towel and set aside to rise on the countertop for at least 20 minutes before baking. Remove the towel and bake for 15 to 18 minutes, until golden brown. Don’t allow the rolls to become overly brown.

While the rolls are baking, make the maple icing: In a large bowl, whisk together the powdered sugar, milk, butter, coffee, and salt. Splash in the maple flavoring. Whisk until very smooth. Taste and add in more maple, sugar, butter, or other ingredients as needed until the icing reaches the desired consistency. The icing should be somewhat thick but still very pourable.

Remove pans from the oven. Immediately drizzle icing over the top. Be sure to get it all around the edges and over the top. As they sit, the rolls will absorb some of the icing’s moisture and flavor. They only get better with time… not that they last for more than a few seconds around here.

Friday, November 7, 2014

For the love of a handbag


A few years ago, Mr K, G and I found ourselves in London. For my sister's wedding (a very happy occasion).

I decided on this trip that I wanted to buy myself a nice handbag.  Treat yo'self. A everyday bag that was both stylish and practical but still beautiful. An investment bag (well an investment in my happiness and a dent in my credit card). However, in my search for the perfect bag, I made possibly THE DUMBEST TRADE EVER. I gave up business class seats to and from Europe for a nicer handbag (dumb for a number of reasons - not the most insignificant of which was the 18 month battle I had with coccyx pain which was started by a seat on the Air France flight home, but I digress).

I really really wanted a Chloe Marcie. Really wanted one. But when I got to London, I started to question my decision, so in Paris I bought a Louis Vuitton Pont Neuf GM instead - which is a fab bag, but - let's be honest - practically useless when juggling a toddler... And totally impractical on visits to the park and there is just nowhere to stuff the wipes pack...

So it sits in its dust cover, waiting for the appropriate time to use it... Which might be in about 10 years at this rate... Don't get me wrong - I love it and it's the bag I will leave to my daughter in my will but for this Mama's Stage of Life, it wasn't a great buy.

My love of the Marcie never went away. When we were in Hawaii last year, I saw a really hot turquoise one. Stunning. But my heart was set on black. And the black one wasn't on sale. For a good 12 months I regretted not buying that bag. It was a fantastic price and I would have loved it. It would have had a very happy home with me. We would have had a lot of fun together.

Fast forward and 12 months later we found ourselves in New York (ever the jetsetters, with a toddler and 17 pieces of luggage - it's not glam I tell you, traveling with a rambunctious toddler). I am standing in Bergdorfs, in front of the Chloe display and I just want one. Mr K sensibly talks me out of it, appealing to my inner bargain seeker through his inner tight arse - saying that by the time we factor in local tax, GST incoming into Australia and currency exchange, it would be cheaper to buy it online.

He was right.

Three weeks after we got home, I found my lovely on Reebonz at a truly bargain price and I have honestly never been happier with a bag purchase. It really was a great price (for a Chloe Marcie) and I have used it almost every day since. It's the medium size - not too big, not too small. Just right.

A bag worth waiting for.

PS: I'd still like one in turquoise. Just between you and me.

K xx

Thursday, November 6, 2014

The Will to Blog

This morning, I woke up, and for the first time in ages, I felt like blogging.

Huh.

I was talking about this very issue last week (and a few months ago, even) with my lovely friend Bron. She said that my blogging mojo would eventually come back and she was right. Unfortunately at possibly the most inconvenient time (busyness wise). But, back, it seems it is!

So, what has happened in my world since I last blogged?

Lots, and not very much really. Life.

I launched my new business last weekend. That took up LOADS of time. Pretty cool! It was something I loved doing but, mother of all that is holy, could someone have please told me how tired I would feel this week? It somewhat goes towards explaining why I had no time to blog...

We are still living in our little hovel, just the three of us - plans *should* go to the structural engineer early next week. Maybe. Who knows? But it's getting increasingly difficult to run two businesses and live in what is effectively a 2 bedroom house. With a toddler who runs everywhere. RUNS. If anyone has any suggestions on how to speed thing up (that don't involve murder or DIVORCE - both of which are threatened on a regular basis) then I am all ears.

We went to America for 5 weeks in May. That was fun. But goodness, it was no holiday (well it was mostly work). A holiday is something we are all in desperate need of at the moment.

So I guess that just goes to show that life really is like Bold and the Beautiful - you can watch it for a while and then go away and come back four years later and Brooke and Eric are still having the same conversation and you feel like nothing has changed. Except, what happened to Ridge?

Huh. There you go. And who said soap operas weren't realistic?

But I digress. So I am back. Talking about what? I don't know yet. Bags? Shoes? Frocks? Cakes? Kids? Jewels? Cats? Houses? Stay tuned. Could be none or all of the above, you lucky people.

There's this week's cliffhanger for you.

Kitty xx

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Miss Kitty bakes: pumpkin and feta loaf








I could start this post by apologising profusely for my absence, but I sense it might be a bit of a theme this year (we have so much going on) and the blog is a bit of a low priority at the moment (amongst other such life changing discussions as "build me a house" and "shall we try to have another child?" etc.). So I will be back and forth, posting when I can or when people ask for specific recipes.


Don't you just love instagram? I live on it. And that's where I saw a variation of this recipe, from the gorgeous Rachael Finch. The recipe originally appeared on her website. I am trying to convince Mr K that we should eat less meat, somewhat unsuccessfully, but if I can find more things like this then I think I am in with a shot.

I didn't have enough almond meal for the recipe and although I had raw almonds and could have made some, I also had a bit of quinoa languishing at the back of my cupboard, so I decided to adapt the recipe to suit what we had. It was delicious. I will definitely be making it again.

The best part for me was that it actually held together! So many of my quinoa experiments have been failures as I have yet to find the right texture and binding agents. My quinoa patties always fall apart. I just tend to throw it in salads or serve it as a side with meat or a stew, but this time it really worked well.

Here is the link to the original recipe, which I have adapted below. Rachael actually adapted it to fit what she had in her cupboard, so it is a very forgiving loaf. You could add whatever veggies you like to it - I think it would be great with roasted eggplant, zucchini and capsicum and served with a chunky tomato sauce in winter, or do as we did and serve it with a salad. This served three hungry people easily, but you could fiddle with the amounts and make a larger loaf to feed more.

Pumpkin and quinoa loaf

Ingredients
1/2 a small butternut pumpkin
1/3 cup almond meal
1/2 cup toasted and chopped walnuts
1/2 cup quinoa, rinsed well
Handful sundried tomatoes, sliced
100g feta cheese, roughly crumbled
3 free range eggs
1 tablespoon chives
1/4 cup milk
Salt & pepper, to taste

Preheat the oven to 180 degrees celcius.

Remove the skin from the pumpkin, cut into bite size cubes and roast on a greased tray for 20 minutes or until coloured and soft. Let the pumpkin cool.

Cook the quinoa in a pot over a low heat and allow to cool.

Meanwhile, mix together eggs, milk and almond meal, quinoa then add all other ingredients. Fold gently to mix well. Pour into baking tin lined with baking paper & bake for 30-40mins, or until crisp on top.

Let the loaf cool for about 5 minutes before removing from tin. Serve with a salad or steamed veggies.