Chambord

Last night I attended the Chambord Shine Awards, at Melbourne’s Longroom.
 

A night of fashion and fun that will be featured soon for Onya Magazine, I thought a little snippet here about the cocktails on the night might whet your appetite for more.

I really didn’t know much about Chambord until last night. Seems it is a Black Raspberry Liqueur perfect for mixing with juices and making cocktails out of. Last night we enjoyed French Martini’s and Chambord with soda and lime – both divine.

Here is the recipe for the French Martini. Enjoy with caution – you won’t be able to stop at one. I had four. Glad i’m not doing the real deal Dry July.

 

French Martini

Ingredients    
15ml Chambord
45ml Finlandia Vodka
30ml Pineapple juice

Glass    
Cocktail

Method
Shake ingredients with ice and strain into a cocktail glass.

Garnish    
Pineapple leaf

 

 

Thanks to Chambord for recipe and images

ahhhhh….. FASHION!

If you didn’t already read about it on Twitter or Facebook, Editor-In-Chief of Onya Magazine Sandi Sieger made a little announcement this week. In keeping with the growing nature of Onya Magazine and the imminent arrival of a print version, Sandi is making some changes behind the scenes at Onya, and one of these was to appoint me (yes, ME!) Fashion Editor. That’s right, Sarah Kempson – Fashion Editor. Today Onya Magazine, tomorrow Vogue. I’m going to take on the world.

So with the excitement of this new appointment comes additional responsibility and of course more writing about what I love, fashion. As you read a few weeks ago, the past twelve months has been a whirlwind but I have loved every minute and when you are recognised for your achievements in ways such as this, it makes it all worthwhile.

Remember, I started out just volunteering at fashion week. Applications for Melbourne Spring Fashion Week (less than 8 weeks away!) opened today, so if you are keen to get involved, head over and sign up today (applications close August 2). Good Luck!

In TRAINing

Over the weekend I went and saw Sex and the City 2 for the second time and picked up on a trend that really hasn’t been written about since the movie’s release.

The train.

I can see you wracking your brains – weren’t they in the Middle East? I know you think you didn’t see any trains. You didn’t even see Carrie emerge from the subway in New York.

And you’d be right. But that isn’t the kind of train we are talking about.

This train is all about the skirt; the dress; the wafting shirt thing Carrie wears over pants. Think about it. Think about the outfits Carrie dons in the film. If they were not mid thigh, they were grazing the ground.

Even the movie poster was in on the act.

My favourite outfit from the film is the purple, black and grey full skirt that Carrie wears at the market. Obviously hooped, the shirt is shorter in the front and longer in the back, skimming the ground – most noticeable when Carrie turns when Aidan calls to her after their initial meeting.
    
Then there is the orange Halston dress when the New Yorker magazine is read and Carrie walks on the beach, holding the folds of the skirt off the sand.

What about the sheer shirt/dress combo over skinny Capri jeans at the karaoke bar? The comfy looking tee shirt dress she wears upon her return home and Big isn’t there, complete with wet hair and forlorn face.

And finally, the green dress, with ruffled train, that curls around the corner of the couch as she exits the bedroom and finally sees Carrie and Big together on that couch, dress and train elegantly placed just so.

The frocks are fun and flirty, not so formal and graceful as a train might usually be, and should definitely be something you add to your wish list for the coming season. Go and see SATC2 again and be on the lookout. The train is coming.

You might also like to read my SATC2 review and a post I wrote about SATC2 style.

2 days in…

I’m barely two days into my personal version of Dry July and I could be ready to give up. My July started being sent out with a staff collection to purchase a gift for a colleague we were farewelling. I headed to Melbourne’s GPO (which was closed til 10am) and then to David Jones (also closed til 9.30am) and finally ended up at Myer (OPEN!). The Chanel perfume the leaving staffer had requested was way outside our budget but I sprayed and took samples and chatted with the salesgirl anyway.

 

Burberry Ruched crepe-jersey dress

 $495.00 by Burberry at Net-A-Porter

~ A dress I dream of while waiting out the shopping embargo ~

 

 

 

I headed upstairs to handbags but found nothing that worked for my sense of style – or that I thought would work for her. A quick retreat led me back through Melbourne’s GPO (still closed) and over to David Jones. Beautiful red signs everywhere called to me – 10, 20 30 per cent off, SALE SALE SALE. Head down, I made a beeline for handbags and accessories, landing at Mimco. I eyed off everything. I wanted to try it all. But I didn’t.

Instead I selected a Mimco wallet and made my way out of the store, cursing my innate ability to choose such a bad time to quit shopping cold turkey.

36 hours later and I am still thinking about the rack of rings and scarves marked down to $5, but I will prevail. I will not let down my guard. I won’t go to stores unaccompanied again and I certainly won’t say yes next time someone leaves and a gift needs to be bought. 2 days down. 29 to go.

Many others in the twittersphere have been inspired by my quest and elected to share the Dry July journey by giving up things that are important to them. You can read about them at The Modern Womans Survival Guide and C’est La Vie.

Pumpkin, Pinenuts & Pasta

After spending the week with Miss J in Sydney during RAFW, it was pressed upon me that cooking isn’t really all that hard and I should probably make more of an effort at times. I do love my microwave dinners (probably more than I should!) but there really isn’t anything like a home cooked meal (which is why I figure I go HOME for this. Hi Mum!).

Last Saturday night I stayed with a friend, and she cooked me dinner. We had a brilliant night in with wine and pasta, Twilight and New Moon, chocolate and gossip. I haven’t had so much fun in ages. One of the best parts about having Miss W cook for me was that she is on a super diet (and looking quite fabulous) so whatever she was going to cook would be super yum but also low on calories.

I have always thought of pasta as a no go zone during diets but this recipe proves you can have your cake and eat it too (or, you know, your pasta… I wouldn’t recommend pasta AND cake if you’re on a diet…). So here is that recipe. Super yum, super easy and not so bad on the hips either. Thanks to Miss W and cookbook, Symply Too Good To Be True, by Anne Symple.  

Creamy Pumpkin and Pinenut Sauce

21/2 tablespoons pinenuts
4 cups (580g) raw pumpkin, diced
Cooking spray
½ cup onion, finely diced
1 tsp crushed garlic (in jar)
1 tsp turmeric
1 tablespoon no added salt tomato paste
1 teaspoon cumin
1 teaspoon dried coriander
2 teaspoons salt reduced vegetable stock powder (MASSEL)
1x 375ml can evaporated light milk
Pepper to taste

Roast pinenuts on a sheet of foil placed under the griller. In a little water, microwave the diced pumpkin for about 6-7 minuted or until just cooked. Coat a non-stick saucepan with cooking spray and sauté onion and garlic for 2 minutes. Add turmeric, tomato paste, cumin, coriander and stock powder and cook 1 minute. Stir in evaporated milk and combine well. Add in drained cooked pumpkin, bring to the boil and serve over pasta. Sprinkle pinenuts over each serve.
 
 

Mamasita

A few months ago, my cousin and her chef husband suggested a new restaurant in town that I might like to try. Mamasita is modern Mexican on Melbourne’s Collins Street (Paris end) and is being touted as the new IT restaurant of the moment – but best of all, the entire menu was gluten free. Given that my cousin and her husband were frequenting this establishment, and they KNOW food, it had to be good, and sure enough the place was being written up everywhere glowingly within a few weeks.

Mamasita doesn’t take bookings, so it seemed it might be a while before I managed to get there. Today was that day. Miss J and I made plans to visit, and Miss E’s excitement when I mentioned we were going was contagious. The three of us ventured out on this freezing Melbourne Tuesday to find out what all the fuss was about and hopefully, warm our bones.

Arriving around 12.45pm, the place was packed and no one looked in a hurry to leave. We scored a bar seat by the kitchen, not such a bad thing since that is where most of the warmth is created. While Mamasita is just an unassuming door on the street followed by a flight of stairs, upstairs is buzzing with midday chatter and the sounds of plates being collected, a bell to signify a ready order and the drone of an open kitchen. Atmosphere is important and Mamasita certainly has it.

We ordered and were thrilled when the food arrived barely ten minutes later. I ordered Tostaditas de Pollo with no real concept of what I was in for except for the fact that Pollo means chicken. I discovered that a Tostaditas is (essentially) a corn chip; the de Pollo part a stack of char grilled chicken, avocado, queso fresco & chipotle mayo. And it was awesome. Not overly spicy but a meal that left me with that pleasant tingly sensation on the lips – exactly what I wanted.

The thrill of being able to order anything on the menu (as the WHOLE menu is gluten free) was not lost on me either. Compared to Switch at Knox, where I ate last Friday night and only one menu item was gluten free, Mamasita is haven for the gluten-ly challenged. If I wasn’t going out for dinner, I might well have ordered more but instead will make Mamasita a regular haunt until I have tried everything they have to offer.

Images thanks to Mamasita

Dry July… What will you give up?

June has been a pretty average month for me. Besides the fact that the weather has turned nasty, I’ve had some moments where I’ve worried about work, about money, about my health and about my friends.  With so much going on, it’s very easy to get carried away and forget about looking after number one – namely, me.

I’ve always been a worrier; it’s just my nature; so July is going to be a new beginning; a fresh start and the commencement of another chapter in my life. Dry July is an initiative designed to support and raise money for adult cancer – the idea being that you give up alcohol for a month and clear your head (so to speak), thus looking after your mental and physical wellbeing and raising money for a good cause at the same time.

Given I am all about the ‘everything in moderation’ philosophy (and let’s face it, I like a drink), I’m changing the rules slightly and making my own. I’m going to give up drinking at home, meaning I can still have a glass at a function (Christmas in July! Woo!), or at dinner but will not ‘just have a glass’ in honour of a bad day.

I imagine you are thinking this is pretty lame – given I live in the city, I eat out a lot and therefore will always be an exception to my own rule, but here is the clincher. I’m going to give up something else.

SHOPPING.

(Pause for reaction)

Yes, shopping. Please feel free to go ahead and gasp, tell me I can’t do it. Cause I can. And I will. Just like the Ikea bookshelf, I can do anything I set my mind to. (And if I don’t the bank might start calling in the credit card debt I have amounted since Christmas.)

Of course, there are exceptions to this rule as well. There has to be. Who can go 30 days without spending a cent!?

Rule 1 – I will not make any purchases, in store or online, for myself
Rule 2 – Groceries are okay
Rule 3 – Should my makeup run out, it’s ok to replace it (ie, foundation or mascara), however the purchase of NEW makeup (ie. hot new eye shadow colour) is not allowed
Rule 4 – July is an extraordinarily busy birthday month and the purchase of gifts for said persons is allowed
Rule 5 – If other people buy things for me, that is ok (although I can’t ask them to buy it on the premise I will pay them back in August)
Rule 6 – Petrol is okay. Chocolate bars and gum at the counter are not.
Rule 7 – If I come to a fork in the road, where I think a purchase may be questionable, I will turn to Twitter in the hopes of seeking an answer with some immediacy. 
(If you think of other rules, or questions, please submit them as a comment!)

Among other things, I have started going running/walking/dragging myself around Albert Park Lake at ungodly morning hours and hope to continue this through July, hopefully on a two days on/one day off system. This should take care of the ‘health’ component, although if I get a cold from the wind or rain or general freezingness at this hour, I am, totally giving up the winter exercise component!!

If you feel like you are in a rut, want to make a change or just need to ‘dry out’, why don’t you join me on this little quest? Donations to Dry July (or any charity, really) are encouraged but I am not ‘signing up’ to any in particular. I am doing this for me.

Monitor my progress at the Style Emporium (for the record, window shopping is definitely still allowed!) where I will continue to find stylish bits and bobs to write about and share with you.

An Ikea Adventure

Last week on Twitter, I ran a poll. Was it worth going to Ikea on a Saturday? The masses were quite decided – ‘Don’t do it!’ they said. ‘Save your sanity!’ But as is usually the case, impatience and the ‘I want it now’ philosophy took over and I suited up to take on the masses. I dressed for comfort and warmth, and given I was going at it alone, for safety. The hot pink coat would serve me well should I get lost in the four walls (four? Four million?) of Ikea and also served to say, ‘I’m a girl, and I can do this alone!’.

The car park was the first hurdle (have you ever been there??) but I finally managed to locate a spot. Under a stairwell and on a ramp. Perhaps it wasn’t a spot but my car fit and with the 6 billion other people taking on Ikea in their Toorak tractors and family wagons, I figured this one had my name on it.

My entire purpose to go to Ikea was to purchase two bookshelves that I have had my eye on for close to a year. When I moved into my city apartment, I proclaimed that the next time my brothers or father visited, we would trek to Ikea to procure these bookshelves I had been eyeing off for so long. Twelve months later and still no visit – it was time to take matters into my own hands.

I entered the golden labyrinth, optimistic and hopeful. If you are unfamiliar with Ikea, think of a hedged maze, and then hang pots and assorted storage containers and furniture catalogues off all the branches. People were everywhere. Children, specifically, were everywhere. I closed my eyes and made my way through the maze, following the handy arrows on the floor (for those of us who just want to get OUT) and twenty minutes later, I found myself in the self service furniture area. Bunnings on steroids. Flat packed furniture as far as the eye could see, both in distance and height.

I managed to locate my bookshelves – Expedit – and a trolley. I watched couples working together to get their boxes off the shelves. I stood and took in the size and weight of my boxes, and paused momentarily to ponder ‘what the fuck are you doing?’ Then I went ahead and did it anyway.

Getting the boxes onto the trolley wasn’t so hard, more a matter of sliding and dragging than any kind of lifting and within a few minutes I was done. Proceeding to the exit, I even used the self service checkout (who needs boys OR staff anymore?) and was quietly chuffed when I went through the double doors to the outside world and realised I had survived my Ikea experience. But the fun part was yet to come.

I left my boxes with the Ikea valet (note, this is not his name or title, I have dubbed him this because you leave your trolley with him while YOU retrieve your car), headed back to my ramped stairwell park then navigated 4 floors of carpark to find the Ikea loading dock. Removing the contents of my boot (Where did that box of books come from? Leftover from moving?? Oops….) and folding down the back seats, I encountered my first ‘can I really do this?’ problem. The seat wouldn’t fold. No matter how I shook it, bashed it, gave it a stern talking too or just plain went at it hell for leather. I caved and called Dad. Yes, I give up easily. No sooner had I dialled than I worked out the problem – stupid locking mechanism!!

Seats down, it was time for actual heavy lifting. If you will, remember I have a desk job and the heaviest things I lift day to day are platform knee high boots. Straining most of my muscles (do you still call them that if you don’t have any?) I huffed and puffed the first box into the boot. This then hung over a good foot out the end of the car. Fuck.

My first thought was, ‘what the hell am I going to do with the second bookshelf?’, followed by, ‘how the hell am I going to get this out at home?’. By now I was warm, the pink jacket was off and I was getting about the Ikea customer pick up area in a babydoll dress and knee high boots. Not once did someone ask if I needed help.

Now you may all think that having all those Coles bags in the boot of your car that you ALWAYS forget to take into Coles are worthless. I’m here to tell you, they aren’t. They are in fact, quite handy when you find yourself at Ikea without a rope. Simply hook the handles through the hook at the top of the boot, pull tight and use the weigh of the object you are moving to anchor the end of the bag. Ta-Da! I’m like a female MacGyver. Truly.

This still left me with problem number two. What to do with the second bookshelf? Returning inside, I discovered delivery was going to be $30 (damned if I was paying that) so I returned it. No questions asked. Although the guy returning it could probably tell the girl in the babydoll dress with knee high boots and a hot pink coat wasn’t up to the challenge of two bookshelves and didn’t need to ask…

Home, seemingly hours later at about 40km/h so I didn’t dent the shelves with the boot bounce, and the epic struggle began to get the box to my front door, all of 25 metres from the car. I have never been so grateful to live on the ground floor. After this it was easy. Individual pieces of a bookshelf are not heavy, I’m a girl and can therefore read instructions – assembly was a breeze. Seems I am unstoppable with an Allen Key and a bit of old fashioned elbow grease.

Of course this wasn’t enough for me and I spent the remainder of the afternoon rearranging all the rest of the furniture in the living room to suit the new bookcase. Perhaps the responses on Twitter were right. My sanity has remained intact but I am finding muscles I didn’t know I had (and I know they are there now because they hurt) and in rearranging the living room I now find I want to return to Ikea for picture frames and throw rugs….

Have some fun of your own at http://www.ikea.com/au/en/

EXCLUSIVE – SS10/11 lookbook – Found By

Presenting my first exclusive: the SS10/11 lookbook for Found By, a Melbourne fashion label sold in Blondies boutiques.

With lot’s of gorgeous pieces to transition your Winter wardrobe into Summer, the range will be in store from July.

What am I loving? Th tulle skirt and pink tie dye dress.

   

Bloom offers FREE nail polish!

www.bloomcosmetics.com.au