As a complete wine making beginner, agreed on the kit. Without a kit, there won't really be too much in the way of recipes. Wine is different in beer in that for beer, there are recipes, but for wine there tends to be a single grape, in this case the muscat grape. (Yes, there are things about grape blends and wine blending.)
So your recipe winds up being muscat grapes (lots), and yeast.
Then you get down to the grape source and season, is it grape season, which locality, which farm, what's the ripeness and sugar content. Each Moscato is different due to yeast and processes, but largely it will be the grape and the soil it was grown in, as well as the weather. So there will be good years, and not so good years, for each region. I think you're already well aware of this since you said you've tried many moscatos and found that you preferred two particular areas of the world.
Kits will be better since it takes those out of the process and gives you something slightly more consistent, but definately straight forward. Especially for us beginners. (Add bag A and X amount of water. Stir, Add included yeast, wait, rack, wait, add D, E and F and wait, then wait more, then bottle, then wait, with wait time dependant on the kit type.) Experienced people use kits too, and I know there's some price comparison threads and how often they use kits as well as press.
I think AC forgot to mention the importance of sanitation!