![]() One cup at a time, add the flour to the butter-sugar, stir to mix well, then add the next cup of flour. Mix together the flour, baking powder and baking soda together in another bowl.Īdd the vanilla and almond extracts to the butter-sugar mixture, stir to mix, then add the eggs. Then, mix the cocoa powder and the sugar with the boiling hot espresso.Ĭream the butter with the sugar until fluffy. Heat the oven to 350F, spray two baking pans with butter spray, and line the bottoms with parchment rounds. This is the method that worked for me, based on my idol Nigella Lawson’s delectable Devil’s Food Cake recipe, with the requisite flavor tweaks by the Easter Bunny.ġ0 ounces of dark chocolate, 70% cocoa solids, broken into pieces To her credit, she then started laughing, so she gets points for having a sense of humor AND for tolerating me as her granddaughter. Bring me back some chocolate.” “Chocolate?” “It’s a dirt-dweller snack…….Satan invented it.” “Devil’s food?” “You can only eat so much white cake, my friend.”īeing Easter Sunday, a chocolate Devil’s Food Cake seemed extremely appropriate for my family lunch, especially because my very Catholic grandmother was there, and the look on her face when I told her what we were having for dessert, was priceless. The archangel gives Raziel his instructions and something else to do. In modern times, Biff is brought back from death to write his own gospel by the angel Raziel, who is sent by one of the archangels to fetch him. Possibly one of the most hilarious and touching moments in this book, and some clever foreshadowing, is when the origin of the Easter Bunny is explained, as a drunken Josh sits on a hill overlooking Jerusalem near Passover, cuddles baby rabbits, and declares “Henceforth and from now on, I decree that whenever something bad happens to me, there shall be bunnies around.” It’s characteristic of the book as a whole – so funny and yet poignantly moving because we all know what is going to happen to Josh. ![]() They make a great team, as they perfectly complement each other – yin and yang, carnal vs. In other words, all the things that Josh, as the Son of God and Bringer of Peace, can’t know. ![]() Biff learns the art of the Kama Sutra, the skills of martial arts and how to kill with a touch, how to create weapons, and how to charm women. Josh learns from the three wise men the tenets of the Tao the Zen school and Buddhism, which all affect his later ministry. Much of the book is their quest to find Balthazar, Gaspar and Melchior – respectively, in Afghanistan, China, and India. The boys travel with their families to Jerusalem for high holy days, encounter Roman soldiers, meet Mary Magdalene -Maggie – and fall in love with her, and go in search of the three Magi who came to see Josh at his birth. The story is told in two timeframes: the life of Josh and the many adventures he and Biff have and Biff in the present time writing his Gospel of memories and adventures with Josh. The Gospels often portray Jesus in such conflicting terms, though I do realize they were written very much as propaganda to further the newly-hatched Christian religion, but for me, seeing the disparate elements of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John so seamlessly melded into Josh’s character made me relate even more to him. He’s pretty awesome.īeing raised Catholic and to believe in the divinity of Jesus Christ as opposed to his humanity, reading this book and seeing another version of Jesus as a man, with the same hopes, fears, desires, and cares, is truly beautiful. Biff, his best friend, is the opposite: loud, rabble-rousing, a total smart-ass, and a total womanizer. Josh – Joshua bar Joseph and who would later come to be known as Jesus Christ – is a serious-minded kid, as you’d guess. Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ’s Childhood Pal, is the story of the life of history’s most famous person told by his best friend and sidekick. It is a fictional retelling, of course, but very much grounded in historical research and definitely holds to the details of Jesus’s life that are in the Bible. Though it’s a very irreverent re-telling of the life of Jesus, I didn’t find it at all disrespectful. ![]() This is one of the funniest books I’ve ever read, and I’ve read it several times.
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