National Geographic Traveller (UK) - Food

| MY LIFE IN FOOD Actor Jesse Tyler Ferguson

The Modern Family star talks about New Mexican cuisine, his cookbook and the joys of tiramisu

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Almost every dish you get in New Mexico has the option of hatch green chile.

It’s indigenous to that part of the world. If you get a hamburger, a cheeseburg­er, scrambled egg — there’s invariably a hatch green chile option. For me, it’s always been the star player of the dishes I get in Albuquerqu­e, where I grew up.

In the ’80s, there were a lot of canned soups poured over dishes.

The most iconic dish from my childhood is green chile chicken enchiladas. They’re fantastic; my mom made them a lot. She would pour a can of mushroom soup over them, and it was delicious. But when I make them now, I do it with fresher ingredient­s.

I’m an avid cookbook collector.

It feels like I get a new cookbook at least once a month. Even before lockdown, I’d cook at least five days a week. I recently watched Taste the Nation with Padma Lakshmi, which talks about the immigrants who came to America and the great foods they brought with them. I think I ordered three cookbooks mid-episode, including

Bottom of the Pot, a fantastic collection of Persian recipes.

There aren’t a lot of cookbooks about two people sharing their culinary histories and creating recipes together.

When I met Julie [Tanous, Jesse’s co-author of Food Between

Friends], we bonded over our love of cookbooks and confessed we’d always dreamed of writing one. Julie is from Cullman, Alabama, and we both love the food we grew up eating. It’s a real divide of food from the south and food from the southwest, and there are a lot of places where we’ve taken those histories and mashed them together — like spoonbread [a cornmeal-based dish]. It’s popular in Alabama, but we’ve added flavours from New Mexico. I have a green chile chicken enchilada potpie recipe that’s also a hybrid of the two regions. There are straight-up dishes, too. There’s a garlicky sorghum chicken stir-fry I make probably once a week.

Some of the most interestin­g food I’ve ever eaten was in Paris, and also some of the most beautifull­y rustic.

I like the highs and lows of Paris. You can have a Michelin-starred dinner or go to a little cafe for some cheese and a baguette and eat it on a park bench, and it’s going to be delicious. In the US, I’m always really impressed with Chicago. Again, it’s about the highs and lows. There are places like Alinea, which was on Chef’s Table and has fantastic, unique dishes, and Girl & The Goat, which has super-rustic, simple dishes that are amazing.

I have a strong sweet tooth.

I love tiramisu, and it’s Justin’s [Jesse’s husband] favourite. He doesn’t have a sweet tooth, which is torture for me because when we go out, I have to beg him to share a dessert with me. But if there’s tiramisu on the menu, he’s absolutely going to order it. I also love pumpkin pie. My parents made it during the holidays, but I feel it can be enjoyed any day of the year.

I’d love to go to Japan.

I haven’t been to any countries in east Asia, and it’s somewhere I really want to go. Back in Albuquerqu­e, I’d go to restaurant­s where they’d cook at your table and flip the shrimp onto your plate. It was like theatre. That’s how I was first exposed to Japanese food — but I want to be in the country where I’d get the authentic version. Food Between Friends, by Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Julie Tanous, is published 9 March (£25, Clarkson Potter). Interview: Farida Zeynalova

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