Some people will put up with a lot on the job. But Yia Vang? He was bitten by a Burmese python in the Florida Everglades. On camera.
That was just one workplace hazard for the Minnesota chef's new gig hosting the Outdoor Channel series "Feral." The show, which premieres Nov. 28, has Vang learning to hunt the invasive species that are threatening ecosystems across the United States, and then using his cooking skills to demonstrate how tasty they can be.
"It bit me," he says on the show after he turns his razor-toothed foe into dinner. "So I bit it back."
Episodes of "Feral" find the Union Hmong Kitchen chef cooking up Chinese mystery snails in Wisconsin, lake trout in Yosemite National Park, iguanas in Fort Lauderdale, and walleye habitat-destroying crayfish in Minnesota. ("If you know anything about Minnesotans," he said, "don't mess with their walleye.")
It's his first series on a national network, though Vang is already a familiar face on Twin Cities screens. He is the host of the TPT series "Relish," in which he interviews local chefs about dishes from their cultures. This summer, he appeared on the Netflix "Iron Chef" reboot, which gave him a national platform to showcase his Hmong cooking. He also gained prominence this year with a James Beard Award nomination for best chef in the Midwest.
"Feral" isn't his only new TV project. He's featured in a Minnesota-themed episode of "Dirt," a YouTube show for Huckberry, an outdoorsy menswear line. And he's appearing Dec. 16 in the PBS series "Craft in America" — the episode focuses on St. Paul's Hmong community.
Vang uses all of these opportunities to share the story of his family, his community and, especially, his food. When it premieres, "Feral" may be the first national television show to have a Hmong host, according to its producers.
"It's somewhat groundbreaking," said Mitch Petrie, vice president of programming for Outdoor Sportsman Group, which owns the Outdoor Channel. "It's important. We have a strong Hmong population here, and I think it's just a great opportunity for the world to get to know Yia and his cooking."