Celebrities Who Hosted Food Shows Michael, May 22, 2026May 22, 2026 Food shows are no longer only for professional chefs. Over the years, actors, singers, comedians, models, athletes, and TV personalities have stepped into kitchens, restaurants, markets, farms, and dinner-party sets to explore food on camera. Some hosted serious travel shows. Some learned to cook in real time. Some turned family recipes into comfort television. Others brought humor, celebrity guests, or competition energy to the table. The best celebrity food shows work because the host brings more than fame. They bring curiosity, personality, family history, cultural connection, humor, or a genuine love of eating and learning. These stars helped make food television feel warmer, wider, and more personal. Stanley Tucci Source : Instagram/stanleytucci Stanley Tucci became one of the most respected celebrity food hosts with Stanley Tucci: Searching for Italy. The CNN series followed Tucci across Italy as he explored regional food, culture, history, local producers, and family traditions. The show premiered in 2021 and went on to win the Emmy for Outstanding Hosted Nonfiction Series. Selena Gomez Source : Shutterstock Selena Gomez turned inexperience into the charm of Selena + Chef. The series began with Gomez learning from professional chefs from her own kitchen, making mistakes, asking honest questions, and improving episode by episode. Food Network describes the show as a casual, heartwarming cookalong where culinary experts help Gomez sharpen her skills. Trisha Yearwood Source : Instagram/trishayearwood Trisha Yearwood became a Food Network favorite with Trisha’s Southern Kitchen. The show centered on Southern hospitality, family meals, comfort food, and recipes with personal stories behind them. Food Network describes the series as Yearwood cooking meals with friends and family, often for reunions, parties, or meaningful gatherings. Snoop Dogg Source : Shutterstock Snoop Dogg became one of television’s most surprising food-show hosts through Martha & Snoop’s Potluck Dinner Party. The VH1 series paired Snoop with Martha Stewart for celebrity dinner parties, cooking segments, jokes, and relaxed conversations. The show ran for three seasons and featured the two hosting weekly meals with celebrity guests. Martha Stewart Source : Instagram/marthastewart Martha Stewart is one of the central figures in food television and lifestyle media. Her hosting career helped teach generations of viewers how to cook, bake, host, decorate, and prepare meals with care. Her later partnership with Snoop Dogg introduced her to a different audience and showed how flexible her food-TV presence could be. Padma Lakshmi Source : Instagram/padmalakshmi Padma Lakshmi became one of the most recognizable food hosts on television through Top Chef. Her long run on the Bravo competition series made her a defining voice in modern food television. She later created and hosted Taste the Nation, which explored immigrant communities, regional food traditions, identity, and American culture through meals. Terry Crews Source : Instagram/terrycrews Terry Crews entered food competition hosting with 100 Cooks on Food Network. The series, announced in 2026, brings together 100 home cooks in a large-scale competition format, with challenges, trivia, short cooking duels, judges, and a prize pot that can grow to $250,000. People reported that Crews is hosting the show, which Food Network billed as a major home-cook competition. Valerie Bertinelli Source : Shutterstock Valerie Bertinelli became a familiar Food Network personality through Valerie’s Home Cooking. The show used her warmth, family stories, Italian-American recipes, California lifestyle, and approachable kitchen style. Bertinelli’s food hosting never felt distant or overly technical. It felt like being invited into a comfortable home kitchen. Ayesha Curry Source : Instagram/ayeshacurry Ayesha Curry built a food-TV presence around home cooking, family meals, and approachable recipes. She hosted Ayesha’s Homemade and later other food-focused projects that blended cooking, motherhood, hosting, and entertaining. Her style is built around practical meals rather than intimidating culinary performance. Chrissy Teigen Source : Instagram/chrissyteigen Chrissy Teigen’s food personality became famous through cookbooks, social media, and her Cravings brand, then expanded into television. She has hosted and appeared in food-focused series and specials, bringing the same voice that made her cookbooks popular: funny, direct, flavor-driven, and casual. Her food hosting style is less about polished perfection and more about appetite, humor, and strong opinions. Antoni Porowski Source : Instagram/antoni Antoni Porowski became the food and wine expert on Queer Eye. His role on the Netflix series is different from hosting a traditional cooking show, but food is central to his public TV identity. He helps guests learn simple dishes, reconnect with family meals, and build confidence around feeding themselves. David Chang Source : Instagram/davidchang David Chang is a chef and restaurateur, but he also became a major food-show host with broad celebrity reach. His series Ugly Delicious and other projects helped bring conversations about food culture, identity, taste, restaurants, immigration, and authenticity to streaming audiences. Chang’s hosting style is curious, opinionated, and willing to challenge easy assumptions. Amy Schumer Source : Instagram/amyschumer Amy Schumer co-hosted Amy Schumer Learns to Cook with her husband, chef Chris Fischer. The series was filmed during the early pandemic period and had a loose, home-video feel. Fischer handled much of the cooking instruction, while Schumer brought comedy, questions, distractions, and the viewer’s perspective. Paris Hilton Source : Instagram/parishilton Paris Hilton hosted Cooking with Paris, a Netflix series built around celebrity guests, kitchen chaos, and her playful public persona. The show was not designed like a traditional cooking program. Hilton was not presented as a technical chef. The format leaned into personality, glam styling, humor, and the idea that cooking can be entertainment even when it is messy. Haylie Duff Source : Shutterstock Haylie Duff hosted The Real Girl’s Kitchen, a cooking and lifestyle series inspired by her blog and cookbook. The show blended recipes, entertaining, family, friends, and a casual home-kitchen tone. Duff’s hosting style was approachable and personal, which helped separate it from more competitive or restaurant-focused food programming. Tia Mowry Source : Shutterstock Tia Mowry hosted Tia Mowry at Home, a Cooking Channel series built around family, friends, and everyday meals. Her food hosting connected naturally to her public image: warm, practical, family-centered, and upbeat. The show gave fans a chance to see her outside scripted television while still keeping the format comfortable and relatable. Featured Image : Photo by Loredana Sangiuliano on Shutterstock Entertainment & Media