Susie Fogelson

7 Questions with Vic “Vegas” Moea

Vic Vegas

7 Questions is a series of interviews with the culinary movers and shakers you want or ought to know better.

A little over a year ago few people outside of Sin City had ever heard of Vic Moea.  The big, bald, inked chef went from being the scary dude to a genuine momma’s boy in just a few weeks.  Though he narrowly missed being the newest Food Network Star, that title went to good friend Jeff Mauro, that doesn’t mean Vic’s moment in the spotlight is over.

Vic, along with fellow FNS 7 alums Penny Borsuk Davidi, Chris Nirschel and Justin Balmes will be going head-to-head once again only this time it’s for charity.  All four will be competing on the star-studded Chopped All Stars which starts this Sunday in a round that pits four Iron Chefs against each other.  The Starsters will be competing in round three where Vic will be representing St. Jude Children’s Ranch.

These days Vic has been splitting his time between Las Vegas and in Hollywood shooting a handful of pilots.  All this he does while raising three kids and satisfying the public’s requests for his time.  As you can see Vic is a busy man but he was not too busy to answer 7 Questions

1. When did you decide that you could make food your career?

I decided that I could make food my career when I was 19 years old and I found out I was going to have a son and I had to get a job as a dish washer so that’s what I pretty much started out as.  As time went on and I got into it more and I started learning my way around it my memory came back of me cooking with the family and growing up into it.  I knew there was something special about all of this.

2. Which chefs have influenced you the most?

Back then we really only had, like, Emeril. That’s really the one that stood out the most.  The chefs that really influenced me the most really weren’t chefs.  It was my mother and grandmother.  If you notice my style ain’t a reflection of anybody else’s but my mother and my grandmother.  It evolved into the Vic-thing from the Betty and Antoinette-thing.

3. How was your experience on Food Network Star?

You know, I got called for Hell’s Kitchen and Food Network Star at the same time but I had wanted Food Network Star.  It took me five years to get on that show, bro, five years.  Every time I didn’t make it I thought it was the end of the world.  But it wasn’t supposed to happen then because it wouldn’t happen the way it’s happened now.

Dude, being on that show was the scariest thing ever and it was crazy.  Crazy, crazy, crazy, bro.  You think you’re ready to go.  You think you’re great so you go on and it brings you to your knees.  It really brings the best out in you because now it’s so comfortable, so cozy and the confidence is there.  But you do it, you experience it and you get your head handed to you.  You get twelve weeks of schooling and training with the best.

Just a true blessing that whole experience.  It changes your whole life.  I didn’t realize how many people watch that show.  Oh boy.  And now I’ve got Chopped All Stars coming up.  You have to be a Wannabe TV Chef to do what we do.

4. How did the Food Network celebrities you met on the show stand up to your preconceived notions?

Vic and GuyI got to meet my idols.  Susie (Fogelson) is a lovely woman.  She’s an amazing, amazing woman and such a darling.  Dude, Alton is the mad scientist.  He’s hilarious, bro, he’s twisted.  He’s twisted in a good way.  That’s the real deal right there.  Alton is phenomenal and I hear Alton is going to be playing a major role in this upcoming season of Food Network Star.

And I got to know Guy.  He invited me to his Road Show when he was in Arizona.  He called me and said “Come on down.”  So I drove down with a buddy.  That’s another great guy, another cool dude.  Ted Allen – good man!  And Scott Conant, I love that guy.  He’s such a perfect judge.

Flay.  Flay was great.  People ask me, “Is Bobby a jerk?  He seems like a jerk.”  How could he be a jerk?  How many people want to know that guy?  So he’s got to be a little choosy so I guess you gotta earn his respect.  He’s not a jerk, he’s tough, dude.  If you can win him over by being yourself that’s when you and Flay are gonna be tight forever.  Me and Mr. Flay are very close.

Emeril, you gotta understand, a lot of TV people don’t really cook but that guy, man.  I’m going to have to say, not taking anything away from anyone else, but by far one of the most talented cooks I’ve ever met in my life. I’m a chili pro now because of him.

5. Which of your fellow cast members do you still keep up with?

Ah, Jyll, the most underrated person on Food Network Star.  She’s awesome, dude.  She needs to keep going.  I got to know her so well, teaming up with her so much.  That by far was my best female friend on the show.  Jyll is awesome, dude.  Orchid, she’s such a doll, dude.  Oh my God I love her.  And Whitney is amazing.  Whitney Chen is fabulous.  I love Whitney Chen.

Howie, by far, one of the most amazing dudes I ever met.  He’s become like a brother to me.  Me and Howie, we talk all the time.  I’ve flown down to Denver and hung out with him.  We went to the first Monday Night Football game together.  I freakin’ love Howie.  He was the first one off the show and he’s going to be one of the biggest stars out there.  Isn’t that killer, dude?

Yeah, and Crazy Chris is going balistic right now.  He’s on VH1 Celebrity Couples Rehab with Angelina from the Jersey Shore.  That’s perfect you know what I mean?  I was making jokes like the second week we were in the house.  I looked at Chris and said, “So, when this is over who are you going to be dating from the Jersey Shore?”  I said that two weeks into filming Food Network Star.  I gotta stop wishing for things, man, a little Vic-tradamus going on here.  He can be my little brother for life.

And Susie (Jimenez).  She’s completely sweet.  She’s a little firecracker.  I’ve got nothing bad to say about nobody.  I liked everyone and everybody was awesome to me.  People have said to me, “Vic, you look so distressed every time someone got eliminated” and I’m like, “Dude, I made friends with everybody.”  We bonded so well, half the time we forgot it was a competition show.

6. How was competing on FNS different from competing on Chopped: All Stars?

Vic Vegas MoeaFor one the time frame (twelve weeks versus one day).  On FNS we were isolated from the whole outside world.  Everything was stripped of us, couldn’t talk to our family often.  I’d say we were in jail but in jail you get to use the phone.  But Food Network Star prepared us to go on Chopped and have a blast.  When you see us on Chopped no one is trippin’ we’re just like, “Yeah!”  And (Chopped) is the crazy show that scares the crap out of everyone.

Food Network Star is a combination of personality and skills.  Chopped is about skills.  Chopped is not a personality show.  Did we bring any personalities to the show?  Hmm, I don’t know. [laughs]  But Justin Balmes may have gotten ixnay’d from Food Network Star early but now this is about cooking ability and that guy is Iron Chef status.  And I’m like, “Oh my God I’m facing Justin B?  Holy crap!”

When I found out the line-up I was like alright, Chris.  Anything is possible because Chris has been a chef now in Little Italy for quite a few months and Penny didn’t go home because she didn’t cook good.  She didn’t have one bad meal.  And you have Justin Balmes who’s pretty much like an encyclopedia and very talented.  He could be trapped on an island with wild life and he’s going to survive cuz he knows how to utilize the whole animal.  Let’s show everybody out there who knows how to cook.

It was awesome hanging out with Penny and Justin and Chris again.  Cuz Penny she’s good people, man.  She really is a good person.  She just played the heel.  That’s OK because at the end of the day when she goes home with her family she’s a loving mother, she’s a caring friend.

7. What’s next for Vic Moea?

I am making it happen.  Some much stuff.  More than you even know is going to be jumping off in the next year.  I go non-stop, man.  I used Food Network Star as a lesson.  I used it as the tune-up for where I really want to be. I got it all out of my system and it was like ba-bing.  Now, let’s do this.  I teamed up with US Foods; I’m now their corporate executive chef for Las Vegas.  They’re totally cool with me going down to Los Angeles to shoot the pilots and the presentations for the three or four show ideas that have been brewed up for me.

For a couple of months after the show (Food Network Star) we weren’t allowed to talk to anybody.  But almost every production company wanted to meet me. So I was talking to Mark Burnett Productions to Big Dog Productions to 123 Productions, everybody.  And a lot of people were scripting up shows about me just in case my future didn’t continue with Food Network as well as the Momma’s Boy show being scripted.  There’s other people – Travel, A&E, Spike TV, Bravo.  Just wait.  It’s amazing, dude, what’s going to be taking place.  But no more competing, now it’s host time.

As a kid I literally wanted to be a WWE wrestler.  At heart I am a WWE wrestler.  I don’t want to be a full time wrestler; I just want to be in Wrestlemania one day.  And actually, Stu, it’s being worked on.  You never know.  I could be wrestling Guy Fieri on Wrestlemania.

WTVC Exclusive Next Food Network Star’s Serena Palumbo

Last year on Next Food Network Star Serena Palumbo drew a lot of attention with her delightful and bubbly personality.  Amongst all of the classically trained chefs it was this home cook who forged one of the most devout followings.  Her effervescent personality and spitfire “can do” attitude struck home with lots of viewers.

Serena Palumbo of Next Food Network StarOf all of the contestants to ever compete on NFNS, Serena may have had the best Plan “B” for not winning.  She could always fall back on her old job of being an international corporate lawyer in the global finance industry.  In 2001 she earned her Juris Doctor from Universita’ degli Studi di Napoli Federico II (Federico II University School of Law in Naples).  In 2004 she studied Corporate Law and Securities Regulation at New York University School of Law as part of a Rotary Foundation Ambassadorial Scholarship.

Serena proved she was no one-trick pony when she started her popular web series Cooking in Manhattan.  Since 2009 her channel has received roughly 50,000 page views with nearly 150,000 individual video downloads.  The success of Cooking in Manhattan has lead to appearances on Food2, CNN, BBC and ultimately as a finalists on Next Food Network Star.

Just a few days before the premiere of NFNS 7 I spoke with Serena.  When talking to her you cannot help but notice her accent.  It is not the stereotype Hollywood gives you of Italians but something warmer and just a touch exotic.  Underlying that accent is a complete mastery of the English language.

As a writer you are always looking for that perfect word to convey an emotion.  Usually it comes easily enough but sometimes you have to thumb through a thesaurus to find it.  That is why it is amazing  to hear Serena do it in casual conversation in what is essentially her second language.  That is an indication of a very keen mind.  She says unabashedly that she is a nerd and proud of it.

Today Serena balances her jet-setting law career with her emerging lifestyle brand on the web site SerenaPalumbo.com which chronicles her life as an attorney, cook, traveler & fashionista.   She has big plans for the site but why not hear about it from her.

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Are you planning to watch the new season of Next Food Network Star?

Most definitely.  Not only will I be watching but I will be live Tweeting about that.  Last year I was very new to Twitter and I didn’t have a chance to use it as a conduit for telling my story.  This year I have been a little more attuned to social media.  I am looking forward to the new season because it is very large in regards to the number of contestants and some of them are characters I would like very much to get to know.

Does it seem like a year since it was you standing before the judges?

It’s been an interesting year.  It’s hard for me to believe that just last year my season was premiering.  It’s been quite hectic.  And it’s been slightly different from what I thought.  It’s really amazing that people recognize you on the street and they tell you, I really liked you on your season.

It’s been really interesting in seeing who took advantage of the platform they were offered and who did not.  You look on my season you saw a lot of people who looked to be very entrepreneurial and you have imagined that they were ready to run with it.  Fortunately some people really ran with the exposure they got.  On the other hand some people didn’t take advantage of it at all.

What changes have taken place in your life since last year?

Serena Palumbo of Next Food Network StarI am very blessed that I participated in the Next Food Network Star because my life has been totally different than it was.  It gave me a lot of training in what to say and what not to say.

My web site now is all new.  There’s so many good things that are going on.  Obviously there is more Cooking in Manhattan.  I keep toying with that because it’s a nice hobby to have, to have this little cooking show that takes place in my own kitchen.  I have been a food writer; I have written for Boulevard Long Island, for Chibo Magazine.  Also in magazines in Italy; the Italian version of Cosmopolotan.

I feel more fearless.

Are there any members of your cast with whom you keep in touch?

Definitely.  I keep in touch with Aarti (Sequeira).  We were friends throughout the show.  I think Aarti is doing an excellent job.  I’m really glad that she got this opportunity.  I think it really went to a person that deserved it.

I’m very good friends with Alexis (Hernandez) and Doreen (Fang).  Alexis is really a person with a big heart.  I really appreciate him a lot.  And Doreen is wonderful.  I am in contact with Brianna (Jenkins).  When she comes to New York from time to time she calls me and then we meet for coffee.  Tom (Pizzica) and I follow each other on Twitter but I actually became good friends with some members of his family so we keep in contact indirectly.

You had a strong run last year and remain a fan favorite to this day.  Can we look forward to seeing you do more work on TV?

There are no plans so far.  If someone comes up to me and says, “Would you like to have a cooking show?”  I definitely would.  Maybe if I can make Bob Tuschman, Susie Fogelson and Bobby Flay change their minds one day then that would be good for me.

How much of your time would you say you spend working abroad right now?

I am the in-house council in America for an Italian bank so they send me traveling very often.  We have a branch in Brazil where they send me often.  They send me very often to Italy because that’s where the headquarters of the bank are.  I would say that my practice in 99% in the United States.

You’re an advocate for the war on childhood obesity, why is this cause so important to you?

I was very chunky when I was a kid.  You know the hippos in Fantasia?  I was more or less like this.

So I am very much an advocate for childhood obesity because I think that obesity is driven sometimes by the fact that kids are not exposed to real food.  They are not exposed to where the chicken is born, where the cows come from.  They are not seeing that and that is something in my culture I did have.  My parents would tell me the apple comes from this tree but the fig comes from a different tree.

All of the work I do outside of my job is for charity because I have something that pays the bills.  Childhood obesity is one thing I feel very strongly about.  The second thing is the American Cancer Society.

Do you have any desire to run your own restaurant?

A lot of people came up to me asking if I would like to have my own restaurant, it’s a lot of hard work.  Maybe in a different stage of my life I will have time to do that.

What other projects are you working on right now?

My web site.  My web site.  My web site.  It’s going to be not only about food but if you notice there is a travel section.  There will be a lifestyle section that I am going to beef up in the next few days.  There is a reason for all this and it is because I have so many friends all over the world.  I have friends in India, obviously a lot of friends in Europe and a lot of friends in the Americas.

I would like to share a lot of things that are not American with my followers.  I’ll start off obviously with travel advice because it is something that I get asked for all the time.  Everyone tells me, “I’m going to Sardinia where should I go?”  That’s the first thing – one place where people can find all of that information on what to do that is not traditional touristy stuff.

And secondly is the lifestyle section that is more about who I really am because food is a great part of my life but there is also another part.  Italian women have a very different esthetic than American women or French women and I would like to show that.

There’s also going to be a lot of food writing for magazines and whatever comes my way really.

 

Season 7 of Next Food Network Star premieres this Sunday at 9/8 Central.  As usual I will be live Tweeting the event.  You can keep up with the snark by bookmarking this link.

http://youtu.be/Vmnn5oVnNOE

Next Food Network Star 6 Rehash

NFNSThe finale to Next Food Network Star Season Six is tonight so I thought I would put together an index of posts to remind us just how we got here:

Next Food Network Star 6 Finale

next food network starWhy does it seem like this season has been going on for years?  Maybe because this was the weakest field of NFNS contestants to date.  Of the twelve seven never stood a chance and an eighth was at best a dark horse.  So that means there were only four legitimate contestants in the whole contest: Aarti, Brad, Tom and Herb.  With the finale upon us three of those four remain – Aarti, Tom and Herb.

Many Tweeting the show and commenting on blogs across the Online have stated that they don’t really see anyone in this year’s cast that they think they could watch.  In fact that seems to be the prevailing thought with most fans of the show.  True there may not be another Guy Fieri in this group but for sure none of the final three are Aaron McCargo Jr or Amy Finley either.  And let’s be honest, other than Guy, no one really watches the shows of NFNS winners.

Here are my thoughts on the final three contestants:

Aarti Sequeira on WannabeTVchef.comAarti Sequeira – She has the most star potential.  She brings something to Food Network that they have never had, an Indian chef.  That is important because Bob Tuschman really wants an Indian show on the “big network.”  But more than that Aarti has proven she has range.  Throughout the competition she not only showed the flexibility of Indian cuisine but she also proved proficient in others having won challenges with Mediterranean, Spanish and Mexican dishes.  Just think, Food Network hasn’t had a chef who’s specialty was an Asian cuisine since Ming Tsai.  That was over a decade ago.

Herb Mesa on WannabeTVchef.comHerb Mesa – He is an immensely passionate person.  His love for his family is something that I think everyone will take away from this season.  In a country were many parents only go through the motions of parenthood, Herb attacks it with zeal.  He is also a talented chef but unfortunately I think that the direction he wants to go, healthy food, is one that the Network has tried on many occasions with little success (see Kathleen Dahlman, Ellie Krieger and Juan-Carlos Cruz before he became a murder suspect).  However, I think Herb’s point of view would make a highly successful show on the right network.  I believe he is tailor made for Planet Green.

Tom Pizzica on WannabeTVchef.comTom Pizzica –What a fricking wild card!  When Tom is on he is another Guy Fieri – humorous, stocky, funky hair and bold food.  When he is off he just flat out sucks.  Aarti I’d like to meet at a food bloggers conference, Herb I’d love to cook with but Tom . . .  Tom I want to grab a beer with.  He seems like the guy who’d sit through a marathon of South Park and then put in the movie.  One thing is for sure, in his best challenge he made a potential employer out of both Bobby Flay and Todd English.  I’d say he is already a winner.

Who do I think should win?  After what we’ve seen this season I would have to say that Aarti has earned the win but not by much.

Who do I think will win?  Again it is hard to go wrong with Aarti.  Herb and Tom, though entertaining, do not bring anything new to the Network where as Aarti brings something they’ve never had and desperately want.  Remember last year the race between Jeffrey Saad and Melissa D’Arabian was very close so ultimately, in my opinion, demographics decided the winner.

Thanks for playing:
Alexis Hernandez – went home week 1.
Doreen Fang – went home week 2.
Dzintra Dzenis – went home week 3.
Darrell “DAS” Smith – went home week 4.
Paul Young – went home week 5.
Brianna Jenkins – went home week 6.
Serena Palumbo – went home week 7.
Brad Sorenson – went home week 8.
Aria Kagan – went home week 9.

There was no real mystery in the final challenge; it’s how they always wrap things up.  Each contestant shoots a pilot for their show concept while some Food Network star acts as the director.  This year it was Rachael Ray.  I highly doubt that the final challenge has ever really determined a winner.  There’s the usual curtain call of former contestants and the seriously over played, mellow dramatic, extended pause before announcing the winner (seriously reality TV producers, that trick has gone stale).

So without further eloquence I would like to congratulate The Next Food Network Star . . .

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Aarti Sequeira
Aarti Sequeira on WannabeTVchef.com

Congratulations to Aarti. Hopefully for season 7 I’ll be in her shoes or at least some that are similar to hers only in a size 13 extra wide. Until next year NFNS’ers!

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Stuart in 80 Words or Less

Stuart is a celebrity chef, food activist and award-winning food writer. He penned the cookbooks Third Coast Cuisine: Recipes of the Gulf of Mexico, No Sides Needed: 34 Recipes To Simplify Life and Amigeauxs - Mexican/Creole Fusion Cuisine. He hosts two Internet cooking shows "Everyday Gourmet" and "Little Grill Big Flavor." His recipes have been featured in Current, Lagniappe, Southern Tailgater, The Kitchen Hotline and on the Cooking Channel.

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Stuart’s Honors & Awards

2015 1st Place Luck of the Irish Cook-off
2015 4th Place Downtown Cajun Cook-off
2015 2nd Place Fins' Wings & Chili Cook-off
2014 2015 4th Place LA Gumbo Cook-off
2012 Taste Award nominee for best chef (web)
2012 Finalist in the Safeway Next Chef Contest
2011 Taste Award Nominee for Little Grill Big Flavor
2011, 12 Member: Council of Media Tastemakers
2011 Judge: 29th Chef's of the Coast Cook-off
2011 Judge: Dauphin Island Wing Cook-off
2011 Cooking Channel Perfect 3 Recipe Finalist
2011 Judge: Dauphin Island Gumbo Cook-off
2011 Culinary Hall of Fame Member
2010 Tasty Awards Judge
2010 Judge: Bayou La Batre Gumbo Cook-off
2010 Gourmand World Cookbook Award Nominee
2010 Chef2Chef Top 10 Best Food Blogs
2010 Denay's Top 10 Best Food Blogs
2009 2nd Place Bay Area Food Bank Chef Challenge
2008 Tava: Discovery Contest Runner-up

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