Yan began teaching Chinese cooking for a college extension program. While in
Calgary helping a friend open a restaurant he appeared on a talk show on CFAC-TV (now
CICT-DT) to do a cooking segment resulting in his being asked back repeatedly. This led to 250 daily editions of his original series
Yan Can being produced and syndicated from CFAC for four years until moving to
KQED in
San Francisco in 1982 becoming
Yan Can Cook. He has hosted over 3,500 episodes of the
PBS cooking show
Yan Can Cook since 1982. His shows have been broadcast in over 50 countries. He currently hosts
Martin Yan – Quick & Easy. He also hosts ''Martin Yan's Chinatowns
, where he tours Chinatowns around the globe, as well as Martin Yan's Hidden China''. Yan has opened a chain of Yan Can Restaurants and founded the Yan Can International Cooking School in
San Francisco. He has written over two dozen cookbooks. Yan is one of the lead actors of the
Singapore/
Hong Kong film Rice Rhapsody (
海南雞飯, 2005). In 2007, he supported and endorsed the establishment of the World Association of Master Chefs. He has appeared as a guest judge on several episodes of
Iron Chef America and appeared on the cartoon talk show
Space Ghost Coast to Coast. He also appeared as a guest judge on the Season 10 finale of
Top Chef as well as a Season 11 episode of ''
Hell's Kitchen''. In 2023, Yan said that he planned on reopening his M.Y. China restaurant in San Francisco. He said that he considered reopening the restaurant in the former home of Cathay House restaurant (which was closed in 2018). ==Television appearances ==