Taking bites is better than jerking your hand away or dropping him, but I would really work on trying to handle him in a way that he doesn't get to the point of biting you. If a hook is not working to break the response, a roll of paper towels might work better. It would be better to give him some time to calm down and break that response, even if it takes you 10 or 15 mins to get him out. I would start really slow with handling him rather than going from not being handled at all to being handled daily. I would pick 2-3 days after eating, and handle him for a brief amount of time, maybe 10 mins, and then leave him alone till the next week. Slowly over time you can handle him more often or for longer periods if the sessions are going well. If the sessions are doing nothing but causing him stress, more of them is not going to make him calmer, it's only going to make him behave worse. You have to build some trust with him, which means giving him positive human experiences. The more you open that enclosure besides feeding, the more that will help break his conditioning that it being opened means food. It's also possible he is just really hungry because he wasn't being fed quite enough. Do you have a weight on him? How is his body condition?
You can also try to break the feeding response by misting down the enclosure. Almost none of my snakes enjoy being misted, and go in their hide and curl up if they aren't already.