![]() | aaaFje: and they only had cheeseburgers and normal hamburgers or somethin cuz the grill thing was broken -.- but still! about 9 minutes ago |
![]() | JohannaPERTH: @aaroncarter7 go aaron go come twitter me back and u def shud come visit hamburg or australia aye;) HAMBURGERS ADORE YA ;) about 35 minutes ago |
![]() | whatalamename2: a very nice roast pork dinner, think it may be jam roly poly n custard in an hour or so. god i love sundays!! about 45 minutes ago |
![]() | AimeeWilowski: @SianyLou88 good point, include the custard and i'll lick :D another great reason to have no hair as well, no mess or hairs in your teeth :) about 54 minutes ago |
| XxbabybashxX: @YMaryWinchester hahahahah. now we need some strippers xd. or hamburgers xdd about 56 minutes ago |
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The Arsonist burger is a winner for anyone who can handle the 12 hot sauces, jalapenos, pepper jack cheese and giardinaria they pile on top. | ![]() |
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| By Julie Lawrence OnMilwaukee.com Staff Writer Photography by Whitney Teska E-mail author | Author bio More articles by Julie Lawrence |
| Published May 20, 2009 at 4:19 p.m. |
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When Mike Schmidt closed his original Bella's Fat Cat location in April 2008, it seemed as though Brady Street would be forever changed without a nice, easy spot to grab a great burger for the right price.
A neighbor to the south, Mazen Muna, didn't want to see that happen. Muna owns The Dogg Haus, the Chicago-style hot dog shop that started at 1433 E. Brady St. and has since expanded to three more locations. Schmidt wanted to focus more time on the larger Bella's locations on Oakland and Kinnickinnic Avenues, but Muna, well, he figured he might as well add another one to the mix.
The Burger Joint opened at 1233 E. Brady St. in June 2008, marking Muna's fifth Milwaukee restaurant, though his first venture away from hot dogs.
Any loyal customer of Bella's, which dished up big burgers and creamy custard in the spot for seven years, will notice that The Burger Joint's menu is vastly similar in style -- burgers, fries and custard. This wasn't a form of plagiarism on Muna's part, but rather a strategic move that he hoped would easy the neighborhood's pain of losing a mainstay.
"Michael Schmidt and I have a good business relationship. He didn't want to just sell it to anyone who might come in and ruin the place. And I didn't want that either; I wanted to keep Brady Street nice."
Muna says he kept the restaurant's menu similar to Bella's simply because it was and still is a good fit for the neighborhood. People had long since gotten accustomed to the idea of having a burger and custard place on the street and he wasn't about to take it away from them.
But that's not to say it's exactly the same. Like Bella's, Burger Joint customers can choose from beef, turkey or veggie patties, but Muna has taken the burger menu to another level. Like at The Dogg Haus, you choose from either a variety of 30 random toppings or a list of a dozen or so specialty concoctions mixing various cheese, sauces and vegetables.
While items on The Dogg Haus menu are named after places, The Burger Joint's sandwiches are named for people that coincide with the restaurant's overall old-school ganger theme -- The Capone, the Dillinger, The Tony Montana. The Arsonist, by the way, is a winner for anyone who can handle the 12 hot sauces, jalapenos, pepper jack cheese and giardinaria they pile on top.
The Burger Joint also does wings.
"I thought, if we're going to be open late (3 a.m. on weekends), this should be an appropriate product for us to have," he says. "I remember going out in college and I would have died for half a dozen wings as a night cap."
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5 comments about this article. Post a comment / write a review. |
Posted by drmog on Sept. 9, 2009 at 11:22 a.m. (report)
I ate at the burger joint a couple of times now to try a couple of the burgers out and i would have to say they are the best burgers you will find around the eastside. I have also tried sobelmans tallgrass also and they are king of overpriced burgers, if thats what the last post was referring too. anywho and how could someone say anything bad about the dogg haus, i mean seriously, tell me where you are going to find a better chicago dogg without going to chicago. thanks dogg haus and burger joint
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Posted by mcdoogs on May 22, 2009 at 3:37 p.m. (report)
The Capone Burger? The Dillinger? Hmmm what thugs/murderers will they name a burger after next? Why not the Sadaam Burger? The Dahmer Deluxe? Anyway, the burger I had here was OK, but just like the Dog Hauus I just was not that impressed. Sobelman's is still the king! Can't wait for the new one.
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Posted by ndf2 on May 21, 2009 at 11:19 p.m. (report)
Talk about one end of the burger spectrum to the other (reading about Sobelman's and now Burger Joint). I couldn't have been more underwhelmed with the Mushroom/Swiss burger here several months ago. Dry burger, few mushrooms, cheese not completely melted. Perhaps it was just bad timing on my part? Not sure I'll go back though with Sobelman's Tallgrass coming.
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Posted by OffBradyJman on May 21, 2009 at 10:43 a.m. (report)
Ive have made a stop at the Burger Joint for a night cap. The prices are right and so are the burgers. The Arsonist is ridiculously delic!
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Posted by brewcitypaul on May 21, 2009 at 8:43 a.m. (report)
I've had good burgers here, but if they want to be known for their wings, they have to expand out beyond just generic Cisco wings that aren't any better than what you get at the grocery store.
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