a classic vienna jumbo dog served chicago style with mustard, onion, tomato, relish, pickle, sport peppers and celery salt, comes with our homemade potato chips
Memphis
Bbq Sandwich
$7.00
freshly sliced smoked pork on a kaiser roll with a side of bbq sauce and fresh potato chips
Chicken Willie Strips
$7.00
seasoned and deep fried tenders with a side of memphis style bbq sauce. add blue cheese or branch for $0.75
New Orleans
Willie's Wings (10)
$9.00
jumbo chicken wings, cajun seasoned and deep fried. served with a side of blue cheese or ranch
Cajun Catfish
$7.00
fingers of catfish fillet, seasoned and deep fried. served with your choice of blue cheese or ranch
Jambalaya
$8.00
house-made chicken and andouille sausage spicy
jambalaya served over a bed of rice.
Fried Chicken Salad
$8.00
baby field greens with cucumber, tomato, and onion.
topped with a fried chicken breast and your choice of dressings- ranch, honey mustard, blue cheese, or italian
Willie's House Salad
$5.50
everything but the chicken
Every Where
Feelin's Blue Chips
$5.50
a plateful of our spicy homemade potato chips, drizzled in our own blue cheese dressing and sprinkled with crumbled blue cheese and chips
Chips Or Fries
$3.25
a basket of our seasoned potato chips or sweet potato fries
with a side of blue cheese, ranch or cajun dipping sauce.
extra sides of blue cheese, ranch, cajun dipping sauce or
honey mustard 50
Where were you in 1986? Ronald Reagan was president. William Perry and the Chicago Bears enjoyed The Super Bowl Shuffle. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was under 2,000. Jonny Lang was 5 years old. And Blind Willie's was opening its doors in Virginia-Highland. More than 6,500 nights of live music later, Blind Willie's celebrated its 18th anniversary this year, and the Blind Willie's house band, the Shadows, still backs many of the performers. Co-founders Eric King and Roger Gregory (who doubles as Shadows' bassist) built the club, literally, with carpentry and painting support from local musicians, among them Chicago Bob Nelson and guitarists J.T. Speed and Michael Catalano. It was a real musicians' project, King recalls. "They worked their butts off. They just wanted a place to play.