NewsBite

Advertisement

A tradie hotspot makes one of Melbourne’s top chicken schnitzel sangers

Marko’s Schnitzel lets you choose your own adventure, with four types of house-made schnitties and an old-school salad bar you’ll want to make friends with.

Tomas Telegramma
Tomas Telegramma

If you’re reading this from the south-east, this probably won’t be news to you.

But if you don’t get to Moorabbin much, you might not know that for 15 years, it’s been home to a sandwich shop that gives newer, more hyped openings a run for their money.

Marko’s Schnitzel in Moorabbin.
Marko’s Schnitzel in Moorabbin.Wayne Taylor

It’s all in the name at the no-frills Marko’s Schnitzel, which husband and wife Marko and Maya Abramov opened on an industrial strip of Chesterville Road in 2009.

They serve some of Melbourne’s best chicken schnitzels in never-endingly customisable sangers to a stream of tradies and locals – plus diehards travelling from across town – who have their orders down to a fine art. The process is as follows:

Advertisement

First things first, a vessel

How do you take your schnitzel? On a plate, a fluffy pita or a white sourdough sub? This is Sandwich watch, after all, so we opt for the latter, neither too crusty nor too soft – exactly as the Abramovs intended – so it’s a blank slate for the deliciousness to come.

Marko Abramov’s expert ratios mean every subsequent bite brings a different ingredient to the fore.
Marko Abramov’s expert ratios mean every subsequent bite brings a different ingredient to the fore.Wayne Taylor

The all-important schnitzel selection

Every morning, Marko slices the day’s schnitzels (La Ionica chicken breast is his pick) and breads them with one of four house-seasoned crumbs, made to long-standing recipes: garlic and paprika (the most popular, which we go for), a secret herb blend, onion and plain.

Advertisement

Your schnitzel of choice is flash-fried to order, meaning it’s crispy-crusted while still tender and juicy when you unwrap your sub.

How many do they sell a week? “That’s not for the paper [to know]!” says Maya.

Make friends with the salad bar

This is where decision paralysis may set in. “Is it your first time? I can tell,” says Marko as I sheepishly survey the salad bar, its shiny stainless-steel pots piled high with a multicoloured array of freshly cut vegies, and dips and spreads made in-house. It’s like Subway with a Middle Eastern edge – the Abramovs came to Australia from the Soviet Union via Israel.

Advertisement
The old-school salad bar.
The old-school salad bar.Wayne Taylor

Taking Marko’s lead, the sub gets a swipe of silky-smooth hummus and spicy “salsa” (“I can’t tell you what’s in it, or I’ll have to kill you and I don’t want to,” he says with a grin). Then a lettuce-tomato-cucumber medley, Moroccan-spiced carrots, shreds of pickled red cabbage and sumac-y red onion, pickles, cheese and a criss-cross of tahini. “Careful, it’s addictive,” Marko says as he hands over the sub.

There’s a lot going on, but he’s right. The first thought upon first bite? Why is home a 45-minute drive from here?

Marko’s expert ratios mean every subsequent bite brings a different ingredient to the fore. Admittedly, the schnitzel’s garlic-and-paprika flavour takes a back seat, so if you want that up front, go lighter and simpler on fillings.

The garlic and paprika schnitzel with Moroccan-spiced carrots, pickled red cabbage, pickles, cheese and more.
The garlic and paprika schnitzel with Moroccan-spiced carrots, pickled red cabbage, pickles, cheese and more. Wayne Taylor
Advertisement

How do I get one?

The schnitzel sub ($15.50 for a six-inch, $18 for a footlong) is available to dine in (at a handful of stools) or take away at Marko’s Schnitzel, 2/159 Chesterville Road, Moorabbin, open Monday-Friday, 7am-2.30pm.

This is the latest instalment of Sandwich watch, a column dedicated to the Melbourne sandwiches you need to know about.

If there’s a sandwich you’re dying to tell us about, please get in touch here:

Continue this series

15 of Melbourne’s best things between sliced bread in 2024
Up next
Salsa verde brightens the G. McBean Family Butcher’s porchetta roll.

What makes this pork sandwich well worth the $21.90 price tag?

The Italian rolled roast is a thing of salty, porky joy. These Melbourne spots are nailing it and slapping it on rolls you need to know about.

Moon Mart’s kimchi jaffle.

This molten kimchi jaffle will take you to Funkytown

Cheese toasties are great. The fermented extras at this West Melbourne gem make them even better, according to Sandwich watch.

Previous
Walrus cafe’s bacon, egg and cheese sandwich.

‘Best handheld breakfast of the year:’ This bacon, egg and cheese roll is a hangover-busting beauty

Inspired by a quintessential New York City bodega item, it’s the best handheld breakfast Sandwich Watch has had all year.

See all stories
Tomas TelegrammaTomas Telegramma is a food, drinks and culture writer.

From our partners

Advertisement
Advertisement

Original URL: https://www.watoday.com.au/goodfood/melbourne-eating-out/a-tradie-hotspot-makes-one-of-melbourne-s-top-chicken-schnitzel-sangers-20240809-p5k13l.html