You’ve landed in Houston or Austin. You’ve rented a car. You’re driving to Gonzales — a Victorian square town of 7,400, two and a half hours west of Houston on I-10. You’re going to spend a week. You have a rental house with a kitchen. And you’re thinking: where do I buy food?
This is the practical, unromantic side of international travel that guidebooks rarely cover. Where do you get the basics — eggs, milk, fruit, bread, bottled water, coffee, tea, pasta, cooking oil, soap? Where do you find snacks for a day trip? Where do you get international groceries (Indian spices, Korean kimchi, halal meat, European cheeses, Latin American staples)? Where do you buy a case of Shiner Bock or a six-pack of H-E-B chocolate milk?
This is your guide.
The Texas Grocery Hierarchy — Learn These Two Names
H-E-B (pronounced “aitch-ee-bee”) — the iconic Texas grocery chain. Founded 1905 in Kerrville. Beloved by Texans like no other grocery chain in any American state. Fresh produce, excellent prepared foods, Texas-specific products, wide international sections, competitive prices. Most locations have a full bakery, tortilleria (fresh tortillas made in-store), deli, pharmacy, and often a Starbucks or in-store café. The H-E-B brand is to Texas what Tesco is to the UK, what Albert Heijn is to the Netherlands, what Carrefour is to France — except more beloved. Good news for Gonzales visitors: there is an H-E-B right here in town.
Walmart Supercenter — the American retail giant. Everything under one roof: groceries, clothing, electronics, pharmacy, auto supplies, garden center. Prices are low. Selection is vast. Not as fresh or curated as H-E-B, but when you need a $12 pool float, a $4 phone charger, and a package of brisket rub at 10 p.m., Walmart is open and has it.
H-E-B and Walmart — commit these two names to memory. They will cover 95% of your food needs in Central Texas.
Where to Shop in and around Gonzales
In Gonzales Itself
- H-E-B Gonzales — your headquarters for groceries during your stay. Fresh produce, a full bakery, tortilleria with tortillas made in-store, deli, meat counter, international aisles, prepared foods, pharmacy, and everything else you’d expect from Texas’s favorite grocery chain. This is where you should do your big weekly shop. H-E-B also offers full-service delivery in Gonzales — if you’d rather stay at your rental after a long travel day, you can order online through heb.com or the H-E-B app and have groceries delivered to your door. For international visitors who just flew in from 12+ time zones away, this is a small miracle.
- Dollar General — cheap staples, snacks, soft drinks, paper goods. Useful for paper plates, trash bags, disposable cups for a family picnic.
- Family Dollar — similar to Dollar General.
- Gonzales convenience stores — basics, beer, wine, cigarettes, lottery tickets. Several are open 24 hours.
20 Minutes from Gonzales
- Walmart Supercenter Seguin — 20 minutes northwest on US 90. The one-stop for anything beyond groceries: clothing, electronics, auto supplies, garden center, pharmacy.
25 Minutes from Gonzales
- H-E-B Luling — east on US 90A. A second H-E-B option if you’re already heading east toward Houston on a day trip.
- Walmart Luling — basics store.
Houston-area Specialty (for international visitors before driving to Gonzales)
If you have specialty dietary or cultural needs, do a big shop before leaving Houston. The following stores will become your best friends:
- H-Mart Houston (Katy / Spring Branch) — enormous Korean grocery with a strong pan-Asian selection. Kimchi, miso, tofu, fresh fish, Korean snacks, Japanese pantry, Chinese staples, Filipino and Thai sections. Home cooks for a week-long trip can stock up here.
- 99 Ranch Market (Katy) — Chinese-American grocery chain. Strong fresh produce (Asian greens), seafood, dim sum frozen goods, sauces, Chinese-Vietnamese-Japanese pantry.
- Viet Hoa (Bellaire / Houston) — Vietnamese grocery with banh mi ingredients, Thai and Vietnamese staples.
- Seafood City (Pasadena, Sugar Land) — Filipino grocery, chain-based. San Miguel beer, longganisa, pan de sal, bangus.
- Fiesta Mart (multiple Houston, Austin, San Antonio locations) — Latin American grocery specializing in Mexican, Central American, South American, and Caribbean products. Masa, plantains, queso fresco, tropical fruits, achiote, epazote.
- Afro Market (Houston) — African groceries: palm oil, egusi, ogbono, stockfish, plantains, garri, jollof rice basmati.
- Phoenicia Specialty Foods (Houston downtown) — Middle Eastern, Mediterranean, and European. Halal butcher, olive oils, cheeses, Bulgarian yogurt, Turkish coffee.
- Central Market (Houston Westheimer, Austin, Plano) — H-E-B’s upscale cousin. European cheeses, specialty produce, craft products, excellent bakery. Think Whole Foods with Texas attitude.
- Bismillah Meat Bazaar (Hillcroft, Houston) — halal groceries for Pakistani, Bangladeshi, and Indian cuisine.
- Patel Brothers (Sugar Land, Houston, Plano, Austin) — Indian grocery chain. Lentils, rices, ghee, spices, chutneys, frozen Indian foods.
- Salaam Namaste (Houston Hillcroft) — halal and desi groceries.
Austin-area Specialty
- H-E-B Central Market (38th Street, Westgate, Lakeline) — flagship H-E-B upscale.
- H-Mart Austin — new Korean-American grocery.
- Fiesta Mart Austin.
- Wheatsville Co-op — Austin’s organic co-op; limited international.
San Antonio-area Specialty
- H-E-B Central Market (Broadway) — upscale.
- Patel Brothers San Antonio — Indian.
- Ali Baba International Food Market — Middle Eastern and Mediterranean.
What International Visitors Should Know About American Grocery Shopping
Portions are enormous. A standard American milk jug is 3.78 liters (1 gallon). A typical box of cereal is larger than the full family-size box in most countries. Eggs come in cartons of 12, 18, or 24. Pasta in 1-pound (454 g) boxes.
Prices are listed per item, not per kilogram. For produce and deli, prices are typically per pound. Multiply by 2.2 to get the per-kilogram equivalent.
Sales tax is added at checkout. In Texas, unprepared groceries are usually tax-free (a big help for budget-conscious shoppers). Prepared foods, restaurant meals, candy, soft drinks, and non-food items (soap, paper goods) are taxed at 8.25%.
Credit and debit cards are universally accepted. Your Visa/Mastercard from home should work. Check with your bank about foreign transaction fees. Apple Pay and Google Pay work at most checkouts. American Express is accepted at H-E-B but can be spotty at smaller stores.
Bring your own bags or buy plastic. Texas stores usually offer plastic bags free. H-E-B sells sturdy reusable bags for $1-2. Handy for the rental car trunk.
Self-checkout is common. H-E-B, Walmart, and Target all have self-checkout lanes. Scan your items, bag them, pay. Works well for small orders. For full carts, use a staffed lane.
Snacks International Visitors Love and Where to Find Them
Texas-specific snacks to try (available at any H-E-B, Walmart, or Buc-ee’s)
- Kolaches — the Czech-Texan fruit or sausage pastry. Buy at Weikel’s Store and Bakery in Columbus (40 minutes east of Gonzales), Hruska’s in Ellinger, Czech Stop in West, or any Texas gas station in kolache country.
- Buc-ee’s beaver nuggets — sweet caramel corn puffs. Available only at Buc-ee’s mega gas stations.
- HEB Butter Tortillas — fresh from the in-store tortilleria.
- HEB Queso — the queso dip, found in the refrigerated Mexican foods section. Warm it up and dip chips.
- Whataburger sauces — spicy ketchup, Fancy Ketchup, honey butter. Try them at any Whataburger, buy bottles at H-E-B.
- Shiner Bock — the Texas-brewed beer. Six-packs widely available.
- Dr Pepper — invented in Waco in 1885. Tastes different than any Dr Pepper outside Texas (arguably).
- Blue Bell ice cream — a Texas institution since 1907 in Brenham. Flavors like Homemade Vanilla, Tin Roof, Cookies ’N Cream. Available at every grocery store.
- Kerbey Lane pancake mix — Austin diner’s famous pancakes, sold in a box at H-E-B.
- Tito’s Handmade Vodka — Austin-made vodka, available in liquor stores (not grocery stores in Texas — liquor has separate retail).
- Shipley’s Do-Nuts — Houston-founded, dozens of locations. Kolaches and donuts.
- Salsa Lisa, Rick’s Picks, and Marcotte salsas — local Texas salsas at H-E-B.
International snacks available at H-E-B and Walmart
- British — PG Tips tea, HP Sauce, Heinz Baked Beans (UK version), Cadbury chocolate (look for the Cadbury import section).
- French — Président butter and cheeses, Lu biscuits, Bonne Maman jam.
- Italian — De Cecco pasta, San Marzano tomatoes, Parmigiano Reggiano, Lavazza coffee.
- Mexican/Latin — enormous selection. H-E-B Hispanic aisle has masa, tortillas, salsas, Mexican candies (Pulparindo, Vero, Duvalin), Jarritos soda, horchata mix.
- Asian — H-E-B Asian aisle has soy sauce (Kikkoman and Lee Kum Kee), sesame oil, sriracha, Tom Yum paste, ramen noodles (Shin, Nissin), seaweed, rice (jasmine and basmati).
- Indian — Patak’s curry sauces, basmati rice, papadum, chutneys.
- Polish/Central European — Wawel chocolate, Polish pickles (H-E-B carries Mrs. Renfro’s and some Polish brands).
- Turkish — limited at H-E-B; go to Phoenicia in Houston for depth.
- Japanese — H-E-B carries Kikkoman, Yakisoba, some Japanese candies (Pocky, Hi-Chew).
- Korean — H-Mart for depth; H-E-B Asian aisle has Shin Ramyun, some kimchi.
Tea (a specific international obsession)
- H-E-B tea aisle — extensive. Twinings, Bigelow, Lipton (yes, American Lipton tastes different from UK Lipton), Yogi, Harney & Sons, Tazo, Republic of Tea, PG Tips, Barry’s Tea (Irish brand, sometimes stocked), Tetley.
- Central Market (Austin, Houston) — has loose-leaf teas, specialty imports, Mariage Frères, Harney & Sons full range.
- Phoenicia Specialty Foods (Houston) — Turkish black tea, Egyptian chamomile, Moroccan mint.
- Patel Brothers — Indian chai masala, Ceylon black tea, Darjeeling, Assam.
- H-Mart / 99 Ranch — Japanese green teas (matcha, sencha, hojicha), Chinese oolongs, Korean barley tea.
- Hot kettle note — American kitchens rarely have electric kettles (the 110V power makes them slow). You’ll find stovetop kettles. If you need a fast cup, H-E-B sells inexpensive electric kettles (110V) for $15-25.
Coffee — America’s Unofficial National Beverage
- H-E-B Café Olé — Texas-roasted coffee in a bag, reasonable price.
- Starbucks — every H-E-B has one inside. Every Walmart has one inside. Every gas station has one outside. Ubiquitous.
- Dutch Bros Coffee — drive-through coffee chain popular with Texans. Quick, flavored drinks.
- Central Market Coffee Bar — Austin and Houston, locally roasted.
- In Gonzales — the town has two independent coffee shops, both worth your visit: Come and Crepe It (crepes and espresso drinks) and Texpresso. Between them, they cover your morning coffee, your afternoon pick-me-up, and your pre-Legacy-in-Lights caffeine stop.
- Italian-style espresso — Lavazza, Illy at H-E-B.
- Vietnamese coffee (cà phê sữa đá) — Viet Hoa in Houston sells the Phin filter and condensed milk.
- Turkish coffee — Phoenicia Specialty Foods Houston has proper Turkish coffee and cezves.
The Buc-ee’s Experience
Every international visitor to Texas should experience Buc-ee’s at least once. These are enormous 24-hour gas stations / convenience stores / snack bazaars with 120+ gas pumps, 80+ toilets, 20,000+ square feet of floor space, and a cult following.
Closest Buc-ee’s to Gonzales — the Luling Buc-ee’s on I-10, 30 minutes north. Easy pit stop if you’re driving between Gonzales and Houston or Austin.
What to buy at Buc-ee’s: - Beaver Nuggets (sweet caramel corn) - Beef jerky (enormous selection, including exotic flavors) - Kolaches (breakfast) - Fudge (freshly cut at the counter) - Smoked brisket sandwich (yes, Buc-ee’s smokes its own brisket) - Texas-shaped waffle irons, Texas-shaped cheese boards, Texas-shaped everything - Cold drinks in a 44-oz. fountain cup for $1.49
Walk the entire store. Take photos. This is Texan kitsch at its peak.
What to Stock for a Week in Gonzales
For a family of four renting a house for a week, a single big shop at the Gonzales H-E-B (or via H-E-B delivery) costs roughly $250-400. Your list might include:
- Breakfast: eggs (18-count), bacon, HEB tortillas, butter, maple syrup, yogurt, fresh berries, orange juice, coffee, tea.
- Lunch/Snacks: sandwich bread, cold cuts, cheese, salads, chips, hummus, apples, oranges, bananas.
- Dinner: ground beef, chicken breasts, fresh fish, pasta, rice, canned tomatoes, onions, garlic, olive oil, salt/pepper, paprika, vegetables.
- Basics: milk (gallon), bottled water, toilet paper, paper towels, dish soap, trash bags, sunscreen.
- Beer/wine: six-pack of Shiner, bottle of Texas wine (H-E-B has a strong Texas wine section).
International Visitor Tips
- Gluten-free, dairy-free, vegan — H-E-B has excellent selections. Look for the “Live Well” store-within-a-store signage.
- Kosher — limited but available. H-E-B Central Market in Houston and Austin has the best selection.
- Halal meat — rare at H-E-B. For quality halal meat, go to Bismillah or Salaam Namaste in Houston before driving to Gonzales.
- Fresh fish — H-E-B has a good seafood counter, but if you want live or sashimi-grade, go to an Asian market (H-Mart, 99 Ranch).
- Bread — American grocery bread is soft and sweet. If you want European-style crusty bread, go to Central Market, La Boulangerie (Houston), or a local bakery.
- Cheese — H-E-B has a respectable cheese counter; Central Market is better for European imports.
- Produce seasonality — Texas has year-round produce. Strawberries in spring, peaches in summer, pecans in fall, citrus in winter. Local farmers markets (Gonzales has a Saturday morning market on the square in season) are worth a visit.
- Alcohol laws — Texas sells beer and wine in grocery stores, but liquor (spirits) only in dedicated liquor stores. Spec’s and Twin Liquors are the main chains. Sunday hours are restricted on liquor (noon-10 p.m.) and liquor stores are closed Christmas, Thanksgiving, and other holidays.
The “Weekend Grocery Run” International Visitors Should Plan
Saturday mornings are the busiest grocery day in Texas. For a less crowded experience: - Tuesday or Wednesday morning — emptiest store hours. - Sunday morning — moderate crowd, but stores close at different times. - Late Friday night — H-E-B and Walmart are open until 11 p.m. or midnight; fewer crowds.
If your Gonzales visit includes a weekend with extended family, plan a single Friday afternoon big shop at the Gonzales H-E-B — or schedule an H-E-B delivery for the morning you arrive so groceries are waiting at the rental. Meals are covered. Your trip is set.
Pair this guide with International Visitor Guide to Gonzales, Transportation Guide for International Visitors to Gonzales, Gonzales, Texas Visitor Guide, Houston Day Trip from Gonzales, Austin Day Trip from Gonzales, and San Antonio Day Trip from Gonzales for complete planning.
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