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Tag: H-E-B

  • H-E-B just bought more land in Fort Worth, across the street from a Kroger

    The front of the new H-E-B Supermarket opening in McKinney, Texas on Wednesday, July 19, 2023.

    The front of the new H-E-B Supermarket opening in McKinney, Texas on Wednesday, July 19, 2023.

    FortWorth

    H-E-B is continuing to grow its North Texas real estate portfolio with the purchase of more land in Fort Worth, records show.

    The San Antonio-based supermarket giant already owns numerous properties, some of which have sat vacant for years without any announced plans to build stores. For example, in March 2023, H-E-B bought 15 acres by The Shops at Chisholm Trail Ranch in far south Fort Worth, along McPherson Boulevard and Summer Creek Drive. The site remains vacant.

    Tarrant County property records show that the latest H-E-B acquisition is a 4.5-acre site at the southeastern corner of Altamesa Boulevard and McCart Avenue. The property is an abandoned Sack ’N Save warehouse grocery store.

    H-E-B bought its first plot of land in Tarrant County in 2015 in the northwest corner of Cheek-Sparger Road and Rio Grande Boulevard in Euless. That purchase then sparked a buying spree, and the company owned six other plots n the county by the end of 2016.

    H-E-B’s plans for new Fort Worth property

    A spokesperson for H-E-B declined to comment this week on whether the company plans to build a grocery story here or what a timeline could look like in terms of the land being put to use. The purchased land is next to a 7-Eleven, Jack in the Box and a discount tire shop.

    Perhaps more telling, the site is across from one of H-E-B’s chief rivals in North Texas: Kroger. The first H-E-B in Fort Worth opened in 2024 in Alliance in 2022 on Heritage Trace Parkway, directly across from a Kroger Marketplace.

    And in far north Fort Worth, H-E-B owns 17 acres of pasture just south of the new Kroger Marketplace on Bonds Ranch Road that opened in October.

    H-E-B’s future stores in Tarrant County

    After H-E-B announced the Alliance store, the company broke ground on a location in Mansfield in early 2023 and opened it the following year.

    Then, H-E-B announced plans for its second Fort Worth grocery store last July. The location is in the booming Walsh area along I-20 just across the Parker County line.

    In January 2025, H-E-B also bought land in Wise County at the southeast corner of Farm Road and U.S. 287 in the growing Reunion development, where thousands of homes have either been built or planned.

    A third location in Tarrant County is expected to open near the Bedford-Euless line later this year.

    H-E-B’s new Altamesa Boulevard property

    Forty years ago, the corner of Altamesa Boulevard and McCart Avenue was fiercely competitive in the grocery business. Kroger has operated here since around 1980.

    According to the Star-Telegram archives, the building H-E-B purchased was originally a Safeway that held a grand opening on Jan. 17, 1982. In 1985, a Sack ’N Save opened on another corner of the intersection that was most recently a Big Lots.

    At some point, Sack ’N Save moved into the former Safeway.

    The 4.5 acres has a total tax value of $1,450,929, according to Tarrant County records.

    Last year, H-E-B announced it would build its first store in Dallas.

    Samuel O’Neal

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Samuel O’Neal is a local news reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram covering higher education and local news in Fort Worth. He joined the team in December 2025 after previously working as a staff writer at the Philadelphia Inquirer. He graduated from Temple University, where he served as the Editor-in-Chief of the school’s student paper, The Temple News.

    Samuel O’Neal

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  • North Texas shoppers go home with free H-E-B groceries after system glitch

    H-E-B has opened eight grocery stores in the Metroplex, with more in the pipeline.

    H-E-B has opened eight grocery stores in the Metroplex, with more in the pipeline.

    H-E-B

    A glitch in the system led to H-E-B Burleson shoppers walking away with free groceries ahead of the holidays Monday night.

    “H-E-B, we love having y’all as our customers,” the store manager said in a video posted to Facebook. “Thank you for waiting with us. Unfortunately, the computers are not coming back up right now. So today, everything that you have, we’re going to bag you up, and we hope every one of you have a very Merry Christmas and continue to shop with us.”

    The dozens of shoppers waiting in halted lines immediately broke into smiles and applause. Their full baskets came at zero cost.

    Comments on the Facebook post range from playful jealousy to appreciation of the H-E-B location with remarks like “Does the offer still stand?” and “Way to go HEB! This was customer service at its finest!”

    One shopper, Melinda Brown, told Star-Telegram media partner WFAA the act of generosity was a “Godsend” after she waited in line for two hours to feed her kids and grandkids for the holidays.

    “(It) brought tears to my eyes (and) we all gave them a round of applause,” Brown told WFAA. “I asked the checker ‘For real?’ and she said ‘Yep! Merry Christmas.’ What a gift!”

    A woman from Crowley posted on Facebook that her father was in line when the system went down. What he experienced was “amazing” she said.

    In the few hours H-E-B’s register system was down and lines lengthened, only self-checkouts and the customer service desk were working.

    “A worker came by and said if they didn’t have anything that needed to be weighed they could go to customer service. So he went,” she said. “He said he was 6th in line. It was his turn and about 6 items in, the system crashed. He said the man scanning his stuff looked at my dad then looked at the girl bagging and said finish bagging his stuff and send him on his way. My dad stood there in disbelief as she bagged his stuff and said ‘Merry Christmas, have a nice day.’”

    In a statement, an H-E-B spokesperson said the grocery chain is committed to serving customers year-round and especially during the holidays.

    “The customer experience is at the heart of what we do!” the statement said.

    This story was originally published December 23, 2025 at 12:21 PM.

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Rachel Royster

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Rachel Royster is a news and government reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, specifically focused on Tarrant County. She joined the newsroom after interning at the Austin American-Statesman, the Waco Tribune-Herald and Capital Community News in DC. A Houston native and Baylor grad, Rachel enjoys traveling, reading and being outside. She welcomes any and all news tips to her email.

    Rachel Royster

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  • A 100-acre shopping development coming to I-35 north of Fort Worth by new H-E-B

    The town of Argyle signed a deal with R.Y. Properties to develop 123 acres on the southwest corner of Interstate 35W and Robson Ranch Road. This rendering shows plans for buildings and roads.

    The town of Argyle signed a deal with R.Y. Properties to develop 123 acres on the southwest corner of Interstate 35W and Robson Ranch Road. This rendering shows plans for buildings and roads.

    Argyle

    The town of Argyle announced on Friday plans for a major retail development, including big-box stores, restaurants and possibly a grocery story, on more than 100 acres of “prime land” along Interstate 35W.

    Town leaders signed an agreement with R.Y. Properties to develop the 123-acre Heritage development on the southwest corner of Robson Ranch Road and I-35W, just north of the Harvest community. The project is already attracting interest from “major high-quality retail” companies, officials say, and will be anchored by an “innovative medical services hub.”

    The site is near a future H-E-B, which announced in March it will build a grocery store on the northwest corner of Robson Ranch Road at I-35W. The Heritage development could end up with another competing grocery store.

    This roughly 15-mile corridor of I-35W in southern Denton County is booming with new developments that will bring tens of thousands of families to the largely rural stretch between the Texas Motor Speedway and Denton.

    Hillwood, the Ross Perot Jr. company that developed Alliance, is building the 3,200-acre Landmark community just north of the Argyle project. Landmark includes 6,000 homes and 900 acres of commercial space, including the new H-E-B.

    The town of Argyle said R.Y. Properties will invest $25 million in site infrastructure including roads, water, wastewater and drainage. The project is expected to generate $127 million in sales tax revenue for the town of about 6,000 people. Argyle Mayor Ron Schmidt said the deal creates new opportunities for public investment and eases the town’s future reliance on property taxes.

    Schmidt said in an interview Friday that Argyle is not losing its rural feel, and the retail development will be on the opposite side of Interstate 35 from the town.

    “We’re going to retain this rural feel. We’re placing our economic generators along I-35,” Schmidt said.

    The mayor said construction will start next year, and the retailers should start arriving in 2027.

    Schmidt said Argyle and the developer are looking at “big box” stores, giving examples such as Target, Costco or Lowe’s Home Improvement. He said land along I-35W and Robson Ranch Road is also zoned for a grocery store.

    A 50-acre medical component of the development has an area designated for a hospital and will feature wellness-oriented businesses like fitness centers and outpatient services.

    He said Baylor Scott & White has approached Argyle about the possibility of locating there.

    Schmidt said he is glad that Argyle is lessening the burden for property owners.

    “The reason why I’m excited about this is that the state Legislature is trying to get away from property taxes,” he said. “A lot of small towns that are bedroom communities are going to be in trouble if that happens.”

    The town of Argyle signed a deal with R.Y. Properties to develop 123 acres on the southwest corner of Interstate 35W and Robson Ranch Road. This rendering shows plans for buildings and roads.
    The town of Argyle signed a deal with R.Y. Properties to develop 123 acres on the southwest corner of Interstate 35W and Robson Ranch Road. This rendering shows plans for buildings and roads. Argyle

    More details about the project will be revealed in early 2026.

    “We are excited with the interest and activity from major high-quality retail users,” Jim Wills of R.Y. Properties, said in a statement. “We are pressing forward quickly with engineering, planning and construction of infrastructure in and around the development. We will be making more exciting announcements after the first of the year.”

    According to a 2024 Retail Strategies report, the area within a 10-minute drive of the Argyle development has 61,490 residents in 20,364 households with an average home value of $734,080 and a median household income of $150,433.

    R.Y. Properties will be eligible to receive a performance-based reimbursement of sales taxes capped at $20 million out of a projected $127 million in long-term sales tax revenues.

    Elizabeth Campbell

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    With my guide dog Freddie, I keep tabs on growth, economic development and other issues in Northeast Tarrant cities and other communities near Fort Worth. I’ve been a reporter at the Star-Telegram for 34 years.

    Elizabeth Campbell

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  • H-E-B Pumpkin Ice Cream is Legit

    H-E-B Pumpkin Ice Cream is Legit

    It’s the most loved/hated time of the year when pumpkin spice seemingly takes over North America even when some of us are still sweltering and praying for a cold front. It’s everywhere and not just at Starbuck’s. We saw our first glimpses in late August: shelves or orange-colored, pumpkin-spiced everything lining our grocer’s shelves.

    Need spiced dish detergent? No problem. Have a hankering for pumpkin hummus? Easy. You love bagels, but how will you survive without autumn harvest cream cheese? They got you.

    This is as fascinating as it is pretty annoying. Do we really need everything in our pantry and home in general to smell like someone is cooking a pie every day, all day? Probably not. Yes, so many are obsessed. HBO’s This Week Tonight pokes fun at this obsession almost ever year.
    But we are here to tell you that this is NOT all bad. So much of this is leading to “eating season” when we devour food as if we were going to be dead by January. From Halloween candy to Thanksgiving turkey to god forsaken candy canes at Christmas. Definitely the wrong time to start a diet, but a great time to get in on the great foods that are typically reserved for this time of year.

    And, yes, pumpkin spice can be among those delicacies including this offering from H-E-B: Creamy Creations Pumpkin Pie Ice Cream.

    We will fully admit that we obsess over pumpkin pie each fall, often making a second pie that we hide from guests solely for ourselves. So, it’s no shock we would be all over this dessert, especially since the first time we ever had anything like this, it was at Galveston’s famous La King’s (it was crazy good).

    In fact, when purchasing the H-E-B version, we were nervous simply because our experience with pumpkin pie frozen desserts had been so previously positive. Well, be not afraid, ghouls and boys. It’s not quite La King’s (what is?), but it is damn close.

    It’s orange — of course it is — and loaded with those warm cinnamon, clove and ginger spices we love (and sometimes love to hate). Personally, we feel like the Creamy Creations 1905 Vanilla is the best store-bought vanilla ice cream around, so adding a bunch of pie spices to that? Yes, please.

    But, perhaps the best part are the bits of pie crust mixed in. This was one of the highlights of that La King’s version we had years ago and we didn’t imagine H-E-B would follow suit, but they did. So, every bite or two, you get some bits of the flaky crust, the thing that some people claim is better than the filling (they are wrong, but still).

    It’s not actual pumpkin pie, but it really does satisfy that craving a few weeks before the day of the year that made that pie famous. We have only had one half gallon in the house so far because we fear for our waist lines this far ahead of Thanksgiving, but it will make its return to our freezer soon enough because it’s that damn good.

    Jeff Balke

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  • [TX] Chase Offers: Save 10% At H-E-B Grocery, Up To $11 Cashback – Doctor Of Credit

    [TX] Chase Offers: Save 10% At H-E-B Grocery, Up To $11 Cashback – Doctor Of Credit

    Update 6/19/24: Deal is back through August 12 or 13. Limit is higher this time at $11.

    Update 9/6/20: Deal is back, expires 9/30/20. Hat tip to reader Denise

    The Offer

    No direct link, check your Chase Offers

    • Activate to get 10% back at H-E-B grocery store, up to $7 maximum cash back.
    • Others are seeing 5% back, up to $4 maximum.

     

    The Fine Print

    • Offer expires 9/2/20
    • Payment must be made directly with the merchant
    • Offer not valid on tobacco, lottery, or pharmacy purchases
    • Offer valid one time only

    Our Verdict

    $7 isn’t much, but grocery store deals are essentially free money for those in the area. The likely sell gift cards too if you want to go that route.

    My friend J. got this offer on a Chase card. This might be showing on Bank Amerideals and other banks as a number of banks use the same back end for these offers. This includes: Chase, Bank of America, Regions Bank, Suntrust Bank, BBVA, BB&T, PNC, Columbia Bank, Beneficial Bank, and Christian Community CU. You can read this post for more information.

    Chuck

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  • H-E-B: Purchase $100 Giftcards & Get $15 H-E-B Giftcard (Lowe’s, Home Depot & More) – Doctor Of Credit

    H-E-B: Purchase $100 Giftcards & Get $15 H-E-B Giftcard (Lowe’s, Home Depot & More) – Doctor Of Credit

    The Offer

    Direct link to offer

    • H-E-B is offering a number of gift card deals:
      • Buy $100 gift cards for the following brands & get $15 H-E-B gift cards free:
        • Ace Hardware
        • Favor
        • Home Depot
        • Lowe’s
        • Ruth’s Chris
        • Topgolf
      • Buy $30 gift cards for $25 for the following brands:
        • Bubba’s 33
        • Dairy Queen
        • Darden
        • Domino’s
        • IHOP
        • Panera Bread
        • Texas Roadhouse
        • Wendy’s

    Our Verdict

    Lowe’s & Home Depot deals both very good for personal use.

    William Charles

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  • H-E-B: Buy $150 In Select Giftcards & Get $25 H-E-B Giftcard (Southwest, Disney, Uber, Hotels.com & More) – Doctor Of Credit

    H-E-B: Buy $150 In Select Giftcards & Get $25 H-E-B Giftcard (Southwest, Disney, Uber, Hotels.com & More) – Doctor Of Credit

    The Offer

    H-E-B  is offering a digital coupon for the following deal from January 3 – January 9, 2024:

    • Get a free $25 H-E-B gift card when you buy $150 in gift cards from the following brands:
      • Southwest
      • Uber
      • Disney
      • Hotels.com
      • Fandango
      • Vudu

    Our Verdict

    Nice savings.

    Hat tip to reader Terry

    Chuck

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  • H-E-B: Buy $100 Select Giftcards & Get Free $20 H-E-B Giftcard (Home Depot, Airbnb, Lowe’s & More) – Doctor Of Credit

    H-E-B: Buy $100 Select Giftcards & Get Free $20 H-E-B Giftcard (Home Depot, Airbnb, Lowe’s & More) – Doctor Of Credit

    The Offer

    • H-E-B is offering a digital coupon for a free $20 H-E-B gift card when you buy $100 from the following gift card deals through November 28th:
    • They are also offering a free $10 H-E-B gift card when you buy $50 ChooseYourCard gift cards for the following brands: Time To ShopStudy BreakGame TimeFor The HomeBaby & Me.

    Our Verdict

    Home Depot, Lowe’s, and Airbnb are all top brands and great deals. Some of others can be useful as well.

    Hat tip to GC Galore

    Chuck

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  • H-E-B Stores: Select $100 Gift Cards for $80 (Best Buy, Kohl’s & More)

    H-E-B Stores: Select $100 Gift Cards for $80 (Best Buy, Kohl’s & More)

    H-E-B has a sale on select third party gift cards, with a 20% discount when clipping coupon. There’s a limit of one $100 gift card for each brand.

    The post H-E-B Stores: Select $100 Gift Cards for $80 (Best Buy, Kohl’s & More) appeared first on Danny the Deal Guru.

    DDG

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  • The Fruit Aisle Is Getting Trippy

    The Fruit Aisle Is Getting Trippy

    On a recent visit to the supermarket, I found myself terribly disturbed by a carton of fruit. There, among the raspberries and blueberries, were ghostly white strawberries. They were the inverse of every strawberry I had ever seen—fully ripe berries with pale flesh bleeding pinpricks of red. Their seeds called to mind clogged pores in need of a nose strip. Rattled, I pivoted my cart toward less haunting produce.

    The little freaks, I later learned, are pineberries, a cultivar named for their supposed subtle pineapple flavor but far better known for their spooky hue. Slicing one open reveals an interior that is unnervingly white. They aren’t the only wacky-colored fruit in the produce section these days: Other strawberries come in pale yellow or creamy blush, pink-pearl apples are a shocking magenta inside, and there are now kiwis to match every color of a traffic light. You can get yellow watermelon at H-E-B, pink pineapples on Instacart, and peach-colored raspberries at Kroger.

    This is the era of bizarro fruit: Unusual colors are “a clear trend in the produce section,” Courtney Weber, a professor of plant breeding at Cornell University, told me. The variations in color sometimes come with a subtle flavor shift, but the difference is primarily aesthetic. People don’t buy peach-colored raspberries because they taste peachy. They buy them because they look cool.

    Fruits that are the “wrong” color are not new. Some, like the Arkansas Black apple, arise spontaneously in nature. In other cases, breeders develop them by crossing different-colored fruits. But these haven’t historically made their way to your supermarket, because growing them at the volume necessary to serve large chains is risky and expensive. Typically, produce found in big stores must be grown in huge quantities, packed and shipped long distances, and sold quickly enough to not rot on the shelf. To tick all of those boxes, breeders developed hardy supermarket stalwarts such as the Gala apple, the Cavendish banana, and Thompson seedless grapes. In many cases, breeding efforts aimed to bring out appealing and uniform color—a major reason the Red Delicious apple came to be so popular.

    Now things are getting goofy. Although breeders largely still use traditional techniques, such as cross-pollination and grafting, to produce fruit with certain traits, the process is now more efficient because of advances in genomics. “If you understand how the trait is inherited, it’s easier to make the appropriate genetic combinations to get what you’re after,” Weber said. He previously developed a purple strawberry; these days, he’s working on raspberries in sunshine hues.

    The appetite for bizarro fruit has led some big companies to invest in creating new varieties. Driscoll’s, the berry giant, developed pale-yellow “Tropical Bliss” and baby-pink “Rosé” strawberries over decades of breeding in-house. Fresh Del Monte has gone a different route: The company’s coral-fleshed “Pinkglow” pineapples have been genetically engineered to accumulate lycopene, the compound that turns tomatoes red. The fruit is sold only at a smattering of retailers in certain states (notably not Hawaii, which restricts pineapple imports). But it has been so popular that Fresh Del Monte recently suggested that the pineapple has boosted the company’s bottom line.

    You can’t go into just any grocery store and find these kinds of weird fruits. They are stocked at some mid-priced stores—Trader Joe’s, for example, sells pink-fleshed oranges—but they are far more likely to be found at higher-end groceries. At least for now: Fruit innovation beyond ghostly berries and colorful kiwis is “on the horizon,” Lauren M. Scott, the chief strategy officer of the International Fresh Produce Association, told me.  To a lesser extent, the vegetable aisle has gone kaleidoscopic too, with candy-striped beets, violet-colored green beans, and cauliflower in shades of lavender, marigold, and lemon-lime. “People love new things, but they’re also creatures of habit,” Scott said. That is, they don’t want things that are too new. For the average customer bored of regular old fruit, the barrier to entry is lower for a pink apple than it is for, say, a rambutan.

    For consumers who stumble upon them, the experience can be trippy. The new colors can come with tastier fruit—a red kiwi is sweeter than the original tart green. But color shapes our expectations for flavor, which weird-colored fruit can thwart in a way that feels novel and exciting, if not nonsensical. White strawberries look unripe, but don’t taste it. Yellow is usually associated with tropical flavors such as citrus and pineapple, so people expect a yellow watermelon to taste “like banana popsicle,” Weber said. But it just tastes like a watermelon. Likewise, he said, a yellow raspberry tastes like a raspberry.

    The golden age of golden raspberries is what happens when advances in plant breeding coincide with a cultural obsession with aesthetics that also gave us indigo-hued Empress 1908 Gin and the pastel-colored nightmare that is the Starbucks Unicorn Frappuccino. Color makes food fun, even when it doesn’t make any sense. People do it for the ’gram—or, at least, to satisfy the same craving for visual excitement that social media fosters. Even though I’m weirded out by white strawberries, I have to admit that they make a fruit platter look super chic.

    In time, the grocery store could become a bounty of blue bananas and purple mangos, and in the process, bizarro fruit may reshape our basic conception of produce. Ask an American child to draw you an apple, and they’ll sketch a Red Delicious. They will paint grapes purple. But maybe someday, they’ll consider some other colorways because of what they see in the produce aisle. Fantastical as that future supermarket seems, it would be one step closer to nature—where fruit colors are far less predictable than a clamshell of perfect berries would have you believe. Yes, white strawberries are weird. So is the fact that we expect all strawberries to be red.

    Yasmin Tayag

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