Love that it's across the street from Walmart, ensuring what they carry always beats their prices. Very good selection of produce, with amazing prices to boot. Their cheese, too, has nice variety, and appreciate their Havarti and Gouda cheeses are under $3 for the same sizes that run over$5 at BrookShire's and Natural Grocers. As one who's not a fan of pizza, gotta say, seems customers can't get enough of their offerings, loading up their carts with cartons full. My fav, the middle section, finding amazing deals on Aldi Finds (one of a kinds, truly) from German chocolates to unique chips, rices, sauces, coffees, and not to be forgotten, textiles, at unbeatable prices. And who can forget the eggs?? When they'd opened nearly a year ago, 19C/dozen. Yes, nineteen CENTS. That went on for about 4 months. Slowly rising to 24C. They've been hanging out at 48-49C/dozen for the last 4 months. Of course there are limits on the eggs, 6 dozen. But no one says you can't come back and buy 6 dozen more. Each of my pups gets an egg a day now (so good for them). My grr is the checkout. The ppl aren't very smiley. Lemme correct myself, not even the ppl working in ALL the store are very friendly. Granted, when you ask them something, they know the answer vs asking an employee at BrookShire's a question, good luck. Great prices come with the feeling you're shopping in grouch-land in terms of the employees but the shoppers themselves are wonderful. We assist each other, holding open the freezer door, answering where to find something, watch a cart when someone has to run back up the aisle for something missed. Even eagerly making room on the conveyor belt for someone that's to squeeze in the last of the cart. Others may wanna gripe there's never enough lanes open. They've to keep down prices SOMEwhere. I'd rather they go back to cash or debit only as the costs associated with credit card fees eats up our savings by 10-12% (hey, that's another selection or 2 of cheese, LoL). And lastly, the wine and beer selection can NOT be beat. Interesting choices and phenomenal pricing,...
   Read moreP.S. lol I am voice texting this review I will update it more accurately and efficiently later, but just wanted to get things to shout out to the employees at Aldi at this location. Hi, I want to give a detailed representation of what I have personally experienced at Aldiâs over the years since the beginning of their businesses here in Tyler, Texas. Their prices overall stay way cheaper than anybody else I see. Yes, their prices did go up during our massive pandemic. Overall nine out of 10 are always cheaper organic and you can eat organically fresh at Aldiâs. Now they have become a little Walmart, but cheaper than Walmart was before we all got destroyed by taxes this past couple of years. All this merchandise in-store has grown astronomically, and the prices to me are just fabulous. The merchandise HomeGoods are very valuable for their prices and they hold up very well. I am never disappointed when Iâm buying from Aldi. Their managers and employees are phenomenal at this location. I have been treated, so kindly, educationally, and compassionately when Iâve had my darkest medical days inside the srores. Their employees are impeccably amazing at helping me manage payments how to pay how to change my pay because my card wasnât working one day. You cannot find anything wrong with the way They treat you as a customer in the store. They are just beyond amazing and I highly suggest trying out the store, but please donât come and take all the good stuff away and please treat the employees Kindly. They have made my shopping available for me to be able to shop happily. They even accept and understand that I have PTSD and Anxiety. When you have employees that care that much that makes everything about this business complete five stars plus highly recommended by Cherie Mcrae, #JusticeFor Cherie #CCM # Cherie #Reviews #Aldi #GreatEmployees #Loving #Beststore...
   Read moreAldi: The Bratwurst of Grocery StoresâCheap, Efficient, and Surprisingly Satisfying
Ah, Aldiâthe grocery store where you can buy a wheel of Gouda, a chainsaw, and a ski suit all in one trip. Walking in feels like stepping into a well-organized German fever dream, where efficiency reigns supreme, and brand loyalty is for the weak.
The shopping carts? Held hostage by a 25-cent ransom, because nothing says âwe value personal responsibilityâ like a coin-operated buggy system straight out of Berlinâs public transit. Inside, the aisles are stocked with brands youâve never heard of but will defend to the death after one bite. Who needs Ritz when âDeutscheKrispâ crackers exist?
Checking out is a competitive sport. Blink too long, and the cashier has already scanned, bagged, and possibly judged your snack choices. Itâs the autobahn of grocery checkout lanesâno speed limits, no nonsense.
And letâs not forget the Aisle of Shameâwhere impulse buys go to thrive. One minute, youâre grabbing eggs, the next, youâre leaving with a paddleboard, a garden gnome, and a German-language cookbook even though you barely cook in English.
All in all, Aldi is a magnificent, no-frills wonderland of affordable groceries, mysterious treasures, and cultural efficiency. Ein...
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