Sunfield Hand Pies
Hand pies AKA Empanadas or Pastelillos are filled with either meat, veggies, or dessert. Additionally, we have weekly specials, Homemade Pique and Limbers.
All in Buda, Texas!
06/26/2026
06/18/2026
**π₯ NEW SPECIAL ALERT! π₯**
Todayβs the day! Our brand-new BBQ Chicken Mac Nβ Cheese Empanada** has officially arrived at Sunfield Hand Pies! π€€
Stuffed with shredded chicken, creamy mac nβ cheese, and a tangy BBQ sauce, this hand pie brings together everything you love about comfort food in one crispy, golden bite.
Whether you're a BBQ lover, a mac nβ cheese fanatic, or just looking to try something new, this one is calling your name! π
π Downtown Buda
β° Open Today
π Order ahead: sunfieldhandpies.com
Come grab one before everyone else discovers their new favorite empanada! π₯
06/14/2026
π We Want Your Input! π
Over the years we've had some amazing specials roll through Sunfield Hand Pies, and we're curious...
π Which flavors or menu items have you been waiting to see make a comeback?
Was it the Hot Brown?
The QuesaBirria?
The Shrimp N Rice?
The Southwest Chicken?
The BBQ Chicken Mac?
The Lemon Blueberry?
Or maybe something else we've done in the past that you still think about? π€€
Drop your favorite in the comments and let us know what you'd love to see back on the menu. We read every comment, and your feedback helps shape future specials!
π Tell us:
β What item do you miss most?
β What new flavor would you love for us to create?
Let's hear it, Sunfield family!
06/13/2026
The town south of Austin has one of the strangest name stories in all of Texas. And nobody can fully agree on how it happened.
It started in 1880 when a postmaster from a nearby community walked up to a railroad official and reportedly said "Do, pray, give us a depot." The railroad wrote down what they heard. The town became Du Pre.
Six years later the post office discovered there was already another Du Pre in Texas and demanded a name change. What came next depends on who you ask.
Some say it comes from the Spanish word viuda, meaning widow, because two widows ran the kitchen at the local hotel and became so beloved by railroad travelers that the whole town was named in their honor. Others say it is a nod to Budapest, Hungary, brought over by immigrants who settled the area. Nobody knows for certain. The mystery has never been fully solved.
What everybody does know is that in 1881 a woman named Cornelia Trimble donated the land for the townsite, and what grew up around that railroad stop became one of the most charming small towns in Hays County. Today Buda sits just seventeen miles south of Austin and is one of the fastest growing cities in Central Texas.
It was almost called "Do Pray." Instead it got a name nobody can explain. And it is still going strong.
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Opening Hours
| Monday | 12pm - 6pm |
| Tuesday | 12am - 6pm |
| Wednesday | 12pm - 6pm |
| Thursday | 12pm - 8pm |
| Friday | 12pm - 8pm |