Okay, so I’ve been eating Guerrero tortillas for ages, right? They’re kinda my go-to for quick tacos or quesadillas. The other day, I got curious about what exactly goes into them. You know, I started thinking, “What are the actual guerrero tortillas ingredients?” Maybe I could even try making something similar at home.
First thing I did, obviously, was grab the package from my kitchen. I have both the corn ones and the flour ones usually. I flipped it over to the back, squinting at the ingredients list. It’s always in that tiny print, isn’t it?

Looking at the Package
For the corn tortillas, the list was pretty straightforward. Things like corn masa flour, water, preservatives… the usual suspects. I noted down stuff like “ground corn treated with lime,” water, cellulose gum, propionic acid, benzoic acid, phosphoric acid, guar gum, amylase. Okay, some of those sound a bit chemical-ly, but that’s expected for shelf-stable stuff.
Then I checked the flour tortillas package. That list was a bit longer. Enriched bleached flour (wheat flour, niacin, reduced iron, thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), water, vegetable shortening (like soybean oil and palm oil), and then a bunch of things for texture and shelf life – salt, leavening agents (sodium bicarbonate, sodium aluminum sulfate, corn starch, monocalcium phosphate), calcium propionate, sorbic acid, dough conditioners. Again, pretty standard for store-bought flour tortillas.
Trying to Find More Info
Just looking at the package felt a bit basic. I wanted to see if there was more detail, maybe variations or confirmation online. So, I jumped on my computer and searched for “guerrero tortillas ingredients”.
It mostly led me back to retailer sites showing the same package info I already had. Some forums had people discussing them, mostly just saying they liked them or asking where to buy specific types. Nothing really groundbreaking, no secret ingredient revealed, you know?
I did notice slight variations mentioned depending on the specific type of Guerrero tortilla. Like, their “Caseras” style might have a slightly different fat or preservative blend than their regular ones. The ‘Heat & Serve’ ones also probably differ slightly. It made sense – different textures and shelf lives would need tweaks.
What I Think Goes In Them (Generally)
So after looking at the packages and poking around online, my conclusion on the core guerrero tortillas ingredients is pretty much what you see on the label. There’s no big secret.
For Corn Tortillas (the yellow ones I usually get):

- Corn Masa Flour (treated with lime – that’s key for the texture/flavor)
- Water
- Stuff to keep them fresh and flexible (preservatives like propionic acid, gums like cellulose or guar)
For Flour Tortillas:
- Enriched Wheat Flour
- Water
- Fat/Shortening (Vegetable oils)
- Salt
- Leavening Agents (Baking soda/powder types)
- Preservatives and Dough Conditioners (to keep them soft and mold-free)
It wasn’t exactly rocket science, more of just confirming what was already there. It was interesting to see the specific preservatives and conditioners listed, stuff you wouldn’t typically use if you were making them fresh at home from scratch. But hey, that’s why they last longer than my homemade attempts!
So yeah, that was my little investigation into Guerrero tortilla ingredients. Just a regular person trying to figure out what’s in their food. No major revelations, but it satisfied my curiosity.