Grilled Shrimp Boil in Foil Packets

Category:Dinner Recipes

Grilled shrimp boil in foil packets brings all the best parts of a seafood boil into one tidy, smoky package. The shrimp stay juicy, the potatoes turn tender without falling apart, and the corn picks up just enough char from the grill to taste like summer done right. When the packets open, the steam hits first, then the butter and Old Bay, then the briny sweetness of shrimp and lemon.

What makes this version work is the head start on the potatoes. They need that brief boil before they ever meet the grill, or they’ll lag behind everything else and leave you with underdone chunks in an otherwise perfect packet. The butter mixture does double duty too: it seasons the shrimp and vegetables while keeping the foil packet moist enough to steam the ingredients without washing out the seasoning.

Below, I’ll walk through the one step that keeps the timing on track, what each ingredient is doing in the packet, and how to adapt this for the oven when grilling isn’t an option.

The potatoes came out tender and the shrimp stayed plump instead of getting rubbery. Opening the packets at the table was half the fun, and the Old Bay butter soaked into everything just right.

★★★★★— Megan T.

Like this smoky shrimp boil in foil packets? Save it to Pinterest for the nights when you want a full seafood boil with almost no cleanup.

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The Part Most Shrimp Boil Packets Get Wrong

The mistake is treating the shrimp and potatoes like they cook on the same schedule. They don’t. Shrimp need only a short burst of heat, and potatoes need enough time to turn creamy in the middle. If you skip the parboil on the potatoes, you’ll end up overcooking the shrimp while chasing tender potatoes, which is how foil packets turn from convenient to disappointing.

The other thing that matters is the seal. A tight packet traps steam and butter so the corn softens, the sausage flavors the vegetables, and the shrimp cook in their own juices instead of drying out. Leave a little space in the packet for steam to circulate, but crimp the edges well enough that you don’t lose the good stuff when it hits the grill.

  • Shrimp — Large shrimp hold up best here because they stay juicy during the short grill time. Smaller shrimp cook too fast and can go firm before the potatoes are ready.
  • Baby potatoes — These need the 8-minute boil first. That step isn’t optional if you want everything to finish together.
  • Old Bay seasoning — This is the backbone of the dish. A different seasoning blend can work, but it won’t give you the same seafood-boil character.
  • Heavy-duty foil — Standard foil tears too easily once the packets are heavy with vegetables and butter. If you only have regular foil, double up each sheet.

What Each Ingredient Is Doing Inside the Packet

Grilled Shrimp Boil in Foil Packets shrimp corn potatoes
  • Shrimp — They’re the fastest-cooking ingredient, so they go in raw and finish from the trapped heat of the packet. Peel them first so the seasoning gets right onto the meat.
  • Smoked sausage — This brings salt, fat, and a little smokiness that makes the whole packet taste fuller. Pre-cooked sausage is the right choice because it only needs reheating and browning, not a full cook.
  • Butter — Melted butter carries the seasoning and keeps the contents glossy instead of dry. Olive oil can work in a pinch, but it won’t give the same rich finish.
  • Garlic — Fresh minced garlic gives the butter mixture a sharper, fresher edge than garlic powder. If you swap it, use powder sparingly or it can taste dusty after grilling.
  • Lemon wedges and parsley — They’re not garnish for show. The lemon cuts through the butter, and the parsley lifts the whole dish at the end.

Building the Packets So Everything Finishes at the Same Time

Parboiling the Potatoes First

Put the halved potatoes in boiling water for about 8 minutes, just until they’re starting to soften at the edges. Drain them well before they go into the foil, because extra water dilutes the seasoned butter and turns the packets watery. You want the potatoes partly tender, not fully cooked, since the grill will finish them.

Mixing the Seasoned Butter

Stir the melted butter, Old Bay, and garlic together until the seasoning looks evenly suspended and the garlic is distributed through the mixture. If the butter cools and starts to firm up, warm it just enough to loosen it again. Pouring the seasoning over cold butter leaves pockets of salt and spice behind.

Stacking the Ingredients in the Foil

Divide the potatoes, corn, sausage, and shrimp evenly among the four sheets, then drizzle each packet with the butter mixture. Keep the shrimp on top or near the top layer so they cook from the steam instead of getting crushed under the heavier vegetables. Seal the foil tightly, but leave a little room inside for steam to move around.

Grilling Until the Shrimp Turn Pink

Set the packets over medium-high heat and cook for 12 to 15 minutes. The shrimp are done when they’re pink, curled into a loose C shape, and opaque all the way through. If the packets sit too long, the shrimp tighten up fast, so start checking early if your grill runs hot. Open them carefully because the steam blasts out fast, and serve right away with lemon and parsley.

How to Adjust These Foil Packets for Different Kitchens

Make It Dairy-Free

Swap the butter for a good olive oil or a plant-based butter that melts cleanly. You’ll lose a little of the classic seafood-boil richness, but the seasoning still clings well and the packets stay moist.

Use the Oven Instead of the Grill

Bake the sealed packets on a sheet pan at 425°F until the shrimp are pink and the potatoes are tender. The flavor stays close to the grilled version, though you’ll miss the light smoky edge that comes from the fire.

Swap the Sausage

Andouille gives the strongest Southern-style flavor, but kielbasa or any fully cooked smoked sausage works too. If you use a milder sausage, add a little extra Old Bay so the packet still tastes bold enough to stand up to the corn and potatoes.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 2 days. The shrimp will firm up a little after chilling, but the flavor holds well.
  • Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing the finished packets. The shrimp and potatoes both lose texture after thawing.
  • Reheating: Reheat gently in a covered skillet over low heat or in a 300°F oven just until warmed through. High heat is the fastest way to turn the shrimp rubbery.

The Questions That Come Up Before the Grill Gets Hot

Can I use frozen shrimp?+

Yes, as long as they’re fully thawed and patted dry first. Extra moisture makes the packets steam too aggressively and can water down the butter. Dry shrimp also season better and cook with a cleaner texture.

How do I know when the shrimp are done?+

They should be pink, opaque, and curled into a loose C shape. If they tighten into a hard O, they’ve gone a little too far. Pull the packets as soon as the shrimp lose their translucent centers because they keep cooking for a minute after you open the foil.

Can I assemble the foil packets ahead of time?+

You can prep the potatoes, sausage, corn, and butter mixture a few hours ahead, but I wouldn’t add the shrimp until just before grilling. Shrimp sit too long in the seasoning and start to lose their fresh texture. If you want to do even more ahead, keep everything chilled separately and assemble right before the packets go on the grill.

Can I use regular foil instead of heavy-duty foil?+

Yes, but double each sheet so the packets don’t tear when you flip or move them. These are heavy with potatoes and butter, and thin foil can split at the seams. A double layer gives you a little insurance and helps hold in the steam.

How do I keep the potatoes from staying hard?+

Boil them until they’re partly tender before they ever hit the foil. That head start is what gets them to the same finish line as the shrimp. If they’re still firm after grilling, they were undercooked in the first step, not on the grill.

Grilled Shrimp Boil in Foil Packets

Grilled shrimp boil in foil packets with Old Bay seasoning, where potatoes are par-boiled and then finished on the grill for tender, steam-cooked shrimp, corn, and sausage. Each sealed packet keeps everything juicy, with a buttery garlic-spice coating that clings to every bite.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Total Time 35 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: Southern
Calories: 720

Ingredients
  

shrimp boil in foil packets
  • 1.5 lb large shrimp, peeled
  • 1 lb baby potatoes, halved
  • 4 corn, cut into thirds
  • 12 oz smoked sausage, sliced
  • 4 tbsp butter, melted
  • 3 tbsp Old Bay seasoning
  • 3 garlic, minced
  • 1 Lemon wedges
  • 1 parsley
  • 4 heavy-duty foil sheets

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Par-cook and season
  1. Boil baby potatoes for 8 minutes until partially cooked, then drain. You should see the edges soften but the centers still hold their shape.
  2. Mix melted butter, Old Bay seasoning, and garlic. Stir until the garlic is evenly distributed through the spice-butter mixture.
Assemble foil packets
  1. Divide shrimp, potatoes, corn, and smoked sausage among 4 foil sheets. Heap the ingredients in the center of each sheet so they can be sealed tightly.
  2. Drizzle each packet with the seasoned butter mixture. Make sure the shrimp and potatoes get coated so they steam evenly.
  3. Fold foil into sealed packets. Press and crimp the edges firmly to prevent leaks as they grill.
Grill and serve
  1. Grill the foil packets over medium-high heat for 12-15 minutes until shrimp are pink and cooked through. Look for steady steam release and shrimp that turn opaque.
  2. Serve with lemon wedges and fresh parsley. Finish with a squeeze of lemon right before eating for brightness.

Notes

For easy packet sealing, fold once to start, then roll/crimp the seam like a tight envelope so steam stays inside. Store leftovers in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days; reheat gently until warmed through (foil or skillet works). Freezing is not recommended because shrimp texture can change after thawing. For a lighter option, use reduced-fat butter or swap in turkey sausage without changing the packet cooking time.

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