Grilled Shrimp Boil in Foil Packets

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Grilled shrimp boil in foil packets gives you the best parts of a low-country boil without hauling out a giant pot. The shrimp stay juicy, the potatoes turn tender, the corn goes sweet and smoky at the edges, and the sausage seasons everything in the packet as it cooks. When you open the foil at the table, the steam alone tells you you’ve done it right.

This version works because the potatoes get a head start before they ever hit the grill. That one small step keeps everything on the same cooking schedule, so the shrimp don’t overcook while you wait for the potatoes to soften. The butter, Old Bay, garlic, and paprika melt together inside the packets and baste the whole mix as it grills, which means you don’t need a separate sauce or a lot of fuss to get big flavor.

Below, I’ll show you how to keep the packets sealed, how to avoid rubbery shrimp, and a few smart swaps if you want to change up the sausage or make the recipe fit what’s already in your fridge.

The packets came off the grill perfectly timed — the shrimp were just pink, the potatoes were tender, and the garlic butter soaked into everything without making the foil leak.

★★★★★— Megan T.

Save these grilled shrimp boil foil packets for the nights when you want buttery shrimp, sweet corn, and smoky sausage with almost no cleanup.

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The Part That Keeps Shrimp From Turning Tough

Most foil packet shrimp boils fail for one simple reason: everything gets treated like it cooks at the same speed. Shrimp need only a short time over heat, but potatoes and corn need a head start or they’ll still be firm when the seafood is done. Boiling the potatoes first takes the pressure off the grill and keeps the final cook time tight enough that the shrimp stay tender.

The other thing that matters here is packet size. If you crowd too much into one bundle, the ingredients steam unevenly and the bottom layer can sit in liquid instead of picking up that buttery, seasoned finish. Four portions on four sheets of heavy-duty foil gives the heat room to move and makes it easier to check doneness without tearing the packets apart too early.

  • Baby red potatoes — Their waxy texture holds together after boiling and grilling. Russets break down faster and get mealy, so they’re not the best swap here.
  • Old Bay seasoning — This carries the boil flavor on its own. You can use a homemade seafood seasoning blend, but you’ll need enough celery seed, paprika, and salt to mimic the same punch.
  • Andouille or smoked sausage — The sausage adds fat and smoke that season the whole packet as it cooks. Kielbasa works too, but andouille gives you the sharper, spicier edge that fits this dish best.
  • Heavy-duty foil — Thin foil tears when the butter melts and steam builds. If you only have regular foil, double it so the packets stay sealed on the grill.

Building the Packets So Everything Finishes Together

grilled-shrimp-boil-in-foil-packets-recipe

Parboiling the Potatoes

Start the potatoes in boiling water and stop as soon as they’re just barely tender. A fork should slide in with a little resistance, not collapse the halves. That underdone center is what keeps them from falling apart on the grill while the shrimp cook through. Drain them well so extra water doesn’t wash the seasoning out of the packets.

Assembling the Foil Packs

Divide the corn, potatoes, sausage, and shrimp evenly among the foil sheets so each packet cooks at the same pace. Put the butter and seasonings right on top of the ingredients instead of mixing them in a bowl; the heat melts everything down and coats the food as it cooks. Crimp the foil tightly, but leave a little room inside each packet for steam to circulate. If the seal is loose, the butter leaks out and the shrimp can dry before the potatoes finish.

Grilling Until the Shrimp Just Turn Pink

Place the packets over medium-high heat and leave them alone for 12 to 15 minutes. You’re looking for shrimp that are opaque and curled, potatoes that are tender when pierced, and corn that has a little bite left. If you wait until the shrimp are tightly curled into little corkscrews, they’ve gone too far. Open the packets carefully because the steam hits fast and hot, then finish with lemon wedges and parsley.

Ways to Adjust the Packet Without Losing the Boil Feel

Make It Dairy-Free

Swap the butter for a good dairy-free butter stick or olive oil. Butter gives the richest finish, but olive oil still carries the seasoning well and keeps the packets moist. If you use oil, add an extra squeeze of lemon at the end so the dish still tastes bright instead of flat.

Use Different Sausage

Kielbasa, chicken sausage, or even turkey sausage all work here. Just know that milder sausage gives you less smoky depth, so the Old Bay and paprika matter more. If the sausage is fully cooked, the goal is flavor and browning, not doneness.

Swap in Different Seafood

Large peeled shrimp are the safest choice because they cook quickly and evenly, but chunks of lobster tail or scallops can work in part of the packet. Keep the total seafood weight the same and watch the clock closely, since scallops in particular go from tender to rubbery fast. I wouldn’t mix delicate fish fillets into these packets because they break apart before the potatoes finish.

Storage and Reheating

  • Refrigerator: Store leftovers in an airtight container for up to 2 days. The shrimp will firm up a little, so don’t expect the same just-off-the-grill texture.
  • Freezer: I don’t recommend freezing the finished packets. Shrimp and potatoes both lose texture after thawing, and the corn gets watery.
  • Reheating: Reheat gently in a covered skillet over low heat or in a 300°F oven just until warmed through. High heat makes the shrimp tough fast, so stop as soon as the food is hot.

Questions I Get Asked About This Recipe

Can I skip boiling the potatoes first?+

You can, but the potatoes usually won’t finish in time unless you cut them very small. Parboiling gives you tender potatoes and keeps the shrimp from overcooking while you wait on the rest of the packet.

How do I know when the shrimp are done in foil packets?+

The shrimp should be opaque and pink with a loose C-shape. If they’ve curled into a tight O and look dry at the edges, they’ve gone too far. Pull the packets as soon as the potatoes are tender and the shrimp have just turned.

Can I make these foil packets in the oven instead of the grill?+

Yes. Bake them on a sheet pan at 425°F for about the same amount of time, checking for tender potatoes and pink shrimp near the end. The foil still needs to be sealed well so the butter and steam stay inside.

How do I keep the foil packets from leaking on the grill?+

Use heavy-duty foil and fold the seams over twice so the butter can’t escape as it melts. Packets that are overfilled or loosely crimped are the ones that tear first, especially once the ingredients start steaming.

Can I prep the packets ahead of time?+

You can assemble them a few hours ahead and keep them chilled until grilling time. I wouldn’t go much longer than that because the salt and butter start drawing moisture from the shrimp and vegetables, which can make the packets watery.

Grilled Shrimp Boil in Foil Packets

Grilled shrimp boil in foil packets delivers a low-country-style seafood boil with shrimp, corn, red potatoes, and sausage steaming in Old Bay garlic butter. Packets open at the table for bright pink shrimp and tender potatoes without a messy pot.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings: 4 servings
Course: Main Dish
Cuisine: American
Calories: 910

Ingredients
  

Grilled shrimp boil foil packets
  • 1.5 lb large shrimp peeled and deveined
  • 4 ears corn cut into 2-inch rounds
  • 1 lb baby red potatoes halved
  • 12 oz andouille or smoked sausage sliced
  • 6 tbsp unsalted butter divided
  • 1 tbsp Old Bay seasoning
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • 0.5 tsp salt
  • 4 cloves garlic minced
  • lemon wedges for serving
  • fresh parsley for serving

Equipment

  • 1 sheet pan

Method
 

Parboil potatoes and prep grill
  1. Boil the baby red potatoes for 8 minutes until just barely tender, then drain.
  2. Preheat the grill to medium-high heat.
Build the foil packets
  1. Divide the corn, baby red potatoes, and andouille or smoked sausage evenly among 4 large sheets of heavy-duty foil.
  2. Divide the large shrimp evenly among the 4 foil portions.
  3. Top each portion with 1.5 tablespoons unsalted butter, 1/4 of the garlic, Old Bay seasoning, garlic powder, smoked paprika, and salt.
  4. Fold foil into sealed packets, crimping edges tightly.
Grill and serve
  1. Grill the foil packets for 12-15 minutes until the shrimp are pink and the potatoes are tender.
  2. Carefully open the packets at the table with steam kept away from your face, since steam is very hot.
  3. Serve immediately with lemon wedges and fresh parsley.

Notes

For the juiciest shrimp, avoid overcooking—pull the packets when shrimp are just pink and potatoes yield easily. Store leftovers in an airtight container in the refrigerator up to 2 days; reheat gently until warmed through. Freezing is not recommended because shrimp texture can turn rubbery. Dietary swap: use turkey sausage or a plant-based smoked sausage to reduce saturated fat while keeping the same Old Bay garlic butter flavor.

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