Easy, tasty shrimp boil foil packs baked or grilled with summer veggies, homemade seasoning, fresh lemon, and brown butter sauce. The BEST and easiest way to make shrimp boil at home!
If foil packs are on your mind, you’ll have to try these other delicious foil packs like Garlic Steak and Potato Foil Packs, Herb Butter Salmon and Asparagus Foil Packs, and Lemon Herb Shrimp and Broccoli Foil Packs. And if you’re in the mood for shrimp, you’ll love my Sheet Pan Cajun Shrimp and Potatoes and super popular Cajun Shrimp and Rice Skillet
This spring has been something else.
Around here the weather is known for being totally bi-polar, changing all day long making it near impossible to be able to plan ahead and dress for a day out without having to pack extra options. A sweater for layering, flip flops in case it warms up. Drives me bonkers.
But this spring has been more crazy than ever and this past week we had a couple of days that ranged from sunny and sweltering, to rain, to snow, to hail, and back to sunshine in the course of an hour or two. Kinda hard to deal with these days.
So to help me cope, I’m eating my way through A L L the summer foods and I’m not ashamed to say I’ve already made my way through three boxes of popsicles. You gotta do what you gotta do right?
To me, few things say summertime better than grilled foil packet dinners. I grew up on these things, but lately I’ve been putting my own spin on them and now I just can’t stop myself.
I recently made shrimp boil foil packs and I can’t get over how good they turned out.
The key is just to boil the corn and potatoes for a few minutes, then you can combine everything with the seasonings, melted butter, and fresh lemon juice before wrapping it all up in foil and grilling (or baking!).
Top it off with some fresh parsley, more fresh lemon juice, and browned butter for the perfect shrimp boil dinner to take your spring blues away!
WHAT INGREDIENTS DO YOU NEED TO MAKE SHRIMP BOIL FOIL PACKS?
- Shrimp
- Corn on the cob
- Andouille sausage
- Baby red potatoes or baby yellow potatoes
- Old Bay seasoning or homemade seasoning (see note)
- Salt and pepper
- Minced garlic
- Lemons
- Butter
- Fresh parsley
HOW DO YOU MAKE SHRIMP BOIL FOIL PACKS?
This seemingly difficult dish is super easy to make, and is aided by easy clean-up via the foil — just gather the foil together and toss it away when you’re done.
First, you’ll need to cook the potatoes and corn for just a bit to give them a little head start before adding the shrimp, because the shrimp cooks so quickly. Once the corn is husked, cut it into thirds, then cut each third in half lengthwise. Chop potatoes into 2-inch pieces. Boil corn and potatoes for 10 minutes. Drain and set aside.
Next, in a large bowl combine shrimp, sausage, corn, and potatoes. In a small dish, stir together the melted 3 tablespoons butter, Old Bay seasoning, garlic, juice from half a lemon, and salt and pepper to taste and then pour the mixture over shrimp, sausage, and veggies. Stir to coat.
Put 4 12×12 inch sheets of aluminum foil on a baking sheet. Divide the shrimp mixture up evenly among the 4 pieces of foil, folding up the edges of foil around the food to create a closed packet.
Cook the packets on a preheated grill over medium-high heat for 8-10 minutes on one side, then flip and cook another 5-6 minutes on the second side. Or, if you don’t want to grill them, you can bake the packets in the oven at 400 degrees for 15-20 minutes until corn is tender and shrimp are pink and fully cooked.
While the packets are cooking, go ahead and melt remaining butter in a medium saucepan over medium-high heat. Once it’s melted, keep stirring gently over medium heat for 3-4 minutes longer until color changes from pale yellow to a golden amber (but be careful to watch it cook slowly so that it doesn’t burn).
Pull the cooked packets off the grill or take them out of the oven and open them up. Serve the shrimp boil packs topped with chopped parsley, lemon wedges for squeezing, and browned butter for drizzling over the top or dipping. Dig in!
HOW DO YOU MAKE A FOIL PACK?
Cut off a large piece of foil — about 12×12-inches will do. I like to use a thicker foil for grilling to ensure it doesn’t rip.
Depending on what I’m grilling, I’ll also add a spritz of cooking spray or rub the bottom of the foil packet with a little butter or oil. These won’t stick as there is plenty of butter in them already.
I pull up the outside edges of the foil to make a bowl of sorts (don’t worry, it doesn’t have to look good, it’s just to keep the liquid from spilling out). Spoon your ingredients into the foil packet/bowl, being careful not to overstuff. You’ll still need to fold up all the edges from there.
I take two sides of the foil and meet them in the middle, turning them down a bit to seal in the top, then I fold in the edges to seal the other sides. That’s it! It doesn’t have to be fancy or look perfect at all — you just want them to be able to cook/steam in the packet and also keep all the juices from running out.
HOW DO YOU MAKE DIY OLD BAY SEASONING?
I love to make my own seasonings, Italian, Cajun, you name it, because it cuts down on the amount of spices I have to get out of my spice drawer each time but also it’s more economical in the long run. Also, it’s really easy! (For more recipes with these seasonings check out my Lemon Herb Shrimp and Rice Skillet recipe and Sheet Pan Cajun Shrimp and Potatoes.)
In a small bowl, whisk together the following spices:
1 tbsp celery salt
1 tsp paprika
½ tsp black pepper
½ tsp cayenne pepper
¼ tsp dry mustard
⅛ tsp allspice
⅛ tsp cloves,
pinch of ground ginger
Store in a spice jar or another airtight container.
Shrimp Boil Foil Packs
Ingredients
- 1 pound shrimp - peeled and de-veined
- 2 ears of corn on the cob - husked
- ½ pound andouille sausage
- 1 pound baby red potatoes - OR baby yellow potatoes
- 3 tablespoons old bay seasoning - OR homemade seasoning (see note)
- salt and pepper to taste
- 1 tablespoon minced garlic
- juice of ½ lemon + lemon wedges for serving
- 3 tablespoons butter melted + ½ cup - divided
- chopped fresh parsley, for topping
Instructions
- Chop corn into thirds, then chop each third in half lengthwise. Chop potatoes into 2 inch pieces. Boil corn and potatoes for 10 minutes. Drain and set aside.
- In a large bowl combine shrimp, sausage, corn, and potatoes. Stir together melted 3 tablespoons butter, Old Bay seasoning, garlic, juice from half a lemon, and salt and pepper to taste and pour over shrimp, sausage, and veggies. Stir to coat.
- Divide between four 12×12 inch sheets of aluminum foil. Fold edges of foil up around the food to create a closed packet.
- Cook on preheated grill over medium-high heat for 8-10 minutes on one side, then flip and cook another 5-6 minutes on the second side. Alternately, you can bake the packets at 400 degrees for 15-20 minutes until corn is tender and shrimp are pink and fully cooked.
- While packets are cooking, melt remaining butter in a medium sauce pan over medium-high heat. Once melted, continue to stir gently over medium heat for 3-4 minutes longer until color changes from pale yellow to a golden amber (but be careful not to burn it).
- Serve shrimp boil packs topped with chopped parsley, lemon wedges for squeezing, and browned butter for drizzling over the top or dipping.
This is the 2nd time this month I have made this dish except I tweeked it a little, instead of on the grill I put all the ingredients in my heavy enamel cooking pot and did it in the oven, also I used 4 ears of corn (they were small) instead of 2, I topped off the whole thing with a package of frozen mussels (thawed). This is one great meal, and plenty of left overs for the next day, thanks so much for sharing!
Delicious! My husband and son enjoyed and complimented me on the meal.
Which rack height do you use????
Middle. 🙂
I made this tonight and WOW. It was wonderful! Parboiled the potatoes and corn (just cut in thirds) and let them cool. Cleaned my shrimp and rinsed in a lemon water, and patted them dry. Mixed in my sausage and added in the Low Sodium Old Bay with the Garlic and put it in the fridge while the potatoes cooled. When I was ready to put them all together, I added in the butter and mixed up the potatoes and corn with the shrimp. It was WONDERFUL! Definitely a bit of work because of the parboiling but I will make it again. Very flavorful
This was awesome, love ❤️ country boil!
Is this the actual dinner or is it served with a side dish? Rice? Salad?
It can be served however you’d like! Rice or a salad could be added, but it is not needed. 🙂
I’m I think any adult can decide if they need a side and what they should be. You really need others to tell you if it’s ok to ad a side and if rice is ok? Really? Wow!
Delicious recipe! I made this yesterday as a “trial run” (something I usually do before serving a recipe to family and friends) and it turned out great! Very flavorful and filling, and relatively easy to prep. I am wondering – is there a reason for cutting the ears of corn lengthwise after cutting them into thirds? I think it might be easier to eat if it’s not cut lengthwise. Anyway – minor detail. Thanks for sharing the recipe!
Just copied all 3 of the links for your foil packet recipes to my memos. Looks like shrimp boil for tonight. Will do the 2 different chicken recipes over the next couple of weeks. Can’t wait to eat them all.
I think I will microwave the corn and potatoes to avoid heating up the kitchen instead of boiling water!
Can’t wait to try it!
Msde this for our Fathers Day gathering
For 12.It wss a big
Just finished making it, will be having it for dinner tonight. I didn’t use sausage, because I don’t eat meat. I put, shrimp, potatoes, zucchini, red peppers and onions in the packs. Followed the recipe exactly for the sauce, can’t wait. I know it will be delicious. Will leave a review after dinner.
This will become a regular meal at our house, the only thing I will do is change the cook time on the shrimp. I used 14 count and usually cook shrimp for 8 minutes. That is what I will do again.
I will season everything together, pull out the shrimp and add 8 minutes before the packet is done.
Thanks for a great recipe.
My husband doesn’t like anything. I’m going to be brave and make this tonight because he actually does eat shrimp. He doesn’t like any kind of seasoning, but I’m gonna put it in anyway and see what happens. Keep your fingers crossed. I will let you know it is received.
I’m excited to hear how he liked it!
Only used a third of the seasoning because I was afraid it would be too spicy for him. He loved it! Next time I’ll be braver put almost all the seasoning in. Very cool! It was a lot of work for a non-cook like me, but if he likes it it might be worth it.
Going to try this recipe for guests this week, one of whom is dairy free. Would this work using earth balance as a substitute for butter? Has anyone tried it using oil as a substitute and if so, using what amt. of oil?
Amazing ive made this twice and my boys love it